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Radio's "first" contest... 100 years ago!

davideduardo

Moderator/Administrator
Staff member
Consultant Fred Jacobs has an interesting article in his July 31 newsletter. It's entitled "Radio's Last Contest" and it goes on to detail a contest held 100 years ago by Radio Broadcast magazine about "Who is to pay for broadcasting and how".

Among the contest responses: "... suggestions for how radio might pay for itself ran the gamut, including “slot machine radios.” Here’s the concept: You’d put in a nickel, the radio signal would “unscramble” for two hours of listening. What a deal!"

Read it all at:


And here is the original issue:


1722586378076.png
 
Among the contest responses: "... suggestions for how radio might pay for itself ran the gamut, including “slot machine radios.” Here’s the concept: You’d put in a nickel, the radio signal would “unscramble” for two hours of listening. What a deal!"
Would that by today's standard be considered NTR?
 
Before TV, many hotels and hospitals had pay-to-play coin-operated radios. In the 1940s, a quarter would get you one or two hours of radio.

0uNjYsTkWH5j9mtSubJszA.jpg
 
I kind of miss stations having fun contests. There are exceptions of course, but it seems like a lot of contests these days is pretty much reduced to texting a word as part of some national contest.

Working on digitzing boxes on old cassette tapes, it has been fun hearing some old contesting that was a little more creative...

In 1999, WFLZ 93.3 Tampa ran a “survival of the fittest” promotion where 5 listeners will be picked to ride the then new Gwazi wooden rollercoaster at Busch Gardens. The catch is the have to ride it 93 times in a row…whoever remains on the coaster after the 93 laps splits $5,000. The promo was pretty funny: Radio This Week Back Then #19: May 26-June 1

In 1982, as part of signing on the new top 40 format, KAYI 106.9 Muskogee-Tulsa "Kay 107"'s first promotion was to have listeners to tune to the station and rip the knob off — literally — and mail in the knob for a prize. Radio This Week Back Then #26: July 14-20
 
Before TV, many hotels and hospitals had pay-to-play coin-operated radios. In the 1940s, a quarter would get you one or two hours of radio.

0uNjYsTkWH5j9mtSubJszA.jpg
You'd think travelers who felt they needed radio entertainment during their hotel stays would pack a table radio with them.
 
Consultant Fred Jacobs has an interesting article in his July 31 newsletter. It's entitled "Radio's Last Contest" and it goes on to detail a contest held 100 years ago by Radio Broadcast magazine about "Who is to pay for broadcasting and how".

Among the contest responses: "... suggestions for how radio might pay for itself ran the gamut, including “slot machine radios.” Here’s the concept: You’d put in a nickel, the radio signal would “unscramble” for two hours of listening. What a deal!"

Read it all at:


And here is the original issue:


View attachment 7435


I'd love to hear the Bobby Ocean promo for this.

"Solve the problems of our industry and rip us off for five

(reverb: five)

hundred

(reverb: hundred)

dollars in cold hard CASH."
 
CJAY had a kissing contest. On the radio! You couldn't see it, and unless the contestants were really sloppy kissers, you couldn't hear it, either. (The video is a little NSFW, but not explicit.)

 
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