1920s Radio Was Really Cool

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  • Опубліковано 26 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 196

  • @ConceptuallyYour
    @ConceptuallyYour 2 місяці тому +54

    Nothing compares to the peaceful feeling that vintage music brings, like a colorful dream. 🌈

    • @deetalland2551
      @deetalland2551 Місяць тому +8

      Very well expressed ❤

    • @sitarnut
      @sitarnut 7 днів тому +2

      Just scored a 1947, 6 tube AM radio with that warm tube sound... we heard such good music on it in the 1950's. Too bad AM is nothing but stupid talk radio nowadays. Someone ought to start a AM station playing 30's and 40's music.... I bet thousands would tune in... it would play 16 hours a day at my place.

    • @dr.barrycohn5461
      @dr.barrycohn5461 4 дні тому

      What's vintage music?

  • @beadyeye2312
    @beadyeye2312 2 місяці тому +196

    My grandfather was a Navy wireless operator on a troop transport ship (later becoming a hospital ship for Spanish flu victims) during WWI. After he died, among his belongings were several editions of a military produced magazine called The Oscillator.

    • @elainebaird2091
      @elainebaird2091 2 місяці тому +7

      Do you know which ship? The Leviathan?

    • @beadyeye2312
      @beadyeye2312 2 місяці тому +7

      @@elainebaird2091 I don't recall but it wasn't the Leviathan. Years ago in all my family stuff I found the name of the ship and looked it up but unfortunately I don't remember the name and it would take considerable time to find it again.

    • @aalexjohna
      @aalexjohna 2 місяці тому +1

      He was an old gay.

    • @gregh6719
      @gregh6719 Місяць тому

      @@beadyeye2312 there was another transport called USS Melville.

    • @HowShouldIKnow6543
      @HowShouldIKnow6543 Місяць тому +2

      Would love to read an issue of that 🥸

  • @billinflorida2628
    @billinflorida2628 2 місяці тому +51

    I worked at WGY engineering from 1967 to 73, well past the radio drama era. We were still carrying live opera from the NY Met on Saturday afternoons tho. Most shows were live studio then with music on records and cartridge tapes and local news with NBC News on the hour. Call in talk shows were new in those days. Btw I'm 80 now! Where did the time go? BG

    • @uslines
      @uslines Місяць тому +2

      WGY was great. I listened to The Lone Ranger, Gene Autry, X minus 1, Jack Benny...I could go on...Later, good music...before rapcrap and talk radio. I lived down rte 5. Age 85.

    • @trueKENTUCKY
      @trueKENTUCKY 27 днів тому +1

      thank you for your service 🗽🇺🇸

    • @2150dalek
      @2150dalek 25 днів тому +1

      I listened to Art Bell radio through out the 90's. It was cool & entertaining.

    • @pimpgabaghoul3659
      @pimpgabaghoul3659 23 дні тому

      Wassup 80 year old 😎

    • @WVgrl59
      @WVgrl59 16 днів тому

      They did have the CBS Radio Mystery dramas between the 70s and 80s

  • @stevenfromer3816
    @stevenfromer3816 2 місяці тому +75

    Your description is a crystal radio set. Way back when every Cub Scout learned how to make one these fun projects. Times change

    • @christophercox8237
      @christophercox8237 Місяць тому +9

      Had one of those myself. Every once in a while I think about ordering a kit if they are still available. Many nights spent listening to it under the covers. Some evenings, if the skip was right, I’d get WSM out of Nashville.

    • @LetArtsLive
      @LetArtsLive Місяць тому +4

      I still like to listen for skips I live in Western New York I have gotten Chicago Ashville New York

    • @christophercox8237
      @christophercox8237 Місяць тому +2

      @@LetArtsLive wonderful! I live in North East Tennessee. Picked up a station one night, where they were speaking French. I believe it was being broadcast out of Quebec.

