Abstract:

This article uses scaled entity search (SES), a data mining technique and interpretive framework, to analyze radio stations’ strategies of self-distinction and promotion within the broadcasting trade press. The authors model the technique by comparing the frequency of mentions of over two thousand call signs within the 1.5 million page digitized corpus of the Media History Digital Library. Using the ranked distribution of about two thousand results, the article compares the strategies of a top-trending station, WCCO Minneapolis, to those of stations at the twenty-fifth, fiftieth, and seventy-fifth percentile of results to achieve a bird’s-eye view of station advertising practices across a much larger field of practice than is possible with traditional close reading. Although the prominence of often dramatic and eye-catching advertisements in journals such as Broadcasting and Sponsor suggest that station advertising was a widespread industrial practice, SES indicates that the practice was primarily taken up by only the largest stations, those with (local and national) network affiliation, and those represented by highly active station intermediaries.

Keywords: Radio, Broadcasting, Historiography, Big Data, Regionalism

The study and preservation of American radio is in the midst of a renaissance. The foundational works of American radio history explored the significance of key policies,[2] the dominance of the national networks,[3] the programs carried by those networks,[4] and the influence of the medium on listeners and American culture.[5] Recently, media historians have built upon this body of scholarship by complicating and expanding upon our understanding of radio as an industry and cultural form. Cynthia B. Meyers’s A Word from Our Sponsor explores the pivotal role of advertising agencies in producing golden age American radio.[6] In Points on the Dial: Golden Age Radio beyond the Networks, Alexander Russo “challenge[s] the image of radio during the network era as monolithic and static” and calls on scholars to pay more attention to the dynamic role of local stations within the industry.[7] He argues, “there is much more work that needs to be done to explain how local broadcasters operate as local entities, how their practices extend into the national and the global, and how they produce experiences that register as meaningful to listeners on multiple levels.”[8] The Radio Preservation Task Force (RPTF), launched in 2014 by Christopher Sterling and Josh Shepperd, is an ambitious new initiative making progress toward this end. By facilitating collaborations between archivists and scholars, the RPTF is at the forefront of preserving, documenting, and studying local radio programming.[9]

We seek to contribute to this recent turn in radio historiography by modeling how data mining techniques can be used to create a broad comparative infrastructure for better understanding the heterogeneity of local broadcast station practices. As a test case, we employ digital tools to analyze stations’ construction and promotion of their markets via trade journal advertising. To appreciate why a station would advertise or seek publicity in a national trade paper, one needs to understand the basic business model of commercial broadcasting in the 1930s, ’40s, and ’50s. Stations sold airtime to sponsors, and, in some cases, they were local sponsors (the Cook Paint and Varnish Company owned and operated a Kansas City radio station, WHB, for seventeen years).[10] However, stations were also keen to secure the business of national sponsors, which generally either bought time on the networks (which allowed for the reaching of most or all affiliate stations at once) or purchased spot advertising (which enabled reaching audiences on a selective basis by market). The spot advertising marketplace offered a profit center for local stations, which retained a larger percentage of revenue from spot sales than the network advertisements they aired, and supported a coterie of intermediaries called station representatives, who acted as middlemen in the transactions between local stations and national advertisers.[11] Within this industry environment, stations were incentivized to distinguish themselves from their competitors and increase their sales of spot advertising. Trade papers, read by industry insiders, offered one method for stations to achieve this distinction. But what types of stations were most likely to pursue this method? And what strategies did they employ within the trade press to make markets meaningful to advertisers, station representatives, and other industry figures? To pursue these questions, we turned to data mining.

Utilizing the Arclight software application and a process called scaled entity search (SES), we queried 2,002 station call signs within the 1.5 million-page corpus of the Media History Digital Library (MHDL), which includes lengthy runs of several broadcasting journals, including Radio Digest, Radio Mirror, Broadcasting, and Sponsor. Much like Twitter analytics, Arclight and SES can help scholars identify “trending” people, companies, and content in media industries publications and discourse. A public version of the Arclight software will soon be available, allowing users to run scaled entity searches to generate data and visualizations.[12]

SES combines two facets: a technical procedure for generating results, and an interpretive framework for analyzing those results. The interpretive framework stresses three elements of the search process—the entities, the corpus, and the digital—as well as the relationships among them. This framework structures the first half of this article, which discusses call letters as search entities, the MHDL as corpus, and SES as a process of critical digitization. The second half of this article discusses our case study and results. One of the chief benefits of Arclight and SES is the comparative perspective they offer by virtue of scale. Although media history scholarship is dominated by the case study, these studies’ generalizability is not always acknowledged. SES offers a partial corrective to this problem by offering a mechanism for contextualizing case studies within the broader film and broadcasting publishing landscape. Using data mining techniques, we chose a prominent, outlying station as our case study—WCCO Minneapolis, a midsize market station that received industry attention quantitatively comparable to a New York or Chicago station—and used the SES method to develop a comparative framework that allowed us to check that station’s coverage against that of stations across the entire spectrum of North American broadcasting outfits. While tracing WCCO through the MHDL enabled us to develop a sense of how local broadcasters used the industry press to position themselves favorably to advertisers and other participants within the industry, using SES to compare WCCO to other key stations suggests that such direct engagement with the trade press was not a majority practice, with certain kinds of stations far more likely to participate than others.

This ability to provide a framework for comparison nearing grand—and, potentially, comprehensive—scale, enables what we might call “computationally contextualized” case studies. To determine the representativeness or singularity of our case, we can employ comparative analysis made possible by simultaneously situating our case against thousands of others (in our example, other stations)—an undertaking nearly unthinkable without the aid of digital tools. Furthermore, by seeking remarkable historical players and patterns from a quantitative standpoint, rather than allowing preexisting canons and narratives to obscure the unexpected, we can explore broader patterns that previous scholarship has left underexamined. This comparative approach—which both reveals unexpected new avenues of research and allows for comprehensive comparison to deepen the quality and scope of our claims—requires a keen understanding of the entities being compared at the beginning of the SES process.

The Entities: Station Identification

Prior to 1912, wireless operators’ use of call letters to identify the destination and origination of messages was haphazard and idiosyncratic. Call signs ranged from one to three letters and often lacked any semantic or systematic meaning.[13] An International Radiotelegraphic Convention was held in 1912 as part of a series of measures to facilitate open communication between station operators. Convention delegates scrapped existing call signs to create a new three-letter system that carved up the alphabet into sets of consecutive combinations and assigned them to different countries based on their perceived need.[14] The United States was allotted signs beginning with N and W, as well as stations from KDA to KZZ (inclusive).[15] With a few exceptions, early US policy reserved N-- call signs for the Navy, W-- call signs for commercial stations on the Atlantic coast and Gulf of Mexico, and K-- call signs for commercial stations on the Pacific coast and Great Lakes.[16]

With these arrangements in place, station call letters quickly became “big data.” Though only five licensed AM stations were in operation at the start of 1921, this number grew to over 500 stations by 1923. The same figure rose to almost 700 in the ensuing decade, before falling by roughly 15 percent during the Great Depression and rebounding once again to about 830 stations by 1940. Ten years later, the broadcasting landscape included over 2,000 AM stations, more than 700 FM stations, and almost 100 TV stations—each of which had a unique term of identification that made it highly searchable across any heterogeneous corpus.[17]

While regulations charged radio inspectors to “use their discretion in the award of calls, avoiding, of course, duplications,” it is unclear whether early licensees had any input regarding specific combinations to correspond with their location, frequency, or name. Station lists indicate little perceptible correspondence between call letters and station identity, suggesting that even if allowed (unlikely), “vanity” call letters were uncommon. Furthermore, when increased demand resulted in the expansion of call signs to four letters, broadcast license reports indicate that the FCC distributed calls through an orderly, alphabetical system.[18] This policy appears to have shifted sometime in the 1920s, when stations were permitted to request available call letters to suit their marketing interests. Custom call signs became common, and might refer to a station’s location (WACO), owner (Omaha World-Herald’s KOWH), frequency (KLVI, a Beaumont, TX, station broadcasting at 56 kHz), or slogan (KPIG at “107 Oink 5”).[19] While these call signs helped stations insert their brand into their mandated on-air station identifications, others chose calls that would simply be easy to remember (WHEN and WAGE were both tied to the same Syracuse station). As addressed below, this interest in vanity calls impacts our ability to undertake computerized analysis.

