II - ocf.berkeley.edurbunnell/thesis/THESIS-science.doc · Web viewThe Science of Salesmanship...
Transcript of II - ocf.berkeley.edurbunnell/thesis/THESIS-science.doc · Web viewThe Science of Salesmanship...
The Science of Salesmanship “Radio reflects a phase through which much of advertising is passing—a glamorous land of make-believe in which forlorn maidens are told that they will win a husband by the use of a certain soap or face powder; in which young men will succeed in life by avoiding bad breath or by having their hair combed neatly; in which the lures of beauty and success are held out to a public that does not accept them wholeheartedly but wants to try them anyway, just in case they might work. It fattens upon a certain state of mind comparable to the way in which most people approach a fortune teller or a reader of horoscopes. They don’t quite believe it but they aren’t quite willing to disbelieve it.”
—Roy S. Durstine, “The Future of Radio Broadcasting in the United States”
The Annals of the American Academy, January 1935
If the 1920’s were the decade when radio gained its legs as an entertainment medium, the
1930’s were when it became an inescapable, integral part of American culture. By the time the
decade arrived, the institution of radio had worked out its niche within America’s popular
consciousness and made it clear that its grapple on culture was going to persist. The Los Angeles
Times characterized 1930 as likely to be “another period of great advance” for the medium due to
great advances in the field of international broadcasting,1 and the corporate world weighed in
when the Radio Corporation of America, long the dominant company operating within the
market of commercial radio, officially announced the beginning of its existence as an active
manufacturing organization with privately-operated research facilities.2
Even more importantly, the realm of the wireless had cast aside any doubts that once
existed about its commercial potential, and by this point radio had completely come into its own
as a legitimate advertising medium. Over the course of the decade, the number of paid words
crossing the airwaves reportedly rose from an estimated 7 million in 1920 to a formidable 58
million in 1929—a jump applicable not only to increased radio sales but also corporate interest
1 Daggett, John S. “Gains Foreseen in Radio Field.” The Los Angeles Times, January 3, 1930, pg. A12.2 Radio Corporation of America, The Radio Decade (1930), 5.
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in the future of the field.3 In 1930 alone, the amount of cash put forth by advertisers toward
network advertising approached $28,000,000, a significant rise from the previous year’s total of
$19,000,000.4 Although just a decade earlier radio broadcasting was a promising technology
with a hazy, ill-defined future, by the onset of the Great Depression it had officially made a
transition into the stomping ground of the salesman.
At the same time, advertisers were profoundly aware that they were dealing with a
completely new mode of communication with its own boundaries, rules and tics. Announcer
Roy S. Durstine, at the time a prominent figure in the broadcast advertising world, aptly painted
this strange new landscape in an insider piece he wrote for Scribner’s Magazine:
Every one closely associated with broadcasting honestly believes that the constantincrease in its popularity is a wonderful tribute to the inherent hardihood of radio’s appealrather than to the past or present excellence of programme-building. The more a personlearns about it the better he realizes that it is a new and extremely difficult technic, andthat the best results cannot come from borrowing too freely from other kinds ofentertainment.5
Radio operated within a novel, distinctive framework never before experienced in the field of
human communication, and even those directly involved in parallel media, such as newspapers,
essentially had to remap their brains in order to adapt to this sudden paradigm shift. This
technological change in lifestyle on the part of the public was reflected tenfold in the advertising
world; in order to sell and sustain themselves, advertisers had to forge a connection to a listening
public who were themselves coming to terms with an expanding new technology—a change
which required the creation of a completely new set of rules.
The end result was that over the course of the 1930’s and onward, a combination of
advertisers, broadcasters and experts in the broadcasting field independently contributed to the
3 Ibid, 25.4 Volkening, Henry, “The Abuses of Radio Broadcasting.” Current History, December 1930, 396.5 Durstine, Roy S. “We’re On the Air.” Scribner’s Magazine (May 1928), 626.
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building of a body of marketing knowledge that can best be described as a “science of
salesmanship.” This science was expressed primarily through various forms of print media, and
as a whole was geared toward providing sponsors with the ideal means to present advertising
copy to a listening public, all the while bringing in revenue as well as ensuring the success of
both the sponsor and the broadcaster for years to come.
Home Is Where the Hertz Is—The Direct Nature of Radio Broadcasting
The jumping-off point for almost any discussion of radio salesmanship in the ‘30s almost
inevitably concerned the fact that radio broadcasting possessed a direct, in-your-living-room
quality almost unprecedented in the field of communication. At no point in human history had
technology allowed millions of people to listen to the exact same information at the exact same
time, and the potential of this novel ability did not go unnoticed. In its direct appeal to the
public, many likened radio advertising to forms of spoken, in-person advertising of yore such as
the town crier, approaching people directly on the street in a bid to spread news and sell wares.
