Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Comic Books

Comic books, like most media, grew and changed over time, combining old and new ideas until the comic book we recognize finally emerged in the 1920s. The first comic strip was Richard F. Outcault's "The Yellow Kid". The comic strip depicted a young boy from the tenements of New York and the adventures he pursued. It was first published in Joseph Pulitzer's New York Sunday World. The cartoon inspired the term "yellow press" which critics applied to the sensational newspapers of the day. In 1935, a comic book with original material appeared on the newssstands. It was sold for a dime, published by Major Malcolm Wheeler-Nicholson, and called New Fun Comics.


                                        




                                                   Superman made his 
                                         original appearance 1938
                             and got his own comic book in 1939







 Batman made his original appearance
in 1939. He was the first superhero to follow
Superman





Captain Marvel (right) first appeared in 1940, followed shortly thereafter by Captain America (left) in 1941.






About 20 years later, Spiderman and the Incredible Hulk follow in the superhero chain in 1962.


In 1941 alone, three female superheros were introduced: Miss America (featured to the right), Miss Victory, and Pat Patriot. The introduction of female comic book characters led to the discovery that teenage girls could also be comic book fans. The female superheros, however, were nothing like the male superheros. The females were dimwitted, sexy, and were highly obsessed with romance. So, romance comics came along in the late 1940s and early '50s. By the end of 1949, romance comics outsold every other genre. Unfortunately, right around the same time, the Comics Code Authority was established to give its stamp of approval to comic books that cut out the crime, horror, sex, and gore.

The Recording Industry

Even though music began to be recorded in 1900, records were not openly available to the public until about 1910. Until then, sheet music was wildly popular. Most middle and upper class homes had pianos, so sheet music was a large and prosperous market. Once record sales began to soar in the 1910s, sheet music sales declined. The first musical recording ever was a cornet solo of "Yankee Doodle" performed in 1878 in New York City. Continuing in the domino affect was the rise of popular music being played on the radio around 1922. The radio was a double whammy because popular songs were played so often that people tired of them before they bought the sheet music or the record.

**FUN FACT** 
Madame Oberon, a Wagnerian soprano, had to stand ten feet away from the recording horn because her high notes knocked the recording needle off the master disc. Back when recording on a Gramophone, artists were required to move forward (towards the horn) when singing softly and back away (away from horn) when singing loudly. The engineers were responsible for moving the singers back and forth, which often caused a bitter relationship between the two.



Eldridge Johnson was the most important figure in improving the mechanics of the recording machine. He designed a spring motor to replace the hand-wound apparatus in the Gramophone invented by Emile Berliner. After various other improvements, Johnson salvaged and reorganized Berliner's Gramophone Company to Victor Talking Machine Company. On average, consumers bought 35 records for every phonograph.



Artistically, the 1930s and '40s were tremendous years of the recording industries. The Big Band sounds of Glen Miller and Benny Goodman brought about excellent dance music.** The crooning style of singing brought about Bing Crosby and Rudy Vallee. And in 1932, the first disc jockey program hit the airwaves. Al Jarvis' Make Believe Ballroom is considered to be the first disc jockey show.**


"Race Music" was a generic term for almost any black-oriented popular music until the terms "blues" and "rhythm and blues" became popular. Often, white artists recorded "cleaned-up" versions of popular race records. What is even crazier than this is that their versions usually outsold the originals. In the mid to late 1950s, The Miracles, the Supremes, and the Marvelettes, among others, combined influences from blues, gospel, pop, and jazz to create a sound that appealed to a both black and white audience.**


In 1958, the Record Industry Association of America began to audit and certify record sales. Perry Como received the first certified gold record in 1958 for his single "Catch a Falling Star."** In order to do this, he was required to sell 1 million copies of his single. For platinum certification, which began in 1976, an album had to double its requirements for gold certification. The Eagles' Their Greatest Hits received the first platinum award in 1976. In 2004, the RIAA added a Digital Sales award followed by a Digital Ringtone Award in 2006. Bing Crosby's 1942 recording of "White Christmas" is thoguht to be the best-selling single of all time, capping more than 50 million copies.**And Michael Jackson's Thriller is considered the biggest selling album of all time, with sales over 100 million copies.



Recording can be split into two different types. Monaural means that only one channel was used to record. It is the equivalent to listening with only one ear. Stereo recording uses two channels to record and is the equivalent to listening with two ears. Multitrack recording allows an artist to record one instrument or voice at a time on separate tracks. Paul McCartney, Stevie Wonder, and Prince, among many others, have all done this routinely.


