Abstract

Introduction Chapter 1 Dramatizing a Bar of Soap: The Advertising Industry Before Broadcasting Chapter 2 The Fourth Dimension of Advertising: The Development of Commercial Broadcasting in the early 1920s Chapter 3 They Sway Millions as If by Some Magic Wand: The Advertising Industry Enters Radio in the late 1920s Chapter 4 Who Owns the Time? Advertising Agencies and Networks Vie for Control in the 1930s Chapter 5 The 1930s' Turn to the Hard Sell: Blackett-Sample-Hummert's Soap Opera Factory Chapter 6 Showmanship on Radio: Ballet, Ballyhoo, and the Soft Sell of Young & Rubicam Chapter 7 Two Agencies: Batten Barton Durstine & Osborn, Crafters of the Corporate Image, and Benton & Bowles, Radio Renegades Chapter 8 Madison Avenue in Hollywood: J. Walter Thompson and Kraft Music Hall (1936-46) Chapter 9 Advertising, Commercial Radio, and the War Effort, 1942-45 Chapter 10 On a Treadmill to Oblivion: The Peak and Sudden Decline of Network Radio in the late 1940s Conclusion Bibliography

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