Orrin G. Dunlap, radio editor of The New York Times, even went so far as to claim that the
medium was “an art, new in details but old in principle, which is little more than a reversion to
the spoken word and the direct appeal of prehistoric days of the tribal camp fires.”6
In spite of its innovations, however, this directness was a tricky, awkward beast, and had
the potential of posing a threat to the success of a radio campaign if an advertiser took advantage
of it in a careless fashion. From the perspective of experts in salesmanship, radio differs from
print media in the sense that, as an auditory medium, it essentially invades the personal space of
the listener, all the while demanding his or her complete and utter attention for a set amount of
time. The ability to capture a listener’s complete attention is in many ways more powerful than
the printed word, but simultaneously the potential for making the listener uncomfortable and
6 Dunlap Jr., Orrin E, Radio in Advertising (1931), 2.
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embittered is high. Consequently, if the exact same advertisement were to print in a newspaper
and be announced on the radio, the radio listener would be all the more likely to be offended,
since the advertisement has taken up a very specific block of their time that goes on for far
longer than the simple turning of a page.7
The specific means by which the directness of a radio advertisement could go wrong
were multiple and varied, but in general the chief concern expressed was that, as a simulated
human presence existing within the home as opposed to ink on paper, there was the chance that
the line could be crossed from friendliness to outright intrusion. “It has been the dream of the
advertiser to find some medium that might walk in the front door and sell wares,” wrote Dunlap.
This dream is realized in radio broadcasting. But for a guest in the home to endeavor tosell toothpaste, bonds or anything else is an extremely doubtful procedure. Many homes,protesting intrusion of agents and peddlers, have posted their doors. Some have peekholes in the door through which they can look to see who is there before they open it andbid him welcome. But it is not the nature of radio to observe placards, peek-holes orlocks, neither will it be debarred by stone walls nor for the want of a key. Nevertheless,radio should be a worthy contribution to intimate fellowship—never an intrusion.8
In working out the social mechanics of sending advertisements straight into the ears of the
listener, care had to be taken in ensuring that this directness did not bleed into disturbance.
Compounding the liminal nature of an advertisement’s command over a listener’s
attention was the assertion that radio’s directness is basically a one-way street; in other words,
broadcasters had no conceivable way to know whether their audience had abandoned them.
“Radio work is something like shadowboxing in the dark,” wrote radio expert Major Ivan Firth,
“and is valuable or useless according to the amount of serious effort that is used. You can’t see
the other fellow out there in the dark, but unless you can imagine him with all the concentration
at your command you will not obtain the results for which you are striving.”9 In that sense,
7 Hettinger, Herman S. A Decade of Radio Advertising (1933), 290.8 Dunlap, 13.9 Major Ivan Firth, Gateway to Radio (1934), 32.
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broadcasting to the masses was essentially seen by experts as a form of social mathematics—
with the exception of whatever listener response might have come about, the only way to tell
whether an advertisement achieved its intended goal entirely rested on whether or not the
sponsor’s product started moving off of the shelves and into the hands of consumers.
On the other hand, although the isolated nature of a typical radio advertisement had its
drawbacks, some advertisers saw this isolation as a potential means to boost sales through the
mechanism of human psychology. One advantage over print ads that a broadcast advertisement
gained through its isolation was that, whereas in a publication, a great number of ads competed
for the same space in the reader’s brain, on the radio a plug puts the listener on the spot and
nearly demands undivided attention for its complete duration.10 With that in mind, the job of the
radio advertiser would therefore be to use that specific, isolated time to appeal to the listener’s
consumer instincts using whatever methods happen to be possible. In essence, the psychological
element to successful broadcasting was that the state of having a listener glued to his or her set
was inherently temporary, with the job of the broadcaster being to use that brief window to play
on whatever the audience was most likely to want.
What, exactly, the listener specifically wanted out of the radio was up in the air and prone
to variation by community, social status, upbringing, gender and a score of other potential
factors. However, a common thread that ran throughout radio salesmanship teachings was that
the element that any given listener always seeks to derive from the radio, more than any other, is
satisfaction.11 Even at its birth, very little radio programming presented information of any
actual utility, so what thus had to make up for it was a sense of pure entertainment, appealing to
the emotions of the listener in a way that would cause him or her to consider the act of listening
