The Golden Age Of The Radio

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All these new technologies evolving have helped us to be able to communicate in real time today. We will be taking a closer look on the golden age of the radio, how it started and reached its highest point in history.
The evolution of the radio throughout the years had an impact on populations, it was a turning point in history in order to reach people and change the world.
First of all, we will talk about the history of the radio, then about the important role it had during significant times and finally the different subjects we could find.

The period when radio reached its peak popularity with general audiences was in the 1930’s and 1940’s. Strangely, part of this period was during the great depression in North America. This medium …show more content…

He and other black leaders organized the 1963 March on Washington, a massive protest in D.C., for jobs and civil rights. MLK delivered his famous "I Have a Dream" speech to a very large audience, which exceeded 200,000 civil rights devotees. The speech and the march created the political momentum that resulted in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited segregation in America. As a result of King's successful leadership, he was awarded the 1964 Nobel Prize for peace. This speech was recorded on radio and was spread all over America, which didn’t stop people who weren’t present that day from not knowing about it and hearing …show more content…

At first these comedians used their usual tactics, but with time they established the "situation comedy" layout that's still being used on TV today. (Sitcom is a type of comedy that points out characters sharing an identical environment, such as a bistro or a store with amusing dialogue.) Kiddies shows were on in the afternoon. Movie and comic-strip characters like Superman and Little Orphan Annie were quickly adapted for radio and established. Soap operas appealed primarily to housewives, and dominated most mornings. The soap opera format came in 1932, when NBC moved a show from its evening prime time slot to the middle of the day because that was the only place for it in the schedule, it did so well that NBC began programming other shows for women throughout daytime. Soaps were proved to be the most admired shows; by 1940 the four networks offered more than 60 hours of soap operas a week.
One of the nice things about radio is that you can transport the listener anywhere using only sound effects. You want to tell a story that happens on Venus, outer space, in a Casino or at the beach; well you can because you don't need extravagant costumes or sets; you just need the right background sounds. Crime stories and detective shows came early to radio. They were easy to produce and very

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