Almost nobody is alive that was around in 1921, and even fewer care.Many AM heritage stations got their start in 1921 and are still on the air. Is anyone keeping track of - and recordings of - these station's 100-year anniversary celebrations?
By that standard, no company or organization should ever celebrate a centennial.Almost nobody is alive that was around in 1921, and even fewer care.
Ancient Modulation is almost irrelevant now. Who, other than radio historians, cares?By that standard, no company or organization should ever celebrate a centennial.
Because the stations that do it right aren't celebrating a modulation method. They're celebrating a legacy of service to their communities.Ancient Modulation is almost irrelevant now. Who, other than radio historians, cares?
The best promotions for very old stations is along the lines of "we've been with Anytown all the way and we are with you just as strong today" reflecting on the Depression, WW II, Kennedy, the Civil Rights changes, covering "our new freeways" and "new suburbs" and things like that.Any station that has any sort of coherent 100-year history and doesn't bother to use it to leverage some promotion is missing out on a nice opportunity.
Now you sound like our old friend Julius, ragging on poor 1210 in Philadelphia!But a "dead station walking" like WCAU, despite being the first CBS station (bought to promote the Paley's cigar business!), just can't play age and tradition into a valuable commodity today.
The last time I visited KDKA's website they still had a lot of 100th anniversary material posted, including remembrances of a lot of their long-time hosts and on-air staff, timelines illustrating key moments in that station's history, etc. One thing I missed seeing were old shows from well-known hosts like Fred Honsberger, Mike Pintek and John Cigna. It'd have been nice to be able to give them a listen just for old times sake, but I never saw any posted. Pittsburgh is one of those cities where families go back generations, sometimes starting with grandparents or great grandparents who put down roots there when they first immigrated to the USA. Pride in their city and traditions runs deep so I'm sure there was a lot of interest in that city and community in KDKA's centennial.I don't know to what extent KDKA celebrated their 100th anniversary last year, having been recognized (allegedly) as the oldest commercial station. If anyone has any audio, please share. I just wish they had preserved the original KDKA studio, instead of razing it for a fast-food restaurant (if memory serves).
More than likely there were none of those recordings available.The last time I visited KDKA's website they still had a lot of 100th anniversary material posted, including remembrances of a lot of their long-time hosts and on-air staff, timelines illustrating key moments in that station's history, etc. One thing I missed seeing were old shows from well-known hosts like Fred Honsberger, Mike Pintek and John Cigna. It'd have been nice to be able to give them a listen just for old times sake, but I never saw any posted. Pittsburgh is one of those cities where families go back generations, sometimes starting with grandparents or great grandparents who put down roots there when they first immigrated to the USA. Pride in their city and traditions run deep so I'm sure there was a lot of interest in that city and community in KDKA's centennial.
Sad but most likely true. It seems television does a much better job at archiving and cataloging than radio.More than likely there were none of those recordings available.
There is no shortage of lost TV, on the network and local level. Preserving shows that wete on 2 inch tape was cost and storage space prohibitive. As an example, the Ruth Lyons show which originated at WLWT, Cincinnati and was on the air 5 days a week for 17 years has only a few short clips that have survived. The only full-length recording that is known to exist comes from a logger tape of the day of the JFK assassinations.Sad but most likely true. It seems television does a much better job at archiving and cataloging than radio.
Agreed, I wasn't referring to recordings of the day KDKA signed on and did it's first legal ID, I actually meant some of the shows and programming their best known hosts did in the 1970s through the 90s. Host who are no longer with us, but are still fondly remembered by listeners who are still around and might enjoy hearing 30 minutes or an hour of their stuff again as part of the centennial.Recording equipment barely existed in the 1920s. Reel-to-reel tape recorders weren't invented until almost 10 years after KDKA and KYW signed on. I guess teh only medium that did exist were acetate.
I'm sure that's true, but it seems that when someone from broadcast TV signs off for the last time, for instance, they usually have plenty of footage of them through the years for whatever reason (maybe from their personal archives). I recall seeing a youtube video of a 30 minute special a TV station in a smaller market put together as part of an anniversary celebration - They had tons of video of past newscasts, some going back a number of decades featuring various anchors and hosts, positioning slogans and logos they once aired during breaks, etc.There is no shortage of lost TV, on the network and local level. Preserving shows that wete on 2 inch tape was cost and storage space prohibitive.
Magnetic tape recording on paper tape was invented by the Germans in the 30's but made useful for speech and music using a synthetic backing during WW II and brought to the US after the surrender as "spoils of war".Recording equipment barely existed in the 1920s. Reel-to-reel tape recorders weren't invented until almost 10 years after KDKA and KYW signed on. I guess teh only medium that did exist were acetate.
In the same vein, over 50 years ago I asked my stepfather what Forest City Publishing had done with the files and memorabilia of WHK when they sold it to Kluge. Being the direct and rather abrupt person he was, he said, "we are not in the museum business. It went into the trash".I recently got a plaintive email from a friend at a Very Big, Very Well Known Station that's approaching its centennial. After the station's changed hands several times in recent years, there's no archival anything that's survived.
This is not an uncommon situation, sadly. What has survived over the years has almost never survived at the station ownership level. It's been individual air talent or production people saving their own stuff, or listeners doing their own archiving.