RADIO CRAZE
TOO MANY BROADCASTERS.
(Australian and N.Z. Cable Association.)
NEW YORK, Sept. 14. Radio experts, especially throughout the Eastern United States, fear the worst kind of jumbled conditions when the air is crowded with a multiplicity of new stations this autumn and winter. Several of the largest air advertisers have already presented farewell performances, because what is called “clean copy’’ is now impossible to obtain, since the ether jammed with beat tones and squeals. Sixty-five new stations have been licensed within four months, bringing the total of broadcasters to 563. These are jamming each other on tne air in an unprecedented fashion. The newspapers are tiring of playing nurse to the infant industry, which they feel has outgrown its swaddling clothes, and they are cutting out tree publicity, and also reducing their space devoted to radio.
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Bibliographic details
Greymouth Evening Star, 16 September 1926, Page 5
Word Count
137RADIO CRAZE Greymouth Evening Star, 16 September 1926, Page 5
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