10 Hettinger, 26.11 Ibid, 1.
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to the radio a satisfying experience. This process extended into the advertising of a particular
product—the primary goal of any given radio advertiser was to ease a listener into overcoming
resistance against a consumer item by playing up the desirability or necessity of purchasing it.12
Simultaneously, some experts saw radio as a potentially calming presence in the life of a
typical American family; if an advertiser were effectively going to be spending upwards of two
minutes in another’s household, the most solid approach would be to use this time to make this
alien, ephemeral presence come off as a natural element of one’s household life. As radio
psychologists Hadley Cantril and Gordon W. Allport stated,
Radio is perhaps our chief potential bulwark of social solidarity … Take the case of thefamily, the institution that sociologists have always regarded as the keystone of anysociety. In recent years its functions have obviously been weakened. In a modest and unwitting way radio has added a psychological cement to the threatened structure. A radio in the home relieves an evening of boredom and is an effective competitor for entertainment outside. Children troop home from their play an hour earlier than they would otherwise, simply because Little Orphan Annie has her copyrighted adventures at a stated hour.13
Whether or not the idea of children listening to Little Orphan Annie instead of being outside
playing baseball strikes one as a positive development in society, the fact that this shift was
taking place tells countless wonders about the influence of radio on domestic life in the 1930’s.
It makes the ambiguously-appealing nature of radio’s presence in the living room clear; just as
radio possesses the power to terrify and alienate, it is nonetheless in many ways a lot more
personal of a medium than the printed word, and thus possesses a parallel ability to warm the
hearts of listeners and become an inherent part of the household experience. Thus, with the
position of the radio in the consumer world established, the question remained of how to harness
its appeal and make sure that listeners held a consistently positive attitude toward the medium.
Good Will Hunting—How Advertisers Envisioned a Satisfied Radio Audience
12 Ibid, 20.13 Hadley Cantril, Ph.D. and Gordon W. Allport, Ph.D., The Psychology of Radio (1935), 24.
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“Radio entertainment has become a national institution as popular as breakfast,” wrote
Major Ivan Firth, then adding: “There are plenty of people who don’t like breakfast.”14 Indeed,
radio salesmanship studies were rife with the assertion that reaching out to the public was a
constant struggle to win over the skeptical while still remaining faithful to the choir. The
embittered sector of the radio audience was never afraid to criticize a public service that, price of
the receiver aside, it was basically receiving for free; in that context, it was important for experts
in the salesmanship field to seek out what they perceived to be the common element which
would satisfy the entirety of the listening public without fail.
This common element, touted by nearly every salesmanship advocate imaginable, was
the concept of “good will.” A hopeless buzzword by its very nature, the concept was
nevertheless crucial in the envisioning of the basic needs of a radio audience, and is easily the
goal most frequently cited by radio salesmanship literati. Orrin G. Dunlap defined the term as
“nothing more than the expression of approval for a product which comes in the form of sales
sooner or later”15—a concept almost ludicrously simple on the surface, but applied to a public of
millions of radio listeners, the maintenance of approval of a product across the board becomes a
considerably more daunting task. This expression of approval is ultimately ephemeral and easy
to lose grasp of at the simplest mistake. As Dr. Lee de Forest, American inventor and pioneer in
the field of radio broadcasting, once stated, clumsy salesmanship has the instantaneous ability to
convert the good will carefully cultivated at great expense by a sponsor into ill will … ill will
expressed not only against that particular sponsor and often the entirety of radio broadcasting.16
In general, salesmanship experts viewed the building of good will as an ongoing project
involving identifying elements of broadcasting detested by the public and constructing programs
14 Firth, 19.15 Dunlap, 108.16 Ibid, 4.
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in such a way as to avoid said elements. As a concept, good will is directly connected to every
single aspect for which the name of an institution or company stands in the minds of consumers,
and for that reason, all potentially negative aspects are considered bastions of ill will and should
be purged as swiftly as possible, lest the sponsor’s name be tainted by these aspects.17
The process of fostering good will in the consumer sphere, according to the party line of
radio salesmanship, involved a combination of appealing to the audience’s aesthetic taste as well
as to their sense of ethics. The former was a fairly clear-cut process, and by and large had to do
with the purging of any disgusting or negative aspects of a broadcasted advertisement. The
majority of the listening public detested ugliness, and for that reason broadcasting experts by and
large considered the use of the affirmative in advertising infinitely more useful than that of the
negative.18 At the same time, the coarse and vulgar had the tendency to incite feelings of disgust
and uneasiness in the human psyche, and for that reason deserved to be kept off of the airwaves.