The systematic assignment of call letters to local stations was a crucial factor in our decision to apply SES to broadcasting history. Frequently, data mining projects must engage in complex and imperfect disambiguation processes to sort data associated with identical terms, but different referents (e.g., Broadcasting the publication and “broadcasting” the practice).[20] Because station call letters are largely—though, as noted, not completely—unambiguous, they indicate their referent stations relatively reliably in a sea of data as large as the corpus of the MHDL. Using The 1948 Radio Annual, Kit Hughes generated a list of 2,002 unique station IDs along with associated metadata about each station, such as its city, wattage, frequency, network affiliation, and owner. This resulted in a list of unique named entities—each of which could be queried in the MHDL corpus.

The Corpus: Radio Periodicals and the Media History Digital Library

The Radio Annual, which we used to develop our list of 2,002 station IDs, was a product of the robust publishing business that grew alongside the American broadcasting industry.[21] The N. W. Ayer & Son’s Newspaper Annual Directories contain entries for 241 periodicals related to “radio” or “wireless” that emerged between 1920 and 1950 (likely a low figure).[22] In the MHDL, station call letters appear most frequently in general-readership magazines—where they occurred primarily in the context of program listings—and industry trade papers. While both of these genres underwent significant changes between the early 1920s and the early 1930s, our present research questions focus on the industry trades. Understanding these periodicals, and how they changed over time, provides crucial context for interpreting search results.

The first radio trade papers were heavily focused around merchandising, with titles such as The Radio Dealer (established 1922), Radio Retailer and Jobber (established 1922), and the Western Radio and Refrigeration Journal.[23] These retail-oriented trade papers were joined by a new breed of radio publication in the 1930s and 1940s—for example, Broadcasting (established 1931), Radio Daily (established 1937), and Sponsor (established 1946)—that cared more about selling advertising and programming than they did about radios and refrigerators. From their point of view, the key marketplace transactions occurred between advertisers and stations—often through intermediary station representatives. Whereas The Radio Dealer was quick to object to sales methods that bypassed the retailer, the new trade papers condemned any developments that threatened the rapidly growing businesses of advertising sales and program production.[24] Broadcasting, based in Washington, DC, was especially critical of government regulation of the radio industry.[25] Its strong credibility and large readership among advertisers made it an ideal site for self-promoting stations looking to find more sponsors.

Other key genres of radio magazines included technical journals (e.g., Radio Engineering and Radio Manufacturer), radio hobbyist magazines (e.g., CQ and QST), and magazines published by individual stations (e.g., the Kansas City–based station WHB’s magazine, Swing). More scholarship can and should trace the history and influence of these and other magazines. However, for the purposes of our analysis, our focus remains on trade journals. We also acknowledge that the MHDL’s collection is much stronger in some areas than others, and that digital availability has influenced our decisions about which types of journals to concentrate on. As of 2015, the MHDL is fairly robust in its holdings of broadcasting yearbooks (The Radio Annual, 1938–1964), trade papers (Broadcasting, 1931–1945, 1949–1963 and Sponsor, 1946–1963), and general interest magazines (Radio Digest, 1923–1933, Radio Stars, 1933–1938, and Radio Mirror, 1933–1963).[26]

The MHDL is more limited, however, with regard to radio technical journals and hobbyist magazines. Although the MHDL’s runs of Radio Age (1922–1927) and Radio Broadcasting (1922–1930) contain material related to hobbyists and the medium’s technological development, the MHDL and its partners have not yet digitized the most significant radio-hobbyist and technical publications from the 1930s–1950s. Fortunately, many of these journals have been scanned by David Gleason for his remarkable digital library, AmericanRadioHistory.com. However, we were unable to include AmericanRadioHistory.com’s scanned magazines in our analysis because Arclight’s workflow depends on files being stored on the Internet Archive (used by the MHDL, Library of Congress Packard Campus, and Library of American Broadcasting for data hosting and preservation). The significance of these data storage decisions becomes clearer in the next section, which offers a more detailed explanation of scaled entity search and the Arclight app.

The Digital: Scaled Entity Search

Scaled entity search enables “distant reading” of a corpus (in our case, the MHDL) through the lens of chosen data points (the station calls). SES can search thousands of entities at once, maintaining the benefits of search—precision data mining informed by domain expertise—while muting some of search’s most pressing failings—confirmation bias, destruction of context, and filtering of contrary evidence. In addition to comparing individual stations as they trend through time and across sources, SES allows us to learn more about the corpus itself and the perspective and scope of individual magazines.

Our design of SES is informed by a desire to increase nonexpert access to digital tools. We understand access in terms of transparency and adaptability to humanities concerns as well as tools’ distribution and interface usability. To engage concerns over digital methods’ “black boxes,” we pursued a technical method based on counting rather than the increasingly sophisticated algorithms that have gained favor in topic modeling and other data mining practices. Using a more basic technical system introduces different problems, such as the increased need to preprocess data (which we address below). Because of the transparent and self-reflexive nature of SES, however, we believe it is a good introduction to the promise and pitfalls of digital analysis for those unfamiliar with humanities computing. Our particular experiences in the development and use of SES support the notion that struggling with the structural limitations of research is not reserved for “analog humanities” but is a constitutive element of digital work.

As a process, SES works in multiple stages. First, users compose an entity list of the terms they wish to search for—in our case, the call letters of 2,002 stations. Users input this list into the Arclight software app. The software then queries each individual entity through the MHDL search index, Lantern, just as if a user had entered a keyword in a search box. For each entity entered, the app returns crucial metadata relating to each term (the number of page hits per year and those same page hits expressed as a percentage of the total digitized pages from a given year). Arclight provides this information to the user in a Comma Separated Value (CSV) file that can be graphed and visualized in standard spreadsheet software. Arclight also visualizes the data as an interactive line graph (complete with links to the original hits).[27]

This technical process is only the first half of SES. The second process utilizes an interpretive framework designed to help scholars remain critical about their results. Even a bird’s-eye view of the entities and journals can be quite overwhelming, given the potential scale of SES queries; the interpretive framework assists scholars in managing this scale and qualifying their claims. Developed as a series of questions focused on the three major elements of the SES process (the entities, the corpus, and the digital—here, the station calls, broadcast trade journals, and Arclight), the framework ideally progresses from each of these process points to the next, reflecting on how different factors (e.g., choices made when constructing entity lists, fallibility of optical character recognition, copyright) shape the questions we can ask and how we might interpret our results. It is also crucial to attend to the relationships between these fields, such as the disambiguation of the entity list required by digital analytics.[28] Ultimately, the interpretive framework seeks to reinforce the accessibility of SES to researchers concerned with managing uncertainty and qualifying claims by making the limitations of the technical method as transparent as possible.

