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- July 28, 1924SCIENCERadio Politics
-
-
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- William M. Butler, Campaign Manager of President Coolidge,
- announced that his candidate would not go on the stump, but would
- campaign by radio from the Capital. The radiocasters threw up
- their hands in supplication and distraction.
-
- "That makes it unanimous," they cried. "Now they've all said
- they would do it."
-
- Indeed the radiocasters were in a quandary and the campaign
- managers had put them there. The entire trouble is that the
- political managers are not scientists. An official of a large
- radio company, unnamed, gave out a press statement in which he
- said: "They are faced with the disappointment right there, for
- that cannot be done except in very limited instances.
-
- "In broadcasting on a national scale, we will have to fall
- back on the land wires of the American Telephone and Telegraph Co.
- as a basis. These wires will receive the speeches from the
- microphone, where it is set up, and take them to the cities from
- which they are to be broadcast, whereupon the local stations in
- those cities will put them on the air. In other words, the main
- wire channel is limited to what the American Telephone and
- Telegraph Company can provide. It has a service to maintain, and
- cannot throw overboard everything to give right of way to
- broadcasting."
-
- Then the radio man came forward with a sound suggestion -
- sound as politics and sound as radio wisdom:
-
- ". . . A speech which is aimed, for instance, at the
- industrial centres of the East would have little application to
- the campaign that will be made among the farm sections of the
- West.
-
- "It should, therefore, be confined to the local stations of
- the East. Arguments addressed to the farm issues, similarly,
- should be localized in that region. Where the broadcasting can be
- confined to one locality the problem will be greatly simplified.
- . . .Unless the broadcasting of politics is kept within
- reasonable bounds, the public will tire of it as soon as the
- novelty wears off. . . .
-
- "If the campaign managers will take the advice of those of
- us who have studied the problems of broadcasting, they will not
- attempt to put on the air long-winded political speeches. I have
- no hesitancy in saying that the ordinary political speech, as we
- have known it for years to be delivered from platforms in
- political campaigns, will not go at all with radio audiences.
- They will tune out in the middle of it and get some station that
- is sending jazz or a symphony concert."
-