This meant that advertisements for laxatives, toothpaste and deodorant were particularly frowned
upon, especially if these advertisements came equipped with sound effects that illustrated the
bodily functions related to them in murky, graphic detail.19 “With fear and trembling,” wrote
New York advertising agency head Roy S. Durstine,
one of the networks only a few years ago accepted a radio program for a laxative. To itsgreat surprise it has had almost no protest of any kind. The result is that today there aregreat many programs describing in the most intimate detail various ailments of the human body—details which cause an embarrassed silence to drop upon any group of people who may be listening together. Why are there not more protests?20
Durstine’s example illustrates the culture surrounding the concept of good will with pinpoint
efficiency, and builds into the notion of radio as a medium without any direct conduit from
17 B.J. Palmer, Radio Salesmanship (1942), 75.18 Firth, 30.19 Time, “New Radio Rules.” May 20, 1935, 66.20 Roy S. Durstine, “The Future of Radio Advertising in the United States.” The Annals of the American Academy, v. 177 (Jan. 1935), 150.
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public to sponsor. Regardless of whether or not advertisements for laxatives were to cause the
listening public to erupt into outrage, psychologically, the majority of the American populace
possessed no active desire to hear noises and instructions related to how to clean their bowels,
and the end result is an inevitable plunge in good will. It may cause that particular sponsor’s
sales to rise, but at the potential cost of embarrassment and public hatred.
The concept of building and maintaining good will also had ties to the moral and ethical
qualities of a radio advertisement. Regardless of the appeal of a particular plug or the sales of a
sponsor’s product that might ensue, if the a member of the listening public at any point felt that
the plug offended some aspect of his or her set of values, bitterness and consumer alienation
would be the only conceivable end product. For example, radio programs geared specifically
toward children were a tricky lot. Admittedly, these programs hinged on the perception that
younger listeners were impressionable and likely to pressure parents into buying sponsors’
products. “Radio is the most popular form of entertainment for children,” wrote Charles Hull
Wolfe, director of the Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborne Radio and Television Testing Bureau.
It provides more emotional impact than books, magazines or comics. Unlike the movies,it is free; and radio is better at story-telling than parents are. A survey indicated that boysand girls would rather listen to the radio than play ball, play an instrument, read a book,solve a puzzle, read an adventure story or listen to the phonograph.”21
However, these programs also came equipped with the caveat of offending said parents’ senses
of what a child should and should not be able to hear. A widespread perception existed that the
same impressionable nature of children that caused them to be so receptive to sales in turn
rendered them receptive to and sometimes imitative of the vices of culture. A child who watches
a gangster shooter, for example, according to this logic, would either only remember the sheer
terror of the shooting or attempt to imitate the gangster in charge of the shooting.22 This self-
21 Charles Hull Wolfe, Modern Radio Broadcasting (1949), 175.22 Firth, 245.
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same logic applied to the world of advertising; any elements of a radio broadcast that would
strike a parent as course or offensive would strike that same parent tenfold if his or her child
were subject to them, and that family’s sense of good will toward the radio would suffer.
Another aspect which could have potentially derailed an advertising plug’s sense of
moral saliency was whether or not the program played upon issues of misery and carnage as a
selling point. This did not necessarily come up as a problem were radio advertisers to reference
the Great Depression, since the movement of consumer goods could only help the economy
during troubled times. However, as Europe leered closer and closer toward a state of total war,
one which eventually drew U.S. soldiers into direct conflict with enemy forces, the possibilities
for advertisers to be curt with issues of graveness and offhandedly offend large sectors of their
listening public were many. “It would not be a good idea … to link a trade name with terror and
calamity,” wrote Dunlap Jr., “… because that would create ill will for any sponsor who
attempted to capitalize on a scene of death and disaster. But there are more pleasant things in
life … that can be capitalized in an advertising way.”23 Catering to a public growing more and
more sensitive by the year over issues of death, dismemberment, turmoil and carnage, there were
many possibilities for radio advertisers to turn calamity into capital, but whatever brief gains an
advertiser might have made would have been accompanied by a steep plunge in good will.
As abstract of a concept as good will might be, its existence is interesting in that it
basically represented the first time in American, and in fact world history in which a concept like
that could not only be important, but have a profound influence on the operation of an entire
media. With the institution of radio establishing a direct line between sponsor and listener came
a certain responsibility to serve and respect the listeners on the receiving end, lest the public’s
perception of an entire institution be placed in serious jeopardy. Still, maintaining the good faith
23 Dunlap Jr., 109.
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of the public was, in the end, just another component of the science of salesmanship, and the ad
wizards of the 1930’s had an even greater wealth of tricks up their sleeves.
