The 1930's was considered the "Golden Age" of the radio. More than 28 million households purchased a radio for their homes during this decade.
Yes, they did.
In the 1930s people would listen to music on the radio and on a phonograph.
The Chuckwagon
Yes because there were very few televisions
In the 1930s, the primary entertainment at home was the radio. Radio broadcast dramatizations of stories, complete with sound effects (like listening to a movie). Otherwise, children played lots of made-up outside games.
What people did for fun in the 1930s was go to movies to escape the dust bowl, listened to swing music, and listened to radio shows.
They were all relatively cheap forms of entertainment,
RADAR
japan was desperate for resources
japan was desperate for resources
japan was desperate for resources.
Yes, SiriusXM satellite radio has several stations to choose from - oldies going back to the 1930s!
He started out on the radio announcing the play-by-play during Chicago Cubs baseball games in the 1930s.
Because it was the only source of entertainment. There wasn't the Internet or gaming consoles, so people turned to radio.
The have no effect.
He got his start in the early 1930s as a radio announcer of the play by play of Chicago Cubs games.
they used TV and they also used the radio they had no cell phones
Seeing movies listening to the radio and reading books
Around the 1930s and perhaps a bit earlier than that. The 1920s were a time of major American consumerism, and by the 1930s, radios were affordable to a majority of families.
hoover dam
One of the radio comedians of the 1920's and 1930's was Jack Benny. Milton Berle was another radio comedian of the 1920's and 1930's.
The Dolan Family. It was founded by Charles Dolan in the early 1930s.
Musicals, radio, soap operas, big bands and swing, frank Sinatra
tv shows were hardly invented. radio shows were the big thing.
it increased employment