[comp.dcom.telecom] The First Radio Commercial

telecom@eecs.nwu.edu (TELECOM Moderator) (07/31/89)

I know, this is TELECOM Digest, so what is a message about radio commercials
doing here. There is only one excuse, really: The first sale of time on
a radio station for commercial purposes occurred 67 years ago this
week when radio station WEAF, New York City, sold the first commercial
to a Jackson Heights apartment-house builder.

WEAF, one of the first broadcast radio stations in America belonged to a
very large organization: AT&T to be exact.

Yes, among other things, AT&T used to own a commercial radio station
in the early days of broadcasting. WEAF was designed primarily as an
experimental station, used to test out the latest developments from
Bell Labs and Western Electric Company. The majority of the time they played
jazz music and/or symphonies, with occasional speeches of interest by
important people in New York City. They only operated the station a short
time, and decided it was not worth the time or money to continue operating
it.

This was just a little telecom trivia to start the week for you!


Patrick Townson

russ%prism@gatech.edu (Russell Shackelford) (07/31/89)

Glad you didn't make any disparaging sexist remarks about the radio station's
female employees :-)

russ

[Moderator's Note: Well look, no one is perfect. I am bound to miss a few
details now and then. :)  But seriously, I doubt sincerely that they even
had any female employees at the radio station in 1922, except probably the
receptionist/secretary. That's just the way things were back then.  PT]