Projecting, Connecting—Amplified Sincerity and an Announcer’s Success
The psychology of broadcasting was important in establishing a framework within which
radio could successfully operate, but without the proper human conduit to convey the sponsor’s
message, all of the effort that went into the construction of an advertisement would be lost. For
that reason, more than almost any other factor in broadcasting, throughout the body of work
related to radio salesmanship, the quality of the announcer himself received perhaps the most
significant importance. A large portion of this idea was simply based on the fact that the
announcer is usually the first aspect of a radio advertisement that a listener would actually pay
attention to; if the first attempt at grabbing a listener’s ear were to be botched, the impact of the
plug as a whole would suffer at the hands of flimsy salesmanship.24 In addition to pushing a
particular product, the most important function of the announcer in a radio advertisement was to
set the mood of the announcement, the establishment of the proper mental attitude on the part of
the listeners being a key foundation for easing them into understanding the merits of a product.25
However, even more important than the announcer’s position at the forefront of a radio
advertisement, salesmanship experts saw said announcer’s tone and delivery as absolutely crucial
to presenting a public face with which listeners would actually identify. In his book Gateway to
Radio, Major Ivan Firth dedicated an entire chapter to the sheer importance of a respectable,
professional announcer, claiming that “too many radio announcers have turned ‘the voice with
the smile’ into ‘the voice with the smirk’” and that radio charm is too often spoiled by “the
supercilious tones of an obviously bored announcer.”26 Indeed, the human voice is a versatile
24 Dunlap Jr., 145.25 Firth, 210.26 Ibid.
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part of the human anatomy and can be stretched into a wide number of tonal shapes and forms,
but combined with the agency of radio broadcasting, only a select range of these forms actually
come off to the radio listener as natural and worth one’s time and money.
The catch is that radio broadcasting is not merely a science that one can break down into
the formula that sincerity equals success. The default state of human discourse is sincerity, but
that by no means meant that Jumpin’ Joe’s nice-guy neighbor down the street could abandon his
lawnmower, leap onto the radio and enter a state of instantaneous advertising stardom. Radio
has the tendency of skeletonizing the personality of the speaker or performer, develops a use of
imaginative completion in the minds of listeners, and, most important of all, spawns a critical
and individualistic nature in the radio audience that it does not necessarily possess when
speaking to people in person.27 A good example of this approach is President Roosevelt’s radio
“fireside chats” with the public during America’s Great Depression. Roosevelt delivered these
chats in a warm, humble patrician tone that has outlived the ages and become one of the most
famous relics of a bygone era, the reason that these broadcasts were so successful did not
necessarily lay in the fact that Roosevelt spoke in such a way by his very nature. It is likely
more accurate to infer that the president went into his broadcasts with a keen understanding of
the sheer power of the human voice, and in the process became a symbolic glimmer of hope,
beloved by millions and offering a nation a way out of economic turmoil.28
The path toward radio success, as painted by the canon of radio salesmanship scholars,
was to take an approach that effectively combined sincerity with the charisma demanded by the
idea that millions upon millions of people might be listening to you. [Radio expert] Enid Day
summed up this approach with a single sentence: “A daily program must be on a friendly level,
27 Cantril, 14.28 Ibid, 208.
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with continuity which carries the voice of authority, but not the voice of a snob.”29 In layman’s
terms, listeners came to expect from the typical radio announcer exactly what they received from
Franklin Roosevelt: a simulated physical presence which commanded respect but at the same
time did so in a personable, friendly way which did not succumb to smug condescension.
In Gateway to Radio’s chapter on announcers, Major Ivan Firth declares that the problem
most often encountered by radio announcers is that they adopt a “machine-gun” method of
delivery, aimed deliberately at forcing the attention of the listener, which is “ill-advised in
conception and offensive in result.”30 In contrast to this tone, he sets forth a series of radio
announcers whom he considers masters of their form in different areas of radio expressiveness:
voice, spontaneity, personality, sincerity, charm, enthusiasm, salesmanship, naturalness, diction,
culture, conviction and accuracy.31 Some of these categories come off a bit like salesman patter,
and Firth readily admits that none of the announcers he has chosen are absolutely perfect, but
they nonetheless collectively represent the values of amplified humbleness and sincerity that
defined the dominant trends of radio’s science of salesmanship.
For example, as a master of the quality of “enthusiasm,” Firth cites Graham MacNamee,
a prominent radio personality both before and during the Great Depression. Firth admits that
MacNamee lacks a certain quality of voice usually expected from somebody being broadcast on
the radio, but at the same time, nobody is able to project as much enthusiasm as he could
—“provided that he himself is motivated by what he sees.”32 According to Firth, at one point
MacNamee was assigned to cover a boxing match so thrilling that he “forgot all he knew about
showmanship, and was unable to control his own emotions in describing the sport he loved so
29 Enid Day, Radio Broadcasting for Retailers (1947), 28.30 Firth, 212.31 Ibid.32 Ibid,
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well.”33 An announcer like MacNamee is emblematic of the type of personality that listeners
expected from a broadcaster—not necessarily professional 100 percent of the time, but engaging
in a thorough, convincing fashion which inevitably came off as endearing regardless of context.