    • @stevenfromer3816
      @stevenfromer3816 Місяць тому +1

      @@christophercox8237 yep

  • @bpekim1
    @bpekim1 2 місяці тому +63

    This was a great idea for you to read articles from the time. It really gave me a different perspective on understanding people’s attitudes during this time of great change with the advent of radio. It was funny to hear the guy at the end describing jazz and giving it a bunch of back-handed compliments.

    • @allanalogmusicat78rpm
      @allanalogmusicat78rpm Місяць тому +8

      Henry Ford hated Jazz so much he spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on recording traditional "American" dance music. Then they paid to have schools give classes in "folk dancing," using these recordings. Those programs limped along into my own middle school years, circa 1976, with a Physical Education unit on folk dancing.

    • @g.finaldi4302
      @g.finaldi4302 Місяць тому

      @@allanalogmusicat78rpm Me too!

  • @Janika-xj2bv
    @Janika-xj2bv Місяць тому +107

    As a teenager in the early 1980s, me and some boys from school were avid shortwave radio listeners, tuning in to Deutsche Welle, Voice of America, Radio Moscow, Radio France Internationale, everything we could catch.

    • @gregh6719
      @gregh6719 Місяць тому +11

      12 yrs old...early 70's....Avid SWL...and been one ever since through today. also Mediumwave DX'er. 54 yrs now. When the bug bites...it bites.

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 Місяць тому +6

      Love radio. I was into CB living in a suburb of Los Angeles in the mid 70's and later became a ham radio operator. After working Comm/Nav in the USAF in the early 80's, I worked my way up the licenses to the highest one, Amateur Extra, and then that same year tested and got all of the commercial licenses, 5 in all. I now have a collection of over 30 ham radios including the old tube transceivers.

    • @bobdinwiddy
      @bobdinwiddy 22 дні тому

      the westårn impeårîãlistik bullshîtjæwïjistischebæŵègùngh . . .atcschjoeh!!

    • @williamsimmons152
      @williamsimmons152 17 днів тому +3

      Was doing the same thing in the 50's. I heard Radio Moscow's announcement of Stalin's death. I didn't have a clue who he was.

    • @shawnific
      @shawnific 11 днів тому +1

      Was 13 in 1986 when I got my first SW radio. It was a Sony. And suddenly I was a radionaught landing on far off worlds as I tuned into Deutsche Welle, VOA, Radio Moscow, BBC, and a lot of others religiously. It was fascinating listening to live transmissions from thousands of miles away getting to know the cultures and getting updates from around the world.

  • @PopcornSimulationGaming
    @PopcornSimulationGaming 19 днів тому +12

    Don't know how I got here, but once I was I'm hooked 😅

  • @SallySallySallySally
    @SallySallySallySally Місяць тому +6

    When I was a young kid, I was given an old RCA 813K. It was a tall, very heavy multi-band console receiver circa 1937. Besides the usual broadcast AM band, it had four shortwave bands with various countries or capitals on the frequency dial, and a green "tuning eye". It took a while to get it all fixed up but I learned a lot about electronics while working on it and I even sent reception reports to overseas shortwave broadcasters. I had quite a collection of QSL cards!

  • @JoeBlow-fp5ng
    @JoeBlow-fp5ng 2 місяці тому +43

    Thanks for posting this content. I'm really enjoying it.
    Those pioneering radio times must have been very exciting to be a part of.

  • @PhilippinesFarmLife
    @PhilippinesFarmLife 2 місяці тому +13

    Very interesting. Thank You. I remember using a crystal radio up in my tree house in the early 1960's. It made the old radio programs sound NEW and felt like I had gone back in time to when those shows were brand new.

  • @delausa
    @delausa 2 місяці тому +24

    I love this stuff. Tangential to my own doctoral research in social impacts of media and technology of the long 19th century.