As many people know, in 2001, a large struggle for digital music rights between Napster.com and the music industry. In the end, Napster lost. Pay sites began to spring up and users began to frequent these different pay sites.

Elvis Presley, the King rock 'n' roll, was large and in charge in the early 1950s into the '60s until he died from a heart attack on August 16, 1977. Around his glory days, popular music came under heavy criticism, especially rock 'n' roll, which was said to cause atrophy in the brain, cause delinquency, or incite crime. Ice T's song "Cop Killer" created such an uprrar that his company took it off of the shelves, removed the offensive song, and then placed it back on shelves. As a solution, the Parents' Music Resource Center persuaded the music industry to label albums containing explicit lyrics.

The Film Industry

Thomas Edison usually gets the credit for inventing the movie camera, however, his work was based on experiments by others.

1. Eadweard Muybridge started the process with sequential photographs of a running horse. In order to do this, he ran several wires across a racetrack to still cameras. As the horse passed each camera, it tripped the wires and caused the camera to take a still picture. Muybridge then placed the pictures on a disc and had it rotated in front of a projector to give the image of the running horse.**






2. Edison then received patents for the Kinetograph (movie camera) and the Kinetoscope (allowed the viewer to look through a peep-hole at the moving film).


3. Auguste and Louis Lumiere developed a portable camera and projector combined in one unit. Their films were very basic - everyday scenes of life, but viewers of their films were so lost in the majesty of film that they could care less what they were watching; just that they were watching something was enough**

Monday, October 25, 2010

Television and Cable

Even though the popularity of television grew rapidly after WWII, the invention of television happened way before that. WWII slightly halted the process of television, but soon after the war ended, the boom happened. Manufacturers numbers jumped from 179,000 in 1947 to 975,000 in 1948. By 1960 almost 90% of American homes owned television sets. In 1975, the Home Box Office (HBO) began broadcasting to cable systems around the United States. The field of cable was so broad and growing that the government passed the Cable Communication Act of 1993 to require cable companies to compensate local broadcasters for the right to carry their signals. As the technology of television stayed on the incline throughout the 70's, the mid-1980's brought the invention of high-definition television. Audio components of television became important again with the creation of Music Television (MTV). Minorities started out suffering due to stereotypical shows such as Julia. But later other programs such as Good Times, Sanford and Son, and The Jeffersons attempted to portray the "true life" of minority familes. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=clHl_10WbTA

Disc Jockeys and FM

The introduction of disc jockeys was another major boost in the survival of radio after television. Broadcasters paid DJs to spin records rather than paying for unionized musicians, actors, and large studios. DJs also were hired to promote their records, in hopes of boosting their sales.
The invention of FM radio in 1941 was another major step forward for radio. Previously, the broadcasts had been taking place on AM band which contained irritating static and unclear sound. FM had a shorter range than AM but it was virtually static free. FM had a number of setbacks including rejection from the public but eventually FM's popularity spread nationally beginning with the changes in tone and dynamics compared to AM radio.

Networks and Programming

First Play-By-Play Football Broadcast - Nov. 24, 1921 by Texas 
The first national network was established in 1926. The name of it was the National Broadcasting Company (NBC), Shortly after, another national network debuted. The Columbia Phonographic Broadcasting (CBS) system was established in 1927. All of the networks had headquarters in New York City. Radio programs brought families together to listen to the radio. Programs would feature everything from opera singers to comedians on their broadcasts. Sports broadcasts also became popular through radio. There was an especial interest for live entertainment even though recorded programs were still used. Radio programs were divided into two main categories: sponsored and sustaining. Sponsored programs had advertising and sustaining programs did not. Even though the rising popularity of television threatened the survival of radio, in the coming years radio adapted to it's changing environment and it is still prevalent today.

Radio

The very beginning of radio broadcast started in 1895 from a man by the name of Guglielmo Marconi. He led the path to radio by improving the traditional wired telegraph. Marconi's invention led to a number of people attempting to create their own form of wireless communication The official first regular programmed broadcast radio company was KDKA of Pittsburg. KDKA began it's journey by covering the 1920 presidential election between Warren G. Harding and James M. Cox. KDKA was established with a commercial purpose. Radio commercials were not as popular at first because the station owners considered radio as a selling tool itself. Most of early radio's audience consisted of men and boys because they were experimenting with the technology. Listeners were fascinated with the ability to listen to stations from long distances. Fascination with radio programs developed later on.