Manipulating the Ether: The Power of Broadcast Radio in Thirties America

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McFarland, Nov 9, 2004 - Performing Arts - 324 pages

Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first politician to recognize the power of radio. He appealed directly to the American people for support of his New Deal and for his foreign policy. Roosevelt's speeches and fireside chats were broadcast over networks only recently equipped with newsrooms. Listeners immediately learned of events they earlier would not have heard about for days. In those newsrooms, commentators began to interpret the news for average listeners, sometimes slanting it to reflect their own view.

But it fell to a young star to demonstrate the full power of the medium. On October 30, 1938, Orson Welles' War of the Worlds broadcast brought widespread panic with its fictional newscast of an alien invasion. How Roosevelt used radio, how the news was reported, and the changes Welles caused are all detailed.

 

Contents

Roosevelts Views on Radio
9
The Roosevelt Method
15
Campaigning by Radio
25
Campaign
32
Campaign
39
Campaign
55
Domestic Challenges
75
Selling the Foreign Policy Agenda
89
Orson Welles and the War of the Worlds
197
The Broadcast
207
The Public Reaction
219
It Was All So Real
229
Aftermath
241
Conclusion
255
6589
282
Bibliography
287

The Death of FDR
123
Early History of Broadcast News
131
Radio Covers Domestic Events and Crises
139
Radio Covers the World
153
Selected Radio Broadcasts
295
Index
303
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Robert J. Brown lives in Rochester, New York.

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