While this interpretive method points to new questions we must consider when undertaking digital analytical research, it also invokes problems embedded in “analog” forms of research, such as managing a fluctuating corpus. Furthermore, it pushes users to consider the extent to which our work is already constituted by digital technologies and the ways in which the tools we currently use, such as search algorithms and article databases like JSTOR, shape our research. Indeed, much of the above discussion of call signs was shaped by the public availability of digital resources, from amateur historians using the web to coordinate research efforts on a complex and geographically distributed problem, to the digitization efforts of various government and educational institutions such as the FCC and HathiTrust. While these sources may make research easier, faster, and more accessible to a wider group of users, we must be careful not to let digital accessibility overshadow information contained within more difficult-to-access sources. By constantly examining the role of digital technologies in the research we undertake and distribute, we can better account for the forces that weigh on our arguments—no matter the technological form of our data.

Computational Context for WCCO: Broadcasting History’s “Top-Trending” Stations

We now turn to the results of our scaled entity searches, focusing our attention on the top 100 most-discussed stations (see appendix 1). We hoped to use our SES results to identify predicted patterns (to test the relative accuracy of the method) as well as locate any outliers that might point to potentially interesting case studies. Our list of the top 100 stations required a certain amount of processing to discount false positives (i.e., hits prior to stations’ founding) and unacceptably ambiguous results. These included around fifty “vanity” call letters and common English words or names (WITH returned nearly a million hits, while the unambiguous KDKA returned only 8,386). We had no choice to but to discard these stations. SES is not equipped to handle potentially important but ambiguous entities (WITH, for example, self-advertised heavily in both Broadcasting and Sponsor). However, for the purposes of our analysis—for which we were interested in developing a broad sketch of how stations’ strategies of self-distinction appeared across the wider local radio landscape (rather than, for example, identifying every major self-promoting station)—the loss of roughly 2.5 percent of our entities should not unduly interfere with our results.[29]

As expected, many stations topping the list served major mid-twentieth-century markets (Chicago, Philadelphia, New York):

Table 1. Top 20 Results of Station Call-Sign Scaled Entity Search
StationMarketSignificant Network Affiliation(s), 1926–1963Page Hits
KDKAPittsburghNBC8,386
KYWPhiladelphiaNBC7,989
WBBMChicagoCBS7,752
WBZ-WBZABostonNBC–N.E. Regional7,644
WLSChicagoNBC, ABC7,339
KHJLACBS, Mutual–Don Lee6,787
WGNChicagoMutual, NBC, CBS6,479
WSBAtlantaNBC6,393
WGYSchenectadyNBC6,317
WCCOMinneapolisCBS6,307
KFILANBC6,302
KGOSan FranciscoNBC, ABC6,253
WFAADallasNBC, ABC, Texas Quality6,177
WMAQChicagoNBC, CBS5,903
WNEWNew York5,863
WHASLouisvilleNBC, CBS5,614
WJRDetroitNBC, CBS5,549
WRCDCNBC5,441
WSMNashvilleNBC5,280
WGRBuffaloCBS, NBC5,154

Not only were almost all top-ranked stations each affiliated with a major network during a significant portion of the study’s timeframe, many in the top twenty were owned and operated by one of the networks (e.g., KYW, WMAQ, WBZ). Furthermore, many of these stations reached early clear-channel status—protection from nearby interference and permission to broadcast at high power, generally fifty thousand watts, to reach a more geographically dispersed audience.

Other shared characteristics complicate our ability to analyze differences across all of the stations’ results. The first of these is age. Older stations, because they appear in more volumes and annual reports, tend to cluster at the top of rankings. The second is stations’ extension of their radio call signs to their television operations: WLS-TV, for instance. Arclight returns both WLS and WLS-TV for the “WLS” entity, artificially increasing the number of hits for radio stations that lent their calls to television stations. Visualizations—such as a line graph charting each station over time—could help identify stations affected by this problem, since calls used for both radio and television would likely exhibit a bump or sustained rise in the 1940s and 1950s as license holders diversified their broadcast operations.

The overall instability of station IDs presents additional problems when attempting to isolate instances of a unique entity. While some stations, such as KDKA or WSB, might retain their call letters due to their prestige and marketing value, others might likewise change their IDs to reflect shifts in ownership or new branding efforts. The AM station known today as WCBS began broadcasting in 1924 in New York City as WAHG. Shortly after its inception, owner Alfred H. Grebe petitioned the FCC to change the call sign to WABC (letters which up to that time described a station in Anderson, Indiana, owned by the Fulwider-Grimes Battery Company) to reflect the name of his company, the Atlantic Broadcasting Company. Although CBS purchased the station in 1929, it was not until 1946 that WABC switched its call letters once again, this time to indicate its alignment with the network and distinguish itself from its newest chain competitor, ABC, founded in 1943 (the Springfield, Illinois, station to that point known as WCBS changed its call sign to WCVS). As this example indicates, it was not uncommon for a station to change its call, often leading to changes in station IDs across the dial. As a result, even when we can pinpoint hundreds of call letters that have no relation to existing English words or sibling television stations, we must still confront issues of disambiguation. These are the very types of limitations that SES’s interpretive focus on “entities” highlights. Because disambiguation of this kind would be incredibly difficult to achieve through any sort of automated process, this becomes a site of vital human intervention.

After exploring the rough contours of our SES metadata, we turned to a more human scale of analysis: the case study. We hoped to compare the bird’s-eye view of SES calculations with on-the-ground analyses of the original materials. WCCO Minneapolis possesses many of the characteristics shared by the top-ranked stations listed above. Founded as WLAG in 1922, the station adopted its current call sign, WCCO—standing for Washburn-Crosby Company—in 1924, placing it among the earlier stations on our list.[30] Although WCCO affiliated with the NBC Red network in 1928, it shifted allegiances only four years later, when it was purchased by CBS. WCCO bore the mantle of owned-and-operated (“O&O”) status until 1954, when CBS relinquished control to comply with ownership regulations (WCCO remains a CBS affiliate). In addition to serving as an O&O for over two decades, WCCO has been a clear-channel station—operating at fifty thousand watts—since at least 1932.[31] Despite these shared similarities, WCCO stands apart from many of the other stations at the top of the list given its location in a relatively smaller Midwest market. Using WCCO as our case study, we hoped to balance our interests in what pushes a station to prominence—the factors that contribute to “trending”—with what might distinguish WCCO as different.

Even when narrowing our focus to one station, the scale of our data continued to pose difficulties. Over six thousand pages across the MHDL mention WCCO. Following Lev Manovich and his colleagues at the Software Studies Initiative, we asked how we might—with more modest ambition—compare these several thousand images.[32] Although Manovich combines automated analysis of image characteristics like shading and detail with visualizations that depict the entire dataset—in his example, over one million pages—we found that Lantern’s search feature, which provides a thumbnail preview of up to one hundred pages simultaneously, gave us enough “distance” to identify patterns and distinguish station advertisements from the rest of the data.

We developed a series of research questions that required a return to the text with traditional close reading: (1) What “strategies of distinction” did WCCO use to position itself and its market within the trade press? (2) In which publications did such advertisements most frequently appear? (3) Did strategies shift depending on the journal—and consequently the audiences that advertisements hoped to reach? And finally, but most significantly in terms of the potential contribution of digital methods like SES, (4) how did WCCO’s practices compare to the rest of the local station landscape?[33] In other words, were station advertisements—one of the primary ways stations could directly increase their standing in our SES results—an important factor in station trending rates?

WCCO, “The Paul Bunyan Buy!”

Trade advertisements account for 455 of the 6,225 page mentions of WCCO across the MHDL corpus. In Broadcasting and Sponsor—the two journals most frequently featuring such ads—they amount to roughly 14 percent of WCCO mentions. Both before and after WCCO affiliated (and, later, became an O&O), most of the advertisements featured the station itself, promoting its geographical reach, talent, and popularity with local audiences. Often, the same campaigns were split across Sponsor and Broadcasting, with ads in annuals and Variety conforming more to each journal’s house style.