Possibly the most important aspect of this whole culture of picking and choosing the
proper announcer is how much agency and sheer intelligence it places in the consumer’s mind.
Within the wealth of documented information surrounding salesmanship and how to broadcast,
not one writer claims that the road to success is to take advantage of an intellectual high ground
and assume that the listener is an uncultured troglodyte who would take in whatever the radio
might throw at him or her. Instead, the discourse of radio was seen as an amplified form of any
other kind of polite, formal discourse, not so much fooling the listener as much as respecting
their rights to pick and choose whatever consumer product they wish … with the implicit hope
that the product they eventually choose would be the sponsor’s. During a 1934 talk before the
Federal Communications Commission, Columbia Broadcasting Company president William S.
Paley identified that listener interest stems from program content that appeals to the emotions
and self-interest of the listener, and went on to claim that “the radio industry considers this
listener interest its life’s blood.”34 An announcer that fails to live up to standards of friendliness
that any given listener would expect from any of his or her fellow human beings would pose a
significant threat to the flowing of this “life’s blood.”
Do You Copy?—The Incredible Importance of a Wily Wordsmith
“It is amusing that announcers are considered of such importance that their names are
almost invariably given out on every program,” wrote Major Ivan Firth, “whereas the writer, all
too often, remains anonymous.”35 As far as the announcer’s role in the broadcasting of a radio
33 34 William S. Paley, Radio as a Cultural Force (1934), 8.35 Firth, 24.
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program was concerned, radio experts considered his or her personality a crucial factor in the
success of an advertisement, but if the actual words being tossed out into the wireless ether were
not up to snuff, the entire advertisement would crumble into dust. “The staff writer is considered
a very small cog on a very large wheel,” continued Firth, “his name being carefully withheld
from his listeners, while the announcer, quite wrongly, gets all the blame.”36
Advertising copy was not merely the glue that held a radio program together; it was the
body and soul of said program, with the announcer filling the role of being a talented agent of
amplification. The copy of an announcement was where all of the wit, the pizzazz, the wordplay
and the wisdom of an advertisement lay, and on top of that, it was where the name of the actual
product received its articulation. To underestimate the importance of high-quality copy in a
radio advertisement would have been like holding a cinematic awards show without categories
for the screenwriters—entirely a glamour show without any of the substance that makes the
medium work in the first place.
In addition, according to [radio expert] C.H. Sandage, taking on the role of writing
advertising copy was more than just a matter of being the person responsible for the wittiness of
a plug’s words, as filtered through a really talented mouthpiece. It is the copy writer who
ultimately is the singular individual in charge of the message being conveyed to listeners—in
other words, he or she would be the one who must make sure that the advertisement respects the
feelings and intelligence of the listener, all the while making sure to appeal to the self-interest of
the consumer. At the same time, the role extends beyond the task of being in charge of the
information expressed to the listener—the copy writer also must take into account the image of
the sponsor in the minds of the public, including whether or not the retailer is able and willing to
live up to its claims. In that sense, the copy writer’s role was multi-faceted in that, unlike the
36 Ibid.
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announcer, he or she had to juggle several forms of public perception at once, coming up with as
close to a perfect balance as possible while still portraying a sponsor’s service in a light that
would make the public want to purchase it.37
Aside from its role in direct communication with the public, copy writing in itself
followed an interesting set of rules and regulations, probably best elaborated in B.J. Palmer’s
tract Radio Broadcasting, a tract sent out to every major radio station in America. A curt and by-
the-books radio theorist and president of Davenport, Iowa’s Basic Blue Network, Palmer wrote
in a style symbolic of his no-frills approach to radio broadcasting: “Difference between rare
successful station and common failure stations, is difference between a successful man and
failure men. THAT difference is pre-determined by RULES THEY FOLLOW, as and when they
think.”38 In the pamphlet, Palmer claims that too much advertising copy is weighed down by
useless drivel, and introduces the concept of “goat feathers”—unnecessary words and negative
phrasings that have the sole consequence of lengthening advertisements and boring the listener.
“The path of least resistance,” wrote Palmer, “is what makes rivers and men crooked! The path
of hardest resistance—is what makes rivers and men straight!”39
To combat this incessant trend, Palmer introduced a counter-concept called “briefing,” in
which unnecessary words and phrases are either deleted from advertising copy or replaced by
more curt phrasings. As an example, Palmer introduced a contemporary radio advertisement by
the Crown Life Insurance company, with edits made displaying how much of it could be outright
deleted for the sake of flow and clarity. Reproduced below is the first paragraph of the plug,
entitled “The Crown.” All purged words are in bold parentheses, with added text in brackets.