  • @2150dalek
    @2150dalek 2 місяці тому +16

    I use to listen to Art Bell radio shows. Later on I would listen to classical tunes in the garage tinkering. Radio is cool, I can relate. But in 1920, this must have been a treat.

  • @HumanBeanbag
    @HumanBeanbag 2 місяці тому +18

    I love those old radio shows! Good topic ❤

  • @ellen4956
    @ellen4956 2 місяці тому +10

    This was so enjoyable, and full of information! I love everything to do with the "jazz age" (apparently not everyone liked it), and have collected old radios for years. My favorite is the Philco 90 Cathedral, because of their beauty and sound quality. Today there are adapters to let music from other devices play through the speaker of an old radio without having to install it or alter the radio, so that's nice too. I have playlists online of music of the 1920s. I heard there was a "war" between two stations in New Orleans, because one wanted to play music and the other wanted to play news broadcasts. For a couple of years music was banned from the radio there (I think it was 1930-31) but then it was changed back to both.

  • @davidmartin8211
    @davidmartin8211 2 місяці тому +42

    His interesting how the growth of radio in the '20s parallels the birth and growth of the personal computer in the 1970s.

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 2 місяці тому +4

      Radio was the bees knees back in 1916.😅

    • @Creative_name_5
      @Creative_name_5 Місяць тому +5

      If you think this is interesting, you should check out a book called The Victorian Internet by Tom Standage. Computers evolved like television. Which evolved like radio. Which evolved like telegraphy. It's really amazing.

  • @ray4142
    @ray4142 Місяць тому +6

    My father was a crystal radio builder as a boy back in the 30s. He would have loved and been able to relate to this broadcast.

  • @ryanwarren2970
    @ryanwarren2970 2 місяці тому +8

    I have this old looking radio with a Bluetooth feature. I had some fun and listened to this video that way. Great video, keep up the good work!

    • @MarkBrantner
      @MarkBrantner 2 місяці тому

      Sounds like a modern Crosby unit

  • @G.L.McCarthy-vr1oe
    @G.L.McCarthy-vr1oe 2 місяці тому +4

    Very enjoyable, did my mending & learned about radio in the '20s😊

  • @boopah4365
    @boopah4365 2 місяці тому +8

    Such memories..These were my teenage years.

    • @charlotteriddle7303
      @charlotteriddle7303 18 днів тому

      Are you 100 years old?😂

    • @boopah4365
      @boopah4365 18 днів тому

      @@charlotteriddle7303 112 tomorrow....Happy Birthday to me! ☺

  • @RadioHist
    @RadioHist Місяць тому +4

    I've been fascinated for 50+ years in the early build-out radio broadcasting. Few people of today know of even a tiny fraction of the saga of success and failure to get to the point of where radio broadcasting had its flowering in the depths of the Great Depression. Your long form presentation does a good job in assembling commentary of the day with contemporary photos. Thanks!

  • @st8275
    @st8275 2 місяці тому +10

    Vintage. Love it❤

  • @swan6290
    @swan6290 Місяць тому +2

    I've got to say, Isn't this just the bee's knees?! Bravo!

  • @actually_a_circle
    @actually_a_circle 14 днів тому +1

    I can not imagine how cool it would be to decipher coded messages sent to you from the navy while wild jazz played in the background

  • @DoctorBillTheRadioMan
    @DoctorBillTheRadioMan 2 місяці тому +11

    I am a radio amateur. I have always been told we were also scientists as we were always experimenting with different things.

  • @historyfanboy1066
    @historyfanboy1066 2 місяці тому +11

    Grew up in the east suburbs of Pittsburgh--a five minute walk to the site of KDKA's pioneering broadcasts. Thanks so much for creating these great videos.

    • @kdizzystl
      @kdizzystl 2 місяці тому

      Are you sure about the call sign? Stations east of the Mississippi are supposed to start with a W. Like WKRP in Cincinnati, lol.

    • @kdizzystl
      @kdizzystl 2 місяці тому

      Nevermind. This was the first 'commercial' station. That rule must have come later.