Following WCCO’s partnership with CBS, the station became incorporated in many advertisements for CBS Radio Sales (later CBS Spot Sales), the network’s advertising service that allowed sponsors to precisely place ads in local markets, choosing the time of day and the program during which their ad would appear.[34] This corresponds to how WCCO-TV appeared across the MHDL, both in single-station ads and in advertisements for Free & Peters (later Peters, Griffin, Woodward, Inc.)—their station representatives, the intermediaries who developed local markets and worked with advertisers and sponsors to place their ads.[35] WCCO also appeared in advertisements for technical equipment and syndicated programming as a sort of testimonial to the product’s success, albeit rarely. The utility of WCCO’s call letters to these diverse users and institutions contributed to its proliferation in the corpus, representing about 20 percent of their advertising hits.

By looking at the journals in which these ads tend to appear, we can develop a better sense of how WCCO and its representatives thought of its other audience—not the listeners at home, but the advertisers, sponsors, and other business leaders interested more in the station’s performance than its programming. Although Broadcasting returned almost 400 percent more total hits for WCCO than Sponsor (2520 vs. 551), advertisements were split comparatively evenly between Sponsor (168) and Broadcasting (255), with a handful appearing across Variety (16), U.S. Radio (10), and The Radio Annual (6).[36] What strategies did WCCO and its representatives use to appeal to industry professionals? How did they distinguish WCCO and its market amid the increasing national scale of broadcast operations? Below, we discuss three major strategies of self-promotion—facts and figures, local identity, and local relationships—used by stations and their representatives to gain distinction amid an increasingly crowded media landscape.

The most prevalent strategy spanning the three decades of WCCO advertisements under analysis is an emphasis on facts and figures. This includes ratings, receiving sets, population, spot rates, retail market and summer spending dollars, and market share. Drawing on their own accounting (e.g., letters received) as well as ratings and diary reports from ratings companies such as Hooper, Nielsen, and Benson and Benson Inc., WCCO centered campaigns around the popularity of their programs and the large size and economic power of their audiences.[37] This emphasis on quantifying audiences coincided with broadcasters’ persistent push, beginning in the 1930s, to develop accurate accounting systems for their audiences that could rival magazine circulation numbers.[38] We might also consider this approach in relation to “hard sell” advertising strategies, which assumed the rational decision making of audiences and thus sought to provide straightforward (in this instance, quantifiable) “reason-why” copy that emphasized how the product in question suited audiences’ needs.[39]

Often, these advertisements tuck figures into an umbrella campaign, such as WCCO’s “Good Neighbor to the Northwest” series, which featured whimsical graphics alongside short stories describing the appeal of WCCO programs (sports, school closing information, news, farm entertainment) to their audience. In the 1943 “Most-Crowded Newsroom in the Northwest,” for example, a description of the history of news programming on WCCO was also sure to mention the almost four million “Northwest folks” who had depended on WCCO for the previous nineteen years.[40] Other campaigns focused almost entirely on the figures themselves.[41] One long-running early 1960s campaign forgoes any sort of narrative appeal to emphasize WCCO’s high market share. In these ads, it is not unusual for numbers to become the primary graphic interest, suggesting to the reader that the “facts” speak for themselves.[42] In addition to audience-focused facts and figures, one other number routinely appears in WCCO ads: fifty thousand—the maximum wattage (power) of a clear-channel station. The repetition of “50,000” in station advertisements and CBS network advertisements emphasizing their stable of full-power stations situated WCCO as a powerful and prestigious behemoth that could reach massive audiences (and “where it counts most,” i.e., in the most lucrative markets).[43] The incredible reach of those fifty thousand watts is reinforced in many ads through maps that depict radio signals spanning state lines and dispersed localities, visibly building and binding a market otherwise conjured primarily through numbers.[44]

As the example of this map suggests, although sponsors investing in spot buying were interested in the size of a station’s potential audience, they were also concerned with the specific attributes of a given market. Early ratings systems like Hooper’s brief telephone surveys and Nielsen’s Audimeter were unsuited to providing qualitative data about audience demographics; establishing markets’ qualitative value became the work of station representatives. As Alexander Russo details, these workers—tasked with marketing stations, audiences, and markets to potential sponsors through projects like these advertisements—were responsible for drawing the boundaries of local markets and making them meaningful within the broadcasting industry.[45]

While the “facts and figures” noted above represented one avenue by which representatives might use certain knowledge forms to establish and classify stations’ markets, another prevalent strategy for WCCO was drawing on preestablished local culture and identity. One of the station’s major campaigns built on the myth of Paul Bunyan, aligning WCCO’s accomplishments with tales of the giant’s astounding feats to establish the station’s size and power while at the same time alluding to the “folksy” identity of the surrounding farm areas. With many of the ads depicting the production of local commodities (pigs, eggs, chickens, dairy, wheat, corn, ducks, fish) on a Bunyanesque scale, WCCO distinguished itself from other large markets by emphasizing the vast natural resources of the Northwest, “a land of giant earnings.”[46] Likewise, using a sleight of hand by which WCCO aligned Paul Bunyan with the Northwest and aligned themselves with both—suggesting “Northwest radio and WCCO Radio are, in truth, practically synonymous”—WCCO positioned itself as the only viable access point to the market’s vast, resource-rich audiences. “If you would do big things in Paul Bunyanland, remember that it takes a giant to do a giant’s job. You need the Northwest’s 50,000-watt giant ... WCCO RADIO.”[47] By establishing the “Northwest Market” as unique, station representatives helped to define a particular audience commodity and legitimated the value of their own services as a means for sponsors to engage successfully with populations bounded by the geography of WCCO’s reach.

Myths, of course, are slippery—especially when invoked to provide meaning to otherwise undefined audiences—and Paul Bunyan, known for spanning the entire country with his outsized exploits, is perhaps even more flexible and open to appropriation than most. Indeed, several stations took up the folklore hero’s name in their trade advertisements. KOIN-TV (Oregon and southern Washington, 1954), KIRO (Seattle and Tacoma, 1949), WBRE (Wyoming, 1952), and the Hildreth stations, WABI, WAGM, and WPOR (Bangor, Presque Isle, and Portland, Maine, 1959), all made use of Bunyan in one of their ads, touting the “gigantic” size of a new TV tower, the “mighty big” size of their operations, and the “giant proportions” of their coverage area.[48] Bunyan even lent his name to a regional network in northern Wisconsin and Michigan; in addition to a single 1949 ad in Broadcasting mapping out the members and geography of its stations, the Paul Bunyan Network (radio and TV) ran twenty-eight ads in Broadcasting between 1959 and 1963.[49] Although several ads alluded to Bunyan’s size, the majority focused instead on owner Les Biederman, touting his trustworthy, enthusiastic, community-oriented personality and even his refurbished boat:[50]

Nevertheless, Bunyan enabled Biederman to metaphorically bind together several stations spanning expansive geographies. Bunyan’s broad and continuing popularity as a self-branding device for a wide variety of stations across the northern United States indicates to some extent the arbitrary nature of stations’ attempts to make their markets meaningful by drawing on useful cultural properties. It indicates the potential utility of “regional” folklore as one key avenue of distinction, even when Bunyan’s storied roaming did not allow for exclusivity.

