![]() There was also a “silent hour” in the evening, so listeners could scan for sounds of faraway broadcasting stations.Tagged: Actual Play, Adventure, DND, Dungeons and Dragons, League of Ultimate Questing, LUQ, Podcast, Quest, Real Play, Role Playing Game, RPG, Slap Dash, Slap Dash Studios, podcast, comedy, D&D, TTRPG, D20Q, D20 Questions, D20, actual play, real play, table top rpg, board game, funny, Actual Play Adventure, Real Play Podcast, Goblin, Led Zepplin, Star Trek, Haunted House, Rose City Comic Con, RCCC, Gary Gygax, Gen Con, Wizard World Comic Con, Marvel, Moon Knight, Orgasmo, C team, Acquisitions Incorporation, Ac inc, shadow Council, critical roll, kate welch, matt mercer, matthew mercer, 5th edition, 5e, 4th edition, 4e, 3rd edition, 3e, DND3. Early programming, though dry in the extreme, was not dissimilar to the content of 2022: news, sports, market reports, weather forecasts. Station staffers dreamt up a distinctive three-note “chime” (think of the tune “Over There” in reverse) as on-air identification the oft-spun yarn of the NBC network purloining the “bong-bing-bong” for its own use (which continues to this day) may or may not be true, but evidence leaves little doubt WSB’s chimes were indeed the first signal of their kind in the nation. Program logs indicate WSB carried the very first NBC network broadcast in November, 1926. The station moved from the Journal building to the Biltmore Hotel downtown in 1925 the first known recording of the station―the voice of pioneering General Manager Lambdin Kay―dates from that year. Atlanta’s First Presbyterian Church began broadcasting its services on WSB in 1922, starting what became the longest continuously running religious broadcast in the world. ![]() ![]() You’ve heard this for decades billed as an actual WSB broadcast, but it wasn’t-it’s a phonograph record with the radio announcer added as a novelty, a minor fad at the time.ĭecades of legend notwithstanding, the call letters “WSB” were randomly assigned the moniker “Welcome South, Brother”, while fitting, was invented later. >LISTEN: Hear the first recorded example of the “WSB Chimes” and announcer Lambdin Kay. ![]() Barely 600,000 people lived in metro Atlanta at the time. WASHINGTON The Pacific Legal Foundation, libertarian litigators with no shortage of things to litigate against, might have found the key to unlocking a courthouse door. It was the Journal which received the winning telegram from the federal government on March 15, and its station WSB signed on just hours later with weather information-using borrowed equipment. What we’d consider modern “broadcasting” began in 1920 with the reporting of Presidential election returns (Harding wins!) the first radio “commercial” is widely regarded to have aired in August, 1922 in New York City, several months after WSB had taken to the airwaves―the first radio station in the region, thus soon nicknamed “The Voice of the South”. The media landscape was far removed from anything we’d recognize today: no television no internet movies had no sound radio itself was little more than a tool for communication with ships at sea, or a hobby for buffs who’d built homemade sets-and there were an only an estimated 1000 of those in Atlanta. March, 1922: a race to the wire-or more accurately, the “wireless”-between Atlanta’s then-competing newspapers, the Journal and Constitution: which would lay claim to putting Georgia’s first radio station on the air? It was the Journal which received the “winning” telegram from the federal government on March 15, and its station WSB signed on just hours later with weather information-using borrowed equipment in a slapdash studio at the Journal building on Forsyth Street. ![]() There’d be no Scott Slade or Mark Arum without a fellow named Lambdin Kay, 100 years ago. And it’s the foundation of everything you hear from us today. The history of WSB is the history of an industry. ![]()
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