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Q: What Was America's Longest-Running Radio Show? A: The Grand Ole Opry. In 1925, Nashville radio station WSM went on the air. Like many early radio stations, it was the voice of a particular commercial enterprisein this case, the Nashville-based National Life and Accident Insurance Company, which was looking to move beyond sickness and accident insurance into life insurance. The show that preceded the barn dance was a classical music program called the Music Appreciation Hour. One night in 1927 Hay introduced the barn Although some proper Nashville residents thought the show was not in tune with the citys genteel reputation, it soon became wildly popular. A new radio tower built in 1932 allowed WSM to reach most of the nation with the show, although southerners remained the core of the audience. Whereas commercial media like radio have sometimes been seen as a threat to traditional cultures, WSM and the Grand Ole Opry spread and preserved (while it also transformed) southern white rural music. Source: Charles Reagan Wilson and William Ferris, eds., Encyclopedia of Southern Culture (1989). |
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