  • @perpetualmotion357
    @perpetualmotion357 2 місяці тому +7

    When my grandpa was a kid back then he said how he remembered when his old neighbor got one of the first radios. He said all the kids would go to his house and he would hold court. The old neighbor told the kids that there were tiny elves in the radio. He would play a game called Toot My Honker and whoever did it best got to pick the channel.

    • @joeneil5485
      @joeneil5485 2 місяці тому +5

      'Toot My Honker' is suss af...

    • @davidmoser3535
      @davidmoser3535 2 місяці тому +5

      TOOT MY HONKER THAT WOULD GET YOU ARRESTED IN 2024

    • @joeneil5485
      @joeneil5485 2 місяці тому +1

      @@davidmoser3535 I'D BUY THAT FOR A DOLLAR...!

    • @simonsimon325
      @simonsimon325 29 днів тому +3

      Anyone who enjoys having all the local kids coming round their house is suss even before you factor in toot my honker.

    • @joeneil5485
      @joeneil5485 29 днів тому

      @@simonsimon325 I tooted an old man's honker once and I got herpes of the eye...

  • @nightrunner1456
    @nightrunner1456 7 днів тому +1

    How many churches rang bells in the 1920's. In 1915 was the first year, that automobiles pass,
    the making of horse carriages. 10 years ago, I could pick-up Cuba on my SW-radio, from Texas.

  • @josephgnatek5984
    @josephgnatek5984 2 місяці тому +3

    a fine presentation and fabulous historical value...thanks

  • @timburr4453
    @timburr4453 2 місяці тому +3

    Great upload - I'm a huge history buff and really enjoy your work.

  • @danren5510
    @danren5510 19 днів тому +1

    Enjoy the context about the radio coming to be in the 1920's. after taking off just seems like programming followed like the internet and blogs & podcasts. Love the photo at the end, cool find- couldnt tell ya anymore about it myself lol

  • @5DollarShake420
    @5DollarShake420 Місяць тому +1

    This is so fascinating. Thank you for your hard work!

  • @BeeHatGuy
    @BeeHatGuy Місяць тому

    I have wanted a documentary on radio from this time period for so long. This is awesome, thank you!!

  • @anndeefam
    @anndeefam 2 місяці тому +2

    while listening I was reading a Wikipedia list of the oldest radio stations, just a mere second or two after reading the listing for WGY New York I clicked back on UA-cam wondering if you had mentioned about WGY when you read about WGY amazing. WGY is still in operation today. Very entertaining thanks first time viewing your channel.

  • @darkgreenambulance
    @darkgreenambulance Місяць тому +1

    What a lovely commentary from an early age - with developments steadily occurring!

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 2 місяці тому +3

    The founder of the modern practice of Chiropractic DD Palmer’s son BJ Palmer was a pioneer in commercial radio broadcasting. Was the founder of WOC radio station in Davenport Iowa. WOC was one of the first radio stations to affiliate with the NBC Radio Network. To my knowledge WOC is still broadcasting to this day.

  • @JamesDelgado-c3i
    @JamesDelgado-c3i 25 днів тому

    What a beautiful way to describe radio. For lack of world knowledge, they were great communicators

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon 2 місяці тому +4

    I love all the different fonts they used in the 20s

    • @MarkBrantner
      @MarkBrantner 2 місяці тому

      Unusually, it was Parisian. A Very art deco font.

  • @MichaelLeBlanc-p4f
    @MichaelLeBlanc-p4f Місяць тому +1

    A middle boomer, love this focus on '20s stuff.
    Lets me time-travel and spend time in the same company my grandparents kept.