Howdy (there) neighbors, howdy! Reckon you’ve been feeling right chipper (here) the
37 C.H. Sandage, Radio Advertising for Retailers (1945), 17.38 Palmer, 22.39 Ibid.
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last two days (what) with the sun shinin’ so bright and all! (Guess a lot) [Many] of you fellows have been able to get (out) in the corn fields after a delay of some two weeks or more. (You know, s)[S]peaking of (that) delay due to bad weather, makes me think of (some of) the storms we run up against in our (own) lives! We go along singin’ a song thinking (nothin’ will ever happen to our family) [we are immune] when BINGO … the props are knocked (clean out) from under our feet. (Take for instance, w) [W]hen a loved one passes away, and you haven’t (any) spare cash on hand. It’s tough (then), all right, and it’s a hardship (that can be plum) [to] avoid(ed). (If you have a) CROWN LIFE INSURANCE POLICY [will] protect(ing) all (the) members of your family.40
Perhaps even more important than the resulting advertisement being shorter and smoother is the
fact that the edit takes care not to take the humanity out of the advertisement. Though some
worthless words are purged, phrases like “you’ve been feeling right chipper” remain in place,
true to the original spirit of the plug, meant to come off as delivered by a friendly cowboy.
These dueling aspects are emblematic of the role of the copy writer to experts in the field of
radio salesmanship: they had to maintain the flow of the program while still making sure that it
carried a message to consumers that was not only accurate, but appealing.
A Dash of Tonal Flavor—The Role of Music in the Punch of Plugs
The final component of a successful radio advertisement was an element that was in
theory tangential to a listener’s appreciation of a plug, but in many ways was one of the most
important of all: its use of music. Whether in the form of symphony orchestras, commercial
jingles or other accompanying pieces, the reason for its importance was psychological—on an
emotional level, human beings tend to react quite viscerally to the presence of music. “Because
of its ability to induce feelings,” wrote Herman S. Hettinger, “music produces an emotional
reaction which the listener, referring to past experience in an endeavor to classify the impression
which the music makes upon him, terms as ‘sad,’ ‘happy,’ ‘fierce’ or ‘restful,’ as the case may
be.”41 Thus, to experts in the field of radio salesmanship, the proper application of music
40 Ibid, 36.41 Hettinger, 11.
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received treatment on the level of an element that could easily make or break an advertisement.
As was the case with announcers, however, the mere presence of music in a plug was not
enough in its own right to satiate the listening public. Warren B. Dygert, assistant professor of
marketing at New York University, separated the public with regard to musical knowledge into
two classes—those who know music, and those who do not—but at the same time added that
“everyone, the artist, the craftsman, the factory worker, is as conscious of the rhythmic pattern as
they are of symmetry or sheer beauty.”42 Although the public as a whole did not necessarily
consist of individuals endowed with profound musical expertise, it also did not consist of tone-
deaf idiots, and the musical components of advertisements were to be constructed with reverence
for the standard rules of tone and taste no matter the intended audience.
With regard to the content of the actual plugs themselves, music had the ability to play
the role of augmenting and strengthening specific promotional points while, at the same time,
establishing the tone and atmosphere of the plug in general. In particular, the application of
high-quality music could significantly strengthen the impact of a particularly good announcer.
“When an announcer has a voice of molten gold,” wrote Major Firth in Gateway to Radio, “to
hear the opening poem to ‘Arabesque’ is a joy to nearly everyone. The combination of a
glorious voice and the exquisite music behind it has made radio history.”43 Working in tandem
with the announcer, another heralded element of radio advertising, if employed properly music
could give an ad’s overall point extra emotional impact.
At the same time, in the eyes of radio analysts, music possessed a selling power of its
own independent of the presence of the announcer. In particular, radio salesmen experts viewed
the musical components of an ad, particularly its introduction, as important to the establishment
