This episode was originally released on 2/1/2018. While new episodes of Breaking Walls are on hiatus I'll be going back and posting the older episodes beginning with this episode on the birth of radio.
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Highlights:
* Why the Blizzard of 1888 played such an important role in the need for wireless telegraphy
* Who Was Heinrich Hertz? What experiment made him the father of Hertzian Waves?
* What Oliver Lodge, Nikola Tesla, Alexander Graham Bell, and Amos DollBear have in common
* Guglielmo Marconi, father of radio?
* The benefits to wireless telegraphy
* David Sarnoff — His start between 1900 - 1906
* Why the press want to get involved
* Lee Deforest — Inventor, Fraud, or both?
* What incredibly important event happened in December of 1901 in New Foundland
* Why the American Government wanted to regulate wireless telegraphy
* Reginald Fessenden, Christmas Eve, Oh Holy Night, and Brant Rock
* The Titanic Disaster — How it changed wireless telegraphy forever
* The Radio Box Memo
* What’s next?
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A tremendous thank you to today’s cast:
Samantha De Gracia
Olga Lysenko
Justin Peele
Nancy Pop
Fernando Sanabria
William Schallert &
John Stephenson
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The reading material used in today’s episode was:
• Inventing American Broadcasting 1899-1922 by Susan J. Douglas
• Empire of the Air by Tom Lewis
• A Pictorial History of Radio’s First 75 Years by B. Eric Rhoads
• Hello Everybody! The Dawn of American Radio by Anthony Rudel &
• The Network by Scott Woolley
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The interview clips in today’s open:
• Chuck Schaden, who’s interviews can be found at http://www.speakingofradio.com and
• Dick Bertel and the late Ed Corcoran’s Golden Age of Radio program that ran on Hartford, CT’s WTIC in the 1970s, who’s interviews can be found at http://otrrlibrary.org
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Todays’ introduction music of Clair de lune was arranged for harp and vibraphone by David DePeters and played by Elizabeth Hainen. You can pick up her album, Home: Works for Solo Harp on iTunes and Amazon, and listen on Spotify and Pandora. Her website is ElizabethHainen.com and she is on youtube @Elizabethhainenharp
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I’d also like to thank Walden Hughes and John and Larry Gassman of SPERDVAC - http://sperdvac.com/
That thank you also extends to the late Les Tremayne and late Jack Brown for their wonderful 1986 documentary series, Please Stand By: A History of Radio.