    • @MichaelLeBlanc-p4f
      @MichaelLeBlanc-p4f Місяць тому

      One of my grand-uncles, a Mr Potter, was an early radio-ham and carried on for years. Inherited a pile of his 'radio call cards', important in their own way for historical reasons but meaningless to me. Passed then on to a serious radio enthuasiast knowing they woud be in good hands.
      Mr Potter was head of Stanley Tools Accounting Dept for many years. Still have his 'Stanley Tool Box', a bit beaten up but perfectly servicible, full of well used tools still perfectly servicable . . . Made quality stuff and people back in those days

  • @senior_ranger
    @senior_ranger 2 місяці тому +4

    Thanks, good fun to review use of language a century ago!! You don't hear the word celerity much these days

  • @DerrickJLive
    @DerrickJLive 14 днів тому +1

    This is awesome. Thank you.

  • @d.c.8828
    @d.c.8828 2 місяці тому +2

    I really enjoyed this! Thank you!

  • @kdizzystl
    @kdizzystl 2 місяці тому +2

    Fun fact- all stations east of the Mississippi start with a W. Western stations a K. Saint Louis University had the first station west of the Mississippi.

    • @davidmartin8211
      @davidmartin8211 2 місяці тому +1

      @@kdizzystl fun fact. I live in North Texas and we have several W stations.

    • @kdizzystl
      @kdizzystl 2 місяці тому

      @@davidmartin8211 that's the rule. Look it up. I learned this in school. Somebody gots something fucked up. The first radio station to exist is KDKA. In Pittsburgh... So blame my textbooks.

  • @Friezadragonballz
    @Friezadragonballz 2 місяці тому +8

    We should hear samples of radio bulletins from the 20s

    • @McTagh1
      @McTagh1 2 місяці тому +2

      That would be cool. I wonder if they were recorded?

    • @Friezadragonballz
      @Friezadragonballz 2 місяці тому +1

      @@McTagh1 I just wanted to hear their voices

    • @MarkBrantner
      @MarkBrantner 2 місяці тому +1

      Back then, there were only wire recorders. Wax cylinders by Edison were around, too.

    • @Friezadragonballz
      @Friezadragonballz 2 місяці тому

      @MarkBrantner I See. I still wanna hear what a news bulletin from the 1920s sounds like

    • @Gribbo9999
      @Gribbo9999 2 місяці тому +2

      Yes the problem here is that recording apparatus was not commonly available in the 1920s except in a recording studio making 78s. So your radio studio just wouldn't normally have any recording apparatus at all.

  • @alandesouzacruz5124
    @alandesouzacruz5124 2 місяці тому +8

    Very good if i could i would give 100 likes

  • @andrewstallings6548
    @andrewstallings6548 2 місяці тому +3

    “Let me tell you that it’s the thrill of a lifetime when your government first communicates with you direct by wireless.”
    I feel that my experiences with the government over wireless has been much less fulfilling. 😂

  • @abpccpba
    @abpccpba 2 місяці тому +2

    Fascinating keep up the good work. First Article I liked a lot. Thanks so much. Your choice of images match quite well.

  • @AntonSlavik
    @AntonSlavik 10 днів тому +1

    Sleeping porch? I want a sleeping porch!

  • @sarahshanahan2222
    @sarahshanahan2222 2 місяці тому

    Thank you. This is so amazing to hear😊

  • @unclekranky3454
    @unclekranky3454 27 днів тому

    Really really interesting content…thanks a lot 👍🏼

  • @TheTruthResearchers
    @TheTruthResearchers 2 місяці тому

    Fantastic!
    Many Thanks, Dear Sir❤

  • @brew2415
    @brew2415 15 днів тому

    This is the most amusing and illuminating thing I heard in a long time. Thank you announcer even if you are AI.

    • @The1920sChannel
      @The1920sChannel  14 днів тому

      Thank you! And I’m not AI, just for the record ;)

  • @Airborne-80
    @Airborne-80 9 днів тому

    Excellent video. Thank you

  • @jimstokes6742
    @jimstokes6742 2 місяці тому

    :) That was very well done! I've never heard it broken down into components & the differences btwn radio and live theater.