42 Warren G. Dygert, Radio as an Advertising Medium (1939), 87.43 Firth, 59.
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of its atmosphere. In general, the use of music provided a sense of flow which rendered an ad
easier on the listener’s ears as a piece of advertising, thus increasing audience receptiveness to
the sponsor’s product.44 But the successful establishment of flow was a careful and meticulous
process: “In order to have the best music for the needs of a show,” wrote Dygert, “a good
musical program must be carefully planned, the selections must be appropriately arranged, the
talent must be tastefully selected, and the instrumentation … must balance and reinforce the
program, and meet the budget of the advertiser.”45
Another important and ever-present musical aspect of the advertising world was the use
of commercial jingles. Still ever-present today in various forms, these miniature musical
signatures served the purpose of solidifying the name and message of a sponsor’s product in a
listener’s mind, entirely through the tricks and tools of songwriting. However, to salesmanship
experts, the use of a jingle in an advertisement was the most potentially dangerous form of
musical advertising by some distance. Whereas background music, employed improperly, could
only have the ultimate consequence of rendering an advertisement awkward and stilted, a poorly-
composed jingle could actively inspire the irritation and wrath of listeners. This advice comes
straight from the pens of Allan Bradley Kent and Austen Croom-Johnson, two of the most
lucrative songwriters in the 1930’s jingle business:
We are serious about musical commercials in view of the fact that we have built abusiness with them. We believe that they should be a pleasing and intriguing form of sugar-coating the advertising pill. But apparently it isn’t that easy. Agencies, clients and writers must increasingly realize that irritant jingles, badly written or produced, will end up by killing the goose that laid the golden egg.46
From the late 1930’s onward, Kent and Johnson wrote more than forty of radio’s most
frequently-rotated jingles.47 Kent, in particular, stood as a shining example of the power of a 44 Ibid, 55.45 Dygert, 92.46 Wolfe, 557.47 Ibid.
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radio jingle to take over the airwaves. After spot advertisements came into the forefront of
advertising in the mid-1930’s, he was involved in the composition of “Nickel Nickel,” a Pepsi-
Cola jingle advertising the soda brand’s new five-cent, twelve-ounce bargain. The plug aired
more than a million times on 350 separate stations between 1935 and 1941 and, as a result,
became a nigh-on inescapable part of popular culture during the 1930’s.48
Of the components of a successful radio advertisement, jingles were perhaps the most
tricky of all, since, as Charles Hull Wolfe put it, “More than any other style of radio commercial,
jingles are apt to be either brilliantly successful or unhappily mediocre.”49 Since jingles stood as
the aspect of a commercial plug that the public was supposed to remember more than anything
else, the songwriting process involved in the composition of a jingle could be excessively
complex. To achieve commercial success, a jingle had to be fit for the particular product it was
trying to push, composed through close collaboration with the musician or musicians in question,
heavily reliant on emphasizing the title of the product and based on the musical rules of popular
songwriting. Most importantly of all, the jingle had to have one outstanding idea to provide a
reason for its existence. The jingle “Chiquita Banana” originated with the simple idea of
personifying a banana as a Latin-American calypso dancer, and went on to become not only one
of the most popular jingles of its era, but also a stereotype in its own right.50
Most importantly of all, the jingle had to stay on the air long enough to remain lodged in
the radio listener’s memory—without attaining this ultimate goal, the purpose of composing the
jingle would be completely bunk. To accomplish this task, like any other aspect of successful
radio broadcasting, the jingle had to tow the awkward line between shoving itself in the listener’s
ears and doing so without coming off as labored or irritating. The role of music in broadcast
48 Al Graham, “Jingle—Or Jangle.” The New York Times Magazine, October 29, 1944.49 Wolfe, 559.50 Ibid, 561-566.
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advertising in general bore the arduous task of walking this awkward line—as Irwin Edman
wrote in Harper’s Magazine, “The radio, for all its blare and tawdry music, has put millions
within the reach of formerly impossible musical beauty.”51 More than any other characteristic of
radio broadcasting, music possessed the ability to stand on its own as an entity of pure beauty,
but if carried out in a careless fashion it could render a plug annoying like no other.
Radio Salesmanship—An Unusually Unified Science
The most unusual aspect of the science of salesmanship, as it presented itself throughout
the 1930’s, was that the vision that surrounded it was bizarrely unified. The notion of such a
unified vision arising from a field of study built around masterminding some thing as complex as
the human psyche is strange indeed. In the case of radio salesmanship, this is especially true
considering that it was a science built from experts in fields as divergent as academia, marketing,
psychology and the simple everyday operation of radio stations.
Nonetheless, it is particularly interesting to note that a majority of the maxims set forth in
the plethora of radio salesmanship pamphlets from the 1930’s still apply to listeners today after
the turn of the century. In a nation that has been pervaded by the media ever since radio thrust
itself upon the national scene, the psychology surrounding the base-level human instincts that
cause us to react to advertising have remained surprisingly static. With that assertion in mind, it
is honestly no real surprise that such a broad consensus was achieved over what listeners wanted
out of their listening experience during the 1930’s.
The importance of this science of salesmanship might be called into doubt by skeptics
who assume that the development of such a marketing strategy was just a horn-rimmed means to
categorize the listening audience as a populace that adhered to a series of strict psychological
rules and regulations. However, salesmanship did not exist as an island, and an examination of
51 Irwin Edman, “On American Leisure.” Harper’s Magazine (January 1928), 224.
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the public’s reaction to radio advertising throughout the 1930’s and onward may suggest that
pundits in the field of salesmanship had a point in their meticulously-planned psychological
charts and calculations.
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