About this item
Highlights
- During the "golden age" of radio, from roughly the late 1920s until the late 1940s, advertising agencies were arguably the most important sources of radio entertainment.
- About the Author: Cynthia B. Meyers is an Associate Professor of Communication at the College of Mount Saint Vincent in New York City.
- 288 Pages
- Performing Arts, Radio
Description
About the Book
Describes how admen, advertising agencies, and sponsors shaped U.S. radio into a commercial entertainment medium from the late 1920s until the early 1950s. Views the development of twentieth-century popular culture through the lens of the advertising and broadcasting industries. Examines the intersection of commerce and culture in American mass media.Book Synopsis
During the "golden age" of radio, from roughly the late 1920s until the late 1940s, advertising agencies were arguably the most important sources of radio entertainment. Most nationally broadcast programs on network radio were created, produced, written, and/or managed by advertising agencies: for example, J. Walter Thompson produced "Kraft Music Hall" for Kraft; Benton & Bowles oversaw "Show Boat" for Maxwell House Coffee; and Young & Rubicam managed "Town Hall Tonight" with comedian Fred Allen for Bristol-Myers. Yet this fact has disappeared from popular memory and receives little attention from media scholars and historians. By repositioning the advertising industry as a central agent in the development of broadcasting, author Cynthia B. Meyers challenges conventional views about the role of advertising in culture, the integration of media industries, and the role of commercialism in broadcasting history.
Based largely on archival materials, A Word from Our Sponsor mines agency records from the J. Walter Thompson papers at Duke University, which include staff meeting transcriptions, memos, and account histories; agency records of BBDO, Benton & Bowles, Young & Rubicam, and N. W. Ayer; contemporaneous trade publications; and the voluminous correspondence between NBC and agency executives in the NBC Records at the Wisconsin Historical Society. Mediating between audiences' desire for entertainment and advertisers' desire for sales, admen combined "showmanship" with "salesmanship" to produce a uniquely American form of commercial culture. In recounting the history of this form, Meyers enriches and corrects our understanding not only of broadcasting history but also of advertising history, business history, and American cultural history from the 1920s to the 1940s.Review Quotes
Well written and organized, this book is a welcome addition to a growing number of revisionist studies of the broadcasting industry. . . Highly Recommended-- "--Choice Magazine"
"This is a terrific and much-needed book. Cynthia Meyers tells the compelling story of one of the most productive yet hidden cultural forces of the twentieth century."-----Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin, Madison
A Word from Our Sponsor is a truly groundbreaking study of the fateful union of broadcasting and advertising in their formative years. At long last, Meyers provides us with an in-depth, inside account of the creation and essential interdependence of these two dominant American culture industries, as sponsors and their ad agencies shaped "commercial radio" into a machine of mass entertainment and, in the process, into the nation's most effective advertising medium.-----Thomas G. Schatz, University of Texas at Austin, College of Communication
About the Author
Cynthia B. Meyers is an Associate Professor of Communication at the College of Mount Saint Vincent in New York City. She received her Ph.D. in Radio-Television-Film from the University of Texas at Austin.