  • @d00vinator
    @d00vinator 2 місяці тому +1

    I made an even simpler radio receiver than the first one described when I was a kid. Instead of a crystal it used a safety pin and a razor blade. 😊

  • @johnmchugh8049
    @johnmchugh8049 11 днів тому

    Yes , old radio is awesome , there were even cool radio shows up until the 2000’s

  • @RADIUMGLASS
    @RADIUMGLASS Місяць тому

    I have two never played archive records from a Detroit radio station from the 1940s where you have to start the needle on the inside and it plays outward. their still in the original sealed packaging.

  • @ditto1958
    @ditto1958 2 місяці тому +1

    I’m not sure if it was your channel, but I’ve seen that first story before. Fascinating.

  • @PatriciaPalmer-o3e
    @PatriciaPalmer-o3e 11 днів тому

    💥 The Shadow Knows...later Fibber McFee and Molly, Jack Benny and George Burns and Gracie Allen. These old shows are hysterical and listening a treat ! Please try it !

  • @MarkBrantner
    @MarkBrantner 2 місяці тому

    I worked for WCRW 1240 AM Chicago which started broadcasting in 1926. The call letters stood for Clinton R White, the owner. Most call letters back then stoid for something.WGN was World's Greatest Newpaper ( The Chicago Tribune.)
    WLS stood for World's Largest Store (Sears, Roebuck &Co.)

    • @redtandem8483
      @redtandem8483 Місяць тому

      KFI. - ‘Farm Information’ now a top rated AM news channel in Los Angeles

  • @trishmcl9055
    @trishmcl9055 Місяць тому

    Cool 😎. I remember reading this stuff in school.

  • @kirbytrooper
    @kirbytrooper 28 днів тому

    if ur ever in east texas theres a texas broadcasting museum and they have a bunch of radios and broadcasting cameras

  • @jeffking4176
    @jeffking4176 2 місяці тому

    I have , in my collection, a radio made from the parts ordered from a Catalog, and a homemade cabinet.
    One single tube. Very simple. I have been told it’s ca: 1924+/-.
    Battery operated, so I’ve no way of trying it out. [ I have other radios from 1935, on, that I regularly use.].
    📻🙂

  • @davero9704
    @davero9704 2 місяці тому +1

    What made radio popular in the 20s was Bing Crosby and he was not mentioned. At least Paul Whiteman got in his two cents.

  • @DoctorBillTheRadioMan
    @DoctorBillTheRadioMan 2 місяці тому +1

    Oh Thunder !
    Shades of Foley Sound Effects.

  • @SteveMoser
    @SteveMoser Місяць тому

    This is great. Thanks!

  • @carl77242
    @carl77242 2 місяці тому

    I remember making a radio band called thanks to to information about how to make a radio station I was born in the early 40s

  • @donaldfeger91
    @donaldfeger91 2 місяці тому +1

    The guy talking radio sort today on the Internet

  • @LA-gq1lb
    @LA-gq1lb 4 дні тому

    Instant subscribe 😂

  • @kostis2849
    @kostis2849 Місяць тому

    2:44:20 Gloria SWANson duhhh
    The last piece about Jazz was very much spot-on

  • @hadleymanmusic
    @hadleymanmusic 5 днів тому

    With a radio like the one in the thumbnail yea

  • @you8164tube
    @you8164tube Місяць тому

    I am from Asia so a lot of things are a little behind. Therefore I went thru similar things described in this video.

  • @kennixox262
    @kennixox262 2 місяці тому +15

    I think that were the United Stated failed in broadcasting was making it a commercial medium. I think that the BBC in its day was better. That ship has sailed. What I find sad is that radio is pretty much dead. Have not listened to it since the 1990's. AM, with its wall-to-wall talk format is worthless. FM is not much better. I would even say that over the air TV is also pretty much a dead medium.

