"On May 2, 1960, Dick Clark concludes his second day of testimony in the so-called Payola hearings—testimony that both saved and altered the course of his career. If Alan Freed, the disk jockey who gave rock and roll its name, was Payola’s biggest casualty, then Dick Clark was its most famous survivor"
www.history.com
Of course, we know that the payola investigations affected Top 40 radio and it appears that they impacted the tone and nature of the music industry for several years until the combination of Motown, The British Invasion and even The Beach Boys reinvigorated the genre and moved us away from novelty sounds like the Twist and the Bristol Stomp and MOR sounding songs like Bobby Vinton's remake of Blue Velvet.
Dick Clark survives the Payola scandal
On May 2, 1960, Dick Clark concludes his second day of testimony in the so-called Payola hearings—testimony that both saved and altered the course of his
Of course, we know that the payola investigations affected Top 40 radio and it appears that they impacted the tone and nature of the music industry for several years until the combination of Motown, The British Invasion and even The Beach Boys reinvigorated the genre and moved us away from novelty sounds like the Twist and the Bristol Stomp and MOR sounding songs like Bobby Vinton's remake of Blue Velvet.