Once upon a time, I was teaching some second-year law students. I wanted to suggest that a lawyer had over-coached his witness such that the words spoken by the witness were actually the words of the attorney. I attempted a simile: "Just like Edgar Bergen." The uniformly puzzled looks on my audience's faces said that they did not know the ventriloquist who partnered with his dummy Charlie McCarthy. Ending the uncomfortable silence which followed, one of the interns said, "I think he was Candice Bergen's father." As, indeed, he was.
The number of Americans who remember the Golden Days of Radio (1920-1950) grows smaller every year. Pop Quiz! How many of the following do you recognize? Edward R. Murrow, Walter Winchell, Jack Benny, Fred Allen, Abbott and Costello, Fibber McGee and Molly, Amos 'n' Andy, Ozzie and Harriet, Our Miss Brooks, The Goldbergs, Spike Jones, Stan Freberg, Johnny Dollar, Sgt. Joe Friday, Dr. James Kildare and Dr. Leonard Gillespie, Irma Peterson, Kay Kyser, Hedda Hopper, Ethel and Albert Arbuckle, Bulldog Drummond, Lum and Abner, and Chandu. One strongly suspects that the score achieved is directly proportional to one's age.
SiriusXM is an audio streaming service which caters to the very precise interests of its listeners: 1970s pop, Hip-Hop, Willie Nelson, Broadway show tunes, Disney, Beatles, Contemporary Christian, Mary J. Blige, Latin Jazz, Bruce Springsteen, 1940s big band, New Orleans jazz, Grateful Dead, Bollywood, Classical symphony, R&B, Frank Sinatra, Hawaiian, Bluegrass, Coffee house, Yacht rock (!), Calming music for cats (!!). One of their many channels is devoted to the Golden Days of Radio 24 hours per day.
Author Gerald Nachman was literally "raised on radio." His ardour for the "golden days" of the medium is evident throughout his book. The result vacillates between memoir and academic history, each well-written for its genre. Nachman's reach is encyclopaedic; there are other texts which accomplish this better, e.g. John Dunning, On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio, New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. This is an excellent book for the aficionado of classic radio. The rest? Maybe not so much, unless you're an avid student of popular cultural history.