    • @Calc_Ulator
      @Calc_Ulator 2 місяці тому

      "What I find sad is that radio is pretty much dead."
      "Have not listened to it since the 1990's."
      Then how the fuck would you know it's dead? What a wildly stupid comment.
      "AM, with its wall-to-wall talk format is worthless. FM is not much better."
      As if you would know, you haven't listened in three decades!
      I can't imagine how many dumb comments you've left over the years.

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 Місяць тому +1

      Not here in Central Florida. There are tons of stations to listen to or watch, both TV and radio.

  • @bardsamok9221
    @bardsamok9221 21 день тому

    What a great idea would be is if someone acts uploaded an actual real 1920s radio session without talking over it. Now that is something with repeatability! Please consider it! Authentic radio.

  • @robertbruce7686
    @robertbruce7686 2 місяці тому

    As a radio ham feeds into my love for the dark art.....😂😂

  • @nighthiker8872
    @nighthiker8872 7 днів тому +1

    We need to bring this back, station you can turn on at 8:00-pm. To listen to a totally free speech station.
    From a pastor. 80% of what you hear on the radio, is B.S. and its gear to women. Who are unmarried with children.
    No matter where you live in America, same, commercials, want to fix your A.C. for free or give you free solar panels.

  • @kaleidoscopesthirdeyevizions
    @kaleidoscopesthirdeyevizions Місяць тому

    Very cool 😎

  • @kellykiernanray5745
    @kellykiernanray5745 Місяць тому

    Hello, I recently learned that my grandmother was a contralto singer in early radio in NJ on WAAT and other stations. Her stage name was Hilda Kay. Can you direct me to where I might find any recordings of her?

    • @The1920sChannel
      @The1920sChannel  Місяць тому

      Unfortunately there were only a handful of radio recordings in the 1920s because it was only in the experimental phase. If her career continued into the 1930s, there’s a slightly better chance, but even so only a small percentage of radio recordings were recorded then. You may be able to find her mentioned in radio magazines though, and you can find those on the world radio history website.

  • @nightrunner1456
    @nightrunner1456 7 днів тому +2

    What happen to Sunday morning church bells! as we work like slaves all week.

    • @nightrunner1456
      @nightrunner1456 7 днів тому +1

      We NEED TO HAVE REAL RADIO BACK, NOT CONTROL SPIN!

    • @nightrunner1456
      @nightrunner1456 7 днів тому +1

      We could bring this back in some areas. As members only box, with a modify box that also
      could record. Turn-on at 8:00-pm. portable if the power goes out.

  • @jalcobo
    @jalcobo Місяць тому

    Regional radio and even tv was such a cool and interesting thing. It is sad that it is all but dead now.

  • @BlueberryStinkFinger62
    @BlueberryStinkFinger62 2 місяці тому

    It would be nice just to hear the music

  • @MintIceCreamEnjoyer
    @MintIceCreamEnjoyer 2 місяці тому +3

    We lost the radio. It was a great medium, but nowadays the program became so bad that it is unusable...

  • @иванепифан-к8ж
    @иванепифан-к8ж Місяць тому

    С удовольствием посмотрел про ДРЕВНЕЕ РАДИО в Америке ! )) 73 ! Спасибо автору.

    • @GldnClaw
      @GldnClaw 27 днів тому

      Do you use subtitles or do you understand English?

    • @иванепифан-к8ж
      @иванепифан-к8ж 27 днів тому

      @@GldnClaw Yes... subtitles of course. But much is already clear. Anyone who conducts radio communications using a standard set of phrases in English for amateur radio communications will understand a little)) 73!

  • @thatstheguy07
    @thatstheguy07 Місяць тому

    Neat

  • @aDistantLight
    @aDistantLight Місяць тому

    The preacher could've just used a speaker phone instead of setting up an elaborate, expensive radio transmission/receiving rig. That would have saved his congregation a lot of money..