The final strategy taken up in WCCO advertising comprised station testimony regarding its close relationship with its listeners and their ensuing loyalty to WCCO stars (and sponsors). The “Good Neighbor to the Northwest” series mentioned above, for example, positioned WCCO as a valued companion to its listeners known for its neighborliness and emotional proximity—notifying them of school closings, cheering on the local sports teams, filling the “grim” early hours of farm work with “chatter and cheerful noise,” and providing important news.[51] Other advertisements used mail volume and calls as metrics for the station’s value to the local community.[52] WCCO-TV campaigns later intensified this claim, positioning the television as “the other member of the family,” literally transforming the set into a child.[53]

Since the primary users of spot advertising were national sponsors hoping to “localize” their messages, WCCO’s claim to a special relationship with their listeners made for appealing advertising copy.[54] In combining this strategy with those above, WCCO argued that it was not only its massive reach but its affective bond with a unique and valuable market that made the station an important local buy for sponsors.

Rereading WCCO (from Paul Bunyan’s Level): The Wider Computational Context of Local Station Advertising

While our WCCO case study provides necessary detail with regard to what station advertising campaigns actually looked like—as they were used by a major player in the trade press located through our initial SES calculations—it leaves us with more questions than can be answered with the above close-reading methods. How, for example, do WCCO’s practices fit into the wider phenomenon of station trade press advertising? Can we take our case study as representative? Or does it represent an unusual outlier? For this—situating our case study within the complex sets of practices of local broadcasting as a whole—we must toggle back once again to the bird’s-eye view afforded by Arclight.

As noted, the CSV file produced by Arclight provides a list of all 2,002 stations ranked by the amount of attention they received in the MHDL. Although not limited to trade journals (the results include fan magazines and other MHDL genres), the list provides a comparative hierarchy—additional computational context—that we can use to gauge stations against one another. To determine the representativeness of WCCO’s engagement with journal advertising, we compared its practices to stations at the twenty-fifth, fiftieth, and seventy-fifth percentiles of our results. In each instance we looked at “peer clusters” of stations: small groups of six to ten stations with similar numerical results. Because the ranking is only a rough guide—considering the limitations of the entities, corpus, and digital mentioned above—using groups rather than single stations helps protect against taking singular or unusual stations as broadly representative of stations that appear at certain rank levels. In choosing WCCO, we became interested in outliers; in using SES to determine questions of shared practices and characteristics, we attempt to avoid them. We also compared WCCO to WSG and KFI, the two stations that immediately border the station at the very upper limits of our rankings. Ultimately, we compared WCCO to twenty-four other stations strategically chosen for their place within the full distribution of station mentions.

Table 2. 50th Percentile Stations*

*Described by total hits in trade journals carrying ads and total number of station advertisements found.

Total Hits, MHDLBroadcastingAnnualsSponsorVarietyU.S. RadioSingle- Station AdsOther Ads
WQUA3141941001700220
WTTS314115872047900
WABZ3141247170200
WHBI316126991943010
WDVA317137142300800
WKWK317135156114101
WSTC318136134301930
WFIN31813011197900
WITA31841435106000
WDLP319186115841013

Starting in the middle of our results and working out, it quickly becomes clear that most stations probably did not make significant use of station trade-journal advertisements. Indeed, an analysis of our bottom peer cluster (WAVU, WTBC, WTRR, WHBO, KXLQ, and WAGC, each of which boast 168 hits) reveals that only one, KXLQ, appeared in station advertisements. Furthermore, KXLQ (Bozeman, Montana) did not appear in single-station ads, but only in advertisements for a Pacific Northwest network, the “XL Stations” (so-called for the XL in their call signs, which ranged between seven and nine stations in the 1940s and ’50s). Closer examination of page returns of peer cluster stations—which, despite their numerical similarity, often gathered “hits” in diverse ways—also provides further clues to factors that influence trending, from lawsuits and FCC trouble (WFIN, WDLP) to heavy promotion of public service programs (WDVA), and OCR (optical character recognition) problems (WITA). Peer-cluster comparison points to the utility of metadata in quickly identifying stations likely to bear certain characteristics. For example, the higher the ratio of station mentions in Broadcasting to annuals, the more likely stations are to participate in advertisements (it also helps us weed out the false positives of WITA, when we notice the dramatically high number of Variety mentions). The utility of metadata becomes even clearer in the chart below, which details metadata for seventy-fifth percentile stations and WCCO’s immediate cohort.

Table 3. 75th Percentile Stations and WCCO’s Numerical Neighbors
Total Hits, MHDLBroadcastingAnnualsSponsorVarietyU.S. RadioSingle- Station AdsOther Ads
KLIF7454831041123281456
WCMI7504212143030281529
WKMH75147715988014104114
WSBA7524751976505526
KROY75448616830105114
WCLO75434620762811118
KFI6,3022,6704521426191370119
WCCO6,3072,52055255144446302143
WGY6,3171,69139522782834331228

Likewise, if we wanted to get a better sense of what contributes to WCCO’s outlier status beyond its heavy use of ads, we could begin by looking at Sponsor, where our metadata indicates its coverage is double and even triple those in its peer cluster. Together, these two charts signal a dramatic rise in station mentions towards the top of the rankings, suggesting that trade coverage vastly overrepresents a minority of stations. While about 330 hits separate the fiftieth and seventy-fifth percentiles, those near the hundredth percentile received over 5,500 more hits than those at the seventy-fifth. More work is needed to see what additional factors contribute to this uneven trending. The latter chart, for example, underscores the extent to which station relationships with other industry institutions and agents support more hits. Networks,[55] independent spot sales organizations,[56] station representatives,[57] equipment manufacturers,[58] and even syndicators[59] contribute significantly to station advertisements, outnumbering single-station ads for all but two of the above stations. Although this project began by focusing on stations alone, the SES process suggests the future productivity of expanding our entities to trace these dense industrial relationships.

Although the prominence of often dramatic and eye-catching advertisements in journals such as Broadcasting and Sponsor suggest that station advertising was a widespread industrial practice, according to our comparative analysis, we cannot take our case study to be representative of a majority activity (at least in terms of the extent to which WCCO purchased station advertisements). However, if we turn again to close reading to compare advertising strategies between stations, our case study appears less singular. Diverse stations’ ads conform to WCCO’s same strategies, from a focus on numbers and quantification[60] ...

... to an emphasis on local culture[61] ...

... and the intimate bond between station and listener[62]:

While looking beyond WCCO reinforced our initial understandings of station advertisement iconography—maps of all sorts, regions defined metonymically through local commodities—it also highlighted alternative strategies—for example, heavy emphasis on personalities and regionally specific programming, such as sports—that were present but not dominant in WCCO advertising. More research, particularly of high-ranked stations, could sketch out the full gamut of station advertising approaches. For now, however, we have an answer to our question regarding the representativeness of our case study. Qualitatively, but not quantitatively, WCCO stands as a useful entree into better understanding the strategies by which stations sought to make their markets appealing to advertisers.

Conclusion

Beyond its specific historical findings, our study of WCCO highlights one of the central, paradoxical conundrums of scholarship involving scaled digital datasets: how can scholars move from the “distant reading” of the set as a whole to the close reading of a case study, while also leveraging scale methodologically to place that case study within broader trends? We argue that scaled entity search provides one potential solution to this paradox because it permits selecting and situating case studies like WCCO in terms of their computational context. We found that digital tools can be most useful when they allow for and encourage frequent shuttling back and forth between multiple scales of data, as well as computer and human analysis, in an iterative approach to scholarship not unlike that which animates more traditional historical methods.

Nearly everything related to this project is openly accessible. We invite readers to try out the Arclight app on other radio call letters (or other entities entirely) and see where it leads them. We believe our study speaks to the vast possibilities for scholarship on local broadcasting, especially work that uses digital archives and tools. We hope that through approaches like scaled entity search, local historians and amateurs might harness the power of computational context to tell the stories of their own stations.


