- Messages
- 17,215
- Location
- New York City
There were a lot of these types of radio shows -- it was a minor fad in the late thirties. "The Goodwill Hour," "The Goodwill Court," "Alexander's Mediation Board," "The Voice Of Experience," etc etc. "The Jewish Board of Peace and Justice" was a lot of fun to listen to -- in the examples that survive, the program is conducted by this hard-boiled rabbi who takes no guff from anybody, and switches seamlessly between English and Yiddish in mid-sentence thruout the program. Most of the cases are pretty trivial -- in one that I've heard, this woman goes on at some length about a set of slipcovers she ordered but now doesn't want to pay for, and the storekeeper gets pretty fired up about it. The rabbi gets everybody settled down and tells her to pay her bill and go home. Very entertaining stuff once you figure out what's going on.
⇧ Good stuff.
Any comments on the birthing of FM - were AM station owners "seeding" the market or was something more going on? Were, possibly, radio makers behind it as a way to sell a whole new set of sets?