  • @RaveDave871
    @RaveDave871 Місяць тому +3

    Radio killed the vaudeville star ! 😥

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 2 місяці тому +1

    Your pronunciation of more obscure terms has improved markedly in the 7 or so years I've been watching!

  • @bucksdiaryfan
    @bucksdiaryfan 2 місяці тому

    If u stop and ponder it, it was never preordained that people would figure out that you could do mass entertainment broadcasts using radio. After all u were just broadcasting sound and there would have been no precedent for pure verbal entertainment, let alone verbal entertainment served to a mass audience

  • @elemenopi55
    @elemenopi55 2 місяці тому +5

    duquesne is pronounced doo-KAYn. it's french, or whatever.

    • @zacharyrome3432
      @zacharyrome3432 2 місяці тому

      Anybody who doesn't live in the Pittsburgh area or watch college basketball is probably not going to be able to pronounce it proper .

    • @holden190
      @holden190 2 місяці тому +1

      @@zacharyrome3432That’s why if you see an unfamiliar word it’s always good to check its pronunciation.

    • @floatpvnk
      @floatpvnk 2 місяці тому

      Doo que ess nee

  • @DarrylRuiz-s1w
    @DarrylRuiz-s1w 2 місяці тому

    Old time radio.is fascinating thanks!

    • @MarkBrantner
      @MarkBrantner 2 місяці тому

      It no longer exists. It's just a photo now

  • @hueyiroquois3839
    @hueyiroquois3839 2 місяці тому

    Racing fans whenever you mispronounce Carpentier.

  • @PiotrSiedlecki-qv2cd
    @PiotrSiedlecki-qv2cd Місяць тому

    Mój dziadek walczył wtedy w wojnie z komunistami

  • @UnDark1
    @UnDark1 2 місяці тому +2

    Fascinating. Sounds like our AI revolution today. Also radio tech has come so far.

    • @nrrork
      @nrrork 2 місяці тому

      No, radio changed things for the _better,_ huge difference.

  • @ДмитрийВербицкий-у7д

    Lee Helen Davis Brian Hall Gary

  • @nerdvana101
    @nerdvana101 7 днів тому

    Yeah because they never heard 1930s radio

  • @tonymartinez3058
    @tonymartinez3058 Місяць тому

    Dont talk! Let us listen

  • @SoothingSounds-kq6yg
    @SoothingSounds-kq6yg Місяць тому +1

    Why were they sitting in front of the radio, staring at it? Were they hoping it would turn into a television?
    They were thinking: "If only we had a tv set. Maybe we can mind-will it into a tv."

    • @edensdreams2890
      @edensdreams2890 Місяць тому

      I suppose it’s like focusing on a person who is speaking to you. We’re more used to listening to audio streamed from a recording or broadcast, but they’d be more used to focusing on a ‘speaker’, I’d think.
      Also - any pictures demonstrating people using a radio by… ignoring the radio, might not quite sell it for people who didn’t yet have a radio or understand what was going on with it, maybe.

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 Місяць тому

      You have zero imagination, don't ya?

  • @funwithmaverik
    @funwithmaverik 26 днів тому

    Narrator talks agonizingly slow, thumbs down

  • @ambigoush203
    @ambigoush203 2 місяці тому +2

    Dude I’m sorry I really want to listen to your videos but your cadence is unlistenable

    • @jerdonsbabbler3515
      @jerdonsbabbler3515 Місяць тому

      I really disagree. I think he’s doing a good job. At least he’s not a computer.

    • @ChatGPT1111
      @ChatGPT1111 Місяць тому

      Have you tried the speed feature in settings. Takes 5 seconds to change.

  • @morbidmanmusic
    @morbidmanmusic 20 днів тому

    'Enough of your yapping". It is AI..... stop.

  • @UQRXD
    @UQRXD Місяць тому

    Temm me that is not a real voice on this video. It is to grueling to listen to.