    1. Kit Hughes is Assistant Professor in the Department of Media, Journalism, and Film at Miami University in Ohio, where she's working on a book-length project exploring the rise of television within American business and industry. Her research on workplace media, television history, film aesthetics, and the politics of archives has appeared in Media, Culture & Society; Television & New Media; American Archivist; and Film Criticism. Eric Hoyt is Assistant Professor of Media and Cultural Studies in the Department of Communication Arts at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He is the author of Hollywood Vault: Film Libraries before Home Video (University of California Press, 2014) and codirector of the Media History Digital Library. He developed the MHDL's search and visualization platform, Lantern, which received the 2014 Anne Friedberg Innovative Scholarship Award from the Society for Cinema and Media Studies. Derek Long is a doctoral candidate in film at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where his research focuses on distribution and production control in early Hollywood. His work has appeared in the Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television and The New Review of Film and Television Studies, and he is the project director for Early Cinema History Online. Kevin Ponto is Assistant Professor in the Design Studies Department at the school of Human Ecology and in the Living Environments Laboratory at the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His research explores the fields of virtual reality, wearable technology and visualization. He is the developer of ScripThreads, visualization software used to study the structures of character interactions in screenplays. Tony Tran is a doctoral candidate at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. His research focuses on transnational Vietnamese diasporic media practices and their relationship with urban environments.return to text

    2. Robert W. McChesney, Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U.S. Broadcasting, 1928–1935 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).return to text

    3. Erik Barnouw, The Golden Web: A History of Broadcasting in the United States, vol. 2, 1933 to 1953 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1968).return to text

    4. Michele Hilmes, Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922–1952 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997).return to text

    5. Susan J. Douglas, Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999).return to text

    6. Cynthia B. Meyers, A Word from Our Sponsor: Admen, Advertising, and the Golden Age of Radio (New York: Fordham University Press, 2014).return to text

    7. Alexander Russo, Points on the Dial: Golden Age Radio beyond the Networks (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010), 3–4.return to text

    8. Ibid., 4.return to text

    9. See “National Recording Preservation Plan,” Library of Congress.return to text

    10. Wells H. Barnett Jr., “John Blair & Company: WHB's New National Representatives,” Swing, April 1947, 81.return to text

    11. For more on the spot advertising marketplace, see Russo, Points on the Dial, 19–46, 115–150, and Eric Hoyt, Hollywood Vault: Film Libraries before Home Video (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2014), 152–53.return to text

    12. The Arclight software's development, as well as the research discussed in this article, was sponsored by the United States' Institute for Museum and Library Services and Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council as part of a Digging into Data grant. Additional support came from the University of Wisconsin–Madison's Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Education and Concordia University's Media History Lab. We would like to thank the Concordia team, led by Charles Acland, for their collaboration throughout the research and development process. Additionally, we wish to thank the Media History Digital Library and its founder and director, David Pierce, for participating in Project Arclight.return to text

    13. See List of Wireless Telegraph Stations of the World (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 1909); 1912 version.return to text

    14. International Radiotelegraph Convention, Treaty Series 1913, no. 10, signed in London, July 5, 1912 (His Majesty's Stationary Office, printed by Harrison and Sons). Made available online by the International Telecommunications Union. Conference documents containing the assignment of call letters are available (see pp. 496–500).return to text

    15. Radio Stations of the United States, Department of Commerce, Bureau of Navigation (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, July 1913), 7.return to text

    16. Radio Stations of the United States, 7. The United States Department of Commerce and the Bureau of Navigation made alternative arrangements for the regulation of amateur stations.return to text

    17. These figures come from appendix C (Historical Statistics on Electronic Media) in Christopher H. Sterling and John Michael Kittross, Stay Tuned: A History of American Broadcasting (Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2002), 827.return to text

    18. An extensive resource for call-sign assignment information is Thomas H. White's website, United States Early Radio History. White's site stands as an excellent example of thriving digital humanities work taking place outside of the academy and the potential for collaboration (and locating new audiences) through digital projects.return to text

    19. There are also many instances of broadcasters attempting to retrofit their call signs to their stations. WSB, for example, claims its call letters stand for “Welcome South Brother”; however, WSB appears to have been awarded its letters in sequential order related to a larger chunk of WS- signs.return to text

    20. For an example of the interpretive challenges offered by various disambiguation methods, see Seth van Hooland et al., “Exploring Entity Recognition and Disambiguation for Cultural Heritage Collections,” Literary and Linguistic Computing 30, no. 2 (2015).return to text

    21. We have uploaded the station data we collected to the Internet Archive and made it available for reuse. The data was collected from Jack Alicoate, ed., The 1948 Radio Annual (New York: Radio Daily, 1948), 291–730.return to text

    22. N. W. Ayer & Son's Newspaper Annual Directory (Philadelphia): 1900–1950. We used editions located at the Wisconsin Historical Society. Several editions of the Ayer Annuals are also available online at HathiTrust. The N. W. Ayer & Son data we collected are available for reuse.return to text

    23. Ibid.return to text

    24. “Protect the Retailer: He's Here to Stay,” Radio Dealer, April 1922, 27. In 1922, The Radio Dealer objected to advertisements for radio tubes and parts that appeared in magazines like Radio Digest, since these ads' invitation to readers to order directly from the manufacturer threatened retailers.return to text

    25. See, for instance, “Networks Seek Ways to Halt FCC Action,” Broadcasting, May 12, 1941. See also Victor Pickard, America's Battle for Media Democracy: The Triumph of Corporate Libertarianism and the Future of Media Reform (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2015), 74, 88, 100.return to text

    26. All of the above-mentioned journals were sponsored and digitized by the Library of Congress Packard Campus for Audiovisual Preservation and the Library of American Broadcasting at University of Maryland, College Park. Their efforts and generosity have enabled the MHDL's Broadcasting Collection to grow to over three hundred thousand pages. The MHDL's 1905–1941 run of Variety (95,996 pages) also contains a great deal of coverage of the broadcasting industry and radio's relationships with vaudeville and film.return to text

    27. SES's technical details are described fully in Eric Hoyt et al., “Scaled Entity Search: A Method for Media Historiography and Response to Critiques of Big Humanities Data Research,” Proceedings of IEEE Big Humanities Data (2014).return to text

    28. For a more comprehensive discussion of our interpretive method, see our website.return to text

    29. If the latter case were our aim, other strategies—such as individually searching each discarded set of call letters with the station's frequency or location to locate relevant hits—could augment the automated SES method.return to text

    30. “Old WLAG Reopens; New Letters WCCO,” Radio Digest—Illustrated, October 18, 1924, 3.return to text

    31. “Nine Stations Given Maximum Power,” Broadcasting, October 15, 1931, 8.return to text

    32. Lev Manovich, “How to Compare One Million Images?” in Understanding Digital Humanities, ed. David M. Berry (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), 249–98.return to text

    33. Although beyond the scope of this paper, a second set of questions might explore the advertising rates within each journal and magazine that might have influenced where and how advertisements appeared, or attempt to determine the economic significance of station advertisements to the papers' overall financial health.return to text

    34. Russo, Points on the Dial, 12.return to text

    35. For more on the role of station representatives in developing markets, see Russo, Points on the Dial, 17–46.return to text

    36. It is important to point out that the MHDL coverage of Variety ends in 1941 (as of 2015). WCCO station advertisements began to appear in Variety in 1938 and ran regularly through 1941. Though not accounted for in our SES results, it is highly likely that WCCO ads continued to appear in Variety beyond the early 1940s. When WCCO appears in fan magazines oriented toward the listening public, mentions tend to occur within the context of celebrity profiles, program descriptions, and radio listings. When ads appear, they tend to focus on the appeal of network stars, news, and other programming for potential listeners—rather than the appeal of potential listeners to advertisers and sponsors. See, for example, “The Stars That Shine in the Morning Are on the CBS Radio Network,” TV Radio Mirror, May 1962, 4–5.return to text

    37. WCCO's dependence on these outside firms to make such claims is foregrounded in Sponsor, January 20, 1964, 11, which notes that Nielsen would no longer measure local markets, but promises that “the audience is still there—listening and ready to be counted.”return to text

    38. Hugh Malcolm Beville, Audience Ratings: Radio, Television, Cable (Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1988).return to text

    39. Rosser Reeves, Reality in Advertising (New York: Knopf, 1961), 33.return to text

    40. “Most-Crowded Newsroom in the Northwest,” Broadcasting, August 16, 1943, 35.return to text

    41. For example, see Broadcasting, July 28, 1952, 9, and “Minneapolis WCCO Saint Paul,” Broadcasting, October 15, 1931, 27,. Both of these advertisements stack their figures vertically to simulate a sort of accounting that proves the economic viability of station spots. A similar strategy is evinced in Sponsor , July 20, 1964, 8–9.return to text

    42. Indeed, WCCO found itself in a position to be able to use such numbers to its advantage. See “Only on WCCO Radio,” Broadcasting, November 27, 1961, 12–13.return to text

    43. This tagline appears both in CBS spot sales advertisements and in station-specific advertisements. See “This New CBS Power,” Broadcasting, January 15, 1940, 4–7, and “Consistently the Largest Audience,” Broadcasting, September 1, 1940, 53.return to text

    44. “Gateway to the Great Northwest,” Broadcasting, September 1, 1932, 2.return to text

    45. Russo, Points on the Dial, 36.return to text

    46. “Big 'Butter and Egg' Man from Paul Bunyan Land!” Sponsor, September 7, 1953, 26.return to text

    47. “Great Friends,” Sponsor, October 18, 1953, 93.return to text

    48. “Paul Bunyan Would Look Like a Midget . . .” Sponsor, August 9, 1954, 103; “What He Uncovered—We Cover!,” Broadcasting Telecasting, July 11, 1949, 2; “It's Coverage That Counts!,” Broadcasting Telecasting, September 15, 1952, 16; “Maine in Top 50 Markets!,” Broadcasting Telecasting, June 22, 1959, 97.return to text

    49. These likely continued, but 1963 marks the end of the journal's run in the MHDL.return to text

    50. “Paul Bunyan Networks Are Far Sighted!,” Broadcasting October 28, 1959, 49.return to text

    51. “Kandiyohi Calling . . . ,” Broadcasting, July 5, 1943, 7; “Come into a Huddle with Hall,” Broadcasting, August 28, 1944, 120–21; “Nobody Ever Threw a Clock at Lew Brock,” Broadcasting, August 30, 1943, 37; “Adams Says We Just Bombed Berlin Again,” Broadcasting, November 29, 1943, 41.return to text

    52. “Count Me In, Cedric!” Broadcasting Telecasting, September 19, 1955, 84–85.return to text

    53. “The Other Member of the Family,” Sponsor, February 22, 1954.return to text

    54. Russo, Points on the Dial, 35.return to text

    55. NBC (WGY), Nunn Stations (WCMI), NoeMoe Stations (KLIF).return to text

    56. John Blair and Company (KLIF), Edward Petry & Co (WKMH, KFI).return to text

    57. Crowsley Station Representatives (WGY), Henry I. Christal Co. (WGY, KFI).return to text

    58. RCA (WCCO), Continental (KFI).return to text

    59. Ziv (KFI).return to text

    60. Jack Alicoate, ed., The 1938 Radio Annual, 190. See also, for example, WKMH's “33¢ in Detroit,” Broadcasting, November 21, 1949, 5.return to text

    61. See also WSG's “An EMPIRE within an Empire,” Broadcasting, February 15, 1936, 47.return to text

    62. See also WGY's “No School Today,” Broadcasting, February 27, 1956, 11, which is remarkably similar to the WCCO “Kandiyohi Calling . . .” ad cited above.return to text

    Bibliography

    • Alicoate, Jack, ed. The 1948 Radio Annual. New York: Radio Daily, 1948.
    • Barnouw, Erik. The Golden Web: A History of Broadcasting in the United States. Vol. 2, 1933 to 1953. New York: Oxford University Press, 1968.
    • Beville, Hugh Malcolm. Audience Ratings: Radio, Television, Cable. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1988.
    • Hilmes, Michele. Radio Voices: American Broadcasting, 1922–1952. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997.
    • Hoyt, Eric, Kit Hughes, Derek Long, Keven Ponto, and Anthony Tran. “Scaled Entity Search: A Method for Media Historiography and Response to Critiques of Big Humanities Data Research.”Proceedings of IEEE Big Humanities Data (2014).
    • Manovich, Lev. “How to Compare One Million Images?” In Understanding Digital Humanities, edited by David M. Berry, 249–98. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012.
    • McChesney, Robert W. Telecommunications, Mass Media, and Democracy: The Battle for the Control of U.S. Broadcasting, 1928–1935. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
    • Meyers, Cynthia B. A Word from Our Sponsor: Admen, Advertising, and the Golden Age of Radio. New York: Fordham University Press, 2014.
    • Reeves, Rosser. Reality in Advertising, New York: Knopf, 1961.
    • Russo, Alexander. Points on the Dial: Golden Age Radio Beyond the Networks. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010.
    • Sterling, Christopher H., and John Michael Kittross. Stay Tuned: A History of American Broadcasting. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2002.
    • Susan J. Douglas, Listening In: Radio and the American Imagination. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999.
    • Van Hooland, Seth, Max De Wilde, Ruben Verborgh, Thomas Steiner, and Rick Van de Walle. “Exploring Entity Recognition and Disambiguation for Cultural Heritage Collections.”Literary and Linguistic Computing 30, no. 2 (2015).

    Appendix 1. List of Top 100 “Trending” Stations in Media History Digital Library Corpus, via Scaled Entity Search

    Notes: These have been postprocessed to remove unacceptably ambiguous results. Affiliation, ownership, and power information is accurate as of the publication of The 1948 Radio Annual. Page hits begin the year of each station’s founding.

    Call LettersCityEst.AffiliationPowerFreq.OwnerPage Hits
    KDKAPittsburgh1920NBC50,0001020Westinghouse Radio Stations, Inc.8,386
    KYWPhiladelphia1921NBC50,0001060Westinghouse Radio Stations, Inc.7,989
    WBBMChicago1923CBS50,000780Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.7,752
    WBZ-WBZABoston & Springfield1921NBC-New England Regional Network50,000 (WBZ); 1,000 (WBZA)1030Westinghouse Radio Stations, Inc.7,644
    WLSChicago1924ABC50,000890Prairie Farmer Publishing Co.7,339
    KHJLos Angeles1922MBS-Don Lee5,000930Don Lee Broadcasting System6,787
    WGNChicago1924MBS50,000720WGN, Inc.6,479
    WSBAtlanta1922NBC50,000750The Atlanta Journal Co., Inc.6,393
    WGYSchenectady1922NBC50,000810General Electric Co.6,317
    WCCOMinneapolis1924CBS50,000830Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.6,307
    KFILos Angeles1922NBC50,000640Earle C. Anthony6,302
    KGOSan Francisco1924ABC50,000810American Broadcasting Co.6,253
    WFAADallas1922NBC-ABC-Texas Quality Network50,000/ 5,000820/ 570A. H. Belo Corp.6,177
    WMAQChicago1922NBS50,000670National Broadcasting Co.5,903
    WNEWNew York1934NULL10,0001130Greater N. Y. Broadcasting Corp.5,863
    WHASLouisville1922CBS50,000840The Courier-Journal & Louisville Times Co.5,614
    WJRDetroit1922CBS50,000760The Goodwill Station, Inc.5549
    WRCWashington, DC1923NBC5,000980National Broadcasting Co.5,441
    WSMNashville1925NBC50,000650WSM, Inc.5,280
    WGRBuffalo1922CBS5,000550WGR Broadcasting Corp.5,154
    WBAPFort Worth1922NBC-ABC-LSC-Texas Quality Network50,000/ 5,000820/ 570Carter Publications, Inc.5,055
    WTICHartford1925NBC-New England Regional Network50,0001080Travelers Broadcasting Service Corp.4,999
    WBALBaltimore1925NBC50,0001090Hearst Radio, Inc.4,984
    KMOXSt. Louis1925CBS50,0001120Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.4,967
    WHBKansas City1922MBS-Kansas State Network10,000d; 5,000n710WHB Broadcasting Co.4,877
    WOCDavenport1922NBC5,0001420TriCity Broadcasting Co.4,841
    KMBCKansas City1921CBS5,000980Midland Broadcasting Co.4,543
    WEEIBoston1924CBS5,000590Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.4,540
    KGWPortland, OR1922NBC5,000620The Oregonian Publ. Co.4,535
    KFWBHollywood1925NULL5,000980Warner Bros. Broadcasting4,534
    WSAICincinnati1923ABC5,0001360Marshall Field4,523
    WHKCleveland1921MBS5,0001420United Broadcasting Co.4,424
    WMCMemphis1922NBC5,000790Memphis Publishing Co.4,357
    KNXLos Angeles1937CBS-Columbia Pacific Network50,0001070Columbia Broadcasting System4,275
    WHAMRochester1922NBC50,0001180Stromberg-Carlson Co.4,274
    WMTCedar Rapids1922CBS5,000600American Broadcasting Stations, Inc.4,271
    WCBSNew York1924CBS50,000880Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.4,269
    WKYOklahoma City1928NBC5,000930Oklahoma Publ. Co.4,255
    WTAMCleveland1923NBC50,0001100National Broadcasting Co., Inc.4,237
    WDAFKansas City1922NBC5,000610The Kansas City Star Co.4,235
    WKRCCincinnati1923CBS5,000; 1,000n550The Cincinnati Times-Star Co.4,221
    WCAEPittsburgh1922ABC5,0001250WCAE, Inc.4,217
    WBTCharlotte1921CBS50,0001110Jefferson Standard Broadcasting Co.4,141
    WNACBoston1922MBS-The Yankee Network5,0001260General Tire & Rubber Co.4,079
    KLZDenver1922CBS5,000560KLZ Broadcasting Co.4,061
    WJZNew York1921ABC50,000770American Broadcasting Co.4,041
    WOAISan Antonio1922NBC-Texas Quality Network50,0001200Southland Industries, Inc.4,027
    KSTPSt. Paul-Minneapolis1928NBC-Northwest Network50,0001500KSTP, Inc.4,019
    WXYZDetroit1930ABC5,0001270American Broadcasting Corp.3,831
    WGARCleveland1930CBS50,0001220The WGAR Broadcasting Co.3,763
    KFABOmaha1924CBS50,0001110FFAB Broadcasting Co.3,709
    KSLSalt Lake City1924CBS50,0001160Radio Service Corp. of Utah3,510
    WOLWashington, DC1924MBS5,0001260Cowles Broadcasting System3,477
    KFRCSan Francisco1924MBS-Don Lee5,000610Don Lee Broadcasting System3,469
    WJARProvidence1922NBC-New England Regional5,000920The Outlet Co.3,434
    WCKYCincinnati1929NULL50,0001530L. B. Wilson, Inc.3,419
    WSYRSyracuse1922NBC5,000570Central N. Y. Broadcasting3,335
    WJJDChicago1932NULL50,0001160Field Enterprises, Inc.3,319
    WOWOFort Wayne1925ABC10,0001190Westinghouse Radio Stations, Inc.3,287
    WFBMIndianapolis1924CBS5,0001260WFBM, Inc.3,284
    KOINPortland1925CBS5,000970KOIN, Inc.3,264
    KECALos Angeles1929ABC5,000790American Broadcasting Co., Inc.3,263
    WSPDToledo1921NBC5,0001370The Fort Industry Co.3,239
    WENRChicago1923ABC50,000890American Broadcasting Co.3,205
    WHPHarrisburg1924CBS5,000d; 1,000n1460WHP, Inc.3,193
    WTAGWorcester1924CBS5,000580WTAG, Inc.3,167
    WDSUNew Orleans1923ABC-Louisiana State-United Nations5,0001280Stephens Broadcasting Co.3,154
    KOILOmaha1925ABC-Nebraska Network5,0001290Central State Broadcasting Co.3,131
    KVOOTulsa1925NBC50,0001170Southwestern Sales Corp.3,121
    KOMOSeattle1926NBC5,0001000Fisher’s Blend Station, Inc.3,097
    WTOPWashington, DC1928CBS50,0001500Columbia Broadcasting System3,095
    KOBAlbuquerque1920NBC-MBS50,000d; 25,000n770Albuquerque Broadcasting Co.3,091
    WTARNorfolk1923NBC5,000790Norfolk Newspaper, Inc.3,053
    WJBKDetroit1926NULL2501490Detroit Broadcasting Co.3,049
    WCAUPhiladelphia1922CBS50,0001210Philadelphia Record Co.3,036
    WBENBuffalo1930NBC5,000930Buffalo Evening News3,009
    KWKSt. Louis1927MBS5,000; 1,000n1380Thomas Patrick, Inc.2,972
    WRVARichmond1925CBS50,0001140Larus & Brother Co.2,939
    WFILPhiladelphia1922ABC5,000560The Philadelphia Inquirer Div. of Triangle Publications, Inc.2,938
    KMPCBakersfield1924ABC1,0001560Pioneer Mercantile Co.2,920
    WMBDPeoria1927CBS5,0001470Peoria Broadcasting Co.2,904
    WBNSColumbus1924CBS5,000d; 1,000n1460Radionio, Inc.2,897
    WTCNMinneapolis1934ABC-Dairyland Network5,000; 1,000n1280Minnesota Broadcasting Corp.2,892
    KEXPortland, OR1926ABC5,000; cp 50,0001190Westinghouse Radio Stations, Inc.2,885
    WWLNew Orleans1922CBS50,000870Loyola University2,830
    KDYLSalt Lake City1922NBC-Utah-Idaho Network5,0001320Intermountain Broadcasting Corp.2,709
    KSFOSan Francisco1925NULL5,000; 1,000n560The Associated Broadcasters, Inc.2,673
    WNAXYankton1927ABC5,000570Cowles Broadcasting Co.2,645
    WWDCWashington, DC1941NULL2501450Capital Broadcasting Co.2,643
    WGALLancaster1922NBC-MBS2501490WGAL, Inc.2,643
    WWJDetroit1920NBC5,000950Evening News Assoc.2,537
    WMALWashington, DC1925ABC5,000630The Evening Star2,149
    KTHSHot Springs1924ABC10,000d; 5,000n1090Times Publishing Co., Ltd.2,106
    WTMJMilwaukee1927NBC5,000620The Journal Co.2,027
    WIPPhiladelphia1922MBS5,000610Penn. Broadcasting Co.1,945
    KPRCHouston1925NBC-Texas Quality Network5000950The Houston Post Co.1,943
    KOADenver1924NBC50,000850National Broadcasting Co.1,748
    KSDSt. Louis1922NBC5,000550Pulitzer Publishing Co.1,501
    WIBWTopeka1924CBS5,000580Capper Publications, Inc.1,355
    CKLWDetroit-Windsor1932MBS-CBC5,000800Essex Broadcasting, Inc.1,317