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Mutual Broadcasting System

The Mutual Broadcasting System (commonly referred to simply as Mutual; sometimes referred to as MBS, Mutual Radio or the Mutual Radio Network) was an American commercial radio network in operation from 1934 to 1999. In the golden age of U.S. radio drama, Mutual was best known as the original network home of The Lone Ranger and The Adventures of Superman and as the long-time radio residence of The Shadow. For many years, it was a national broadcaster for Major League Baseball (including the All-Star Game and World Series), the National Football League, and Notre Dame Fighting Irish football. From the mid-1930s and until the retirement of the network in 1999, Mutual ran a highly respected news service accompanied by a variety of popular commentary shows. Mutual pioneered the nationwide late night call-in talk radio program in the late 1970s, introducing the country to Larry King and later Jim Bohannon.

Mutual Broadcasting System
Type
Country
  • United States
  • Canada (limited)
Ownership
Parent
History
FoundedSeptember 29, 1934
(88 years ago)
 (1934-09-29)
Closed
  • April 17, 1999 (1999-04-17)
  • (64 years, 200 days)
Coverage
Affiliates
  • 4 founders (1934);
  • 104 (1938); 384 (1945);
  • 543 (1950); 443 (1960);
  • 950 (1979); 810 (1985);
  • approx. 300 (1999)

In the 1970s, acting in much the same style as rival ABC Radio[a] had splitting their network in 1968, Mutual launched four sister radio networks: Mutual Black Network (MBN) (initially launched as "Mutual Reports"[1]), which evolved to today's American Urban Radio Networks (AURN); Mutual Cadena Hispánica (or in English, "Mutual Spanish Network"); Mutual Southwest Network; and Mutual Progressive Network (later re-branded "Mutual Lifestyle Radio" in 1980, then retired in 1983).

Of the four national networks of American radio's classic era, Mutual had for decades the largest number of affiliates, but the least certain financial position[2] (which prevented Mutual from expanding into television broadcasting after World War II, as NBC, CBS and ABC did). For the first 18 years of its existence, Mutual was owned and operated as a cooperative (a system similar to that of today's National Public Radio), setting the network apart from its corporate owned competitors. Mutual's member stations shared their own original programming, transmission and promotion expenses, and advertising revenues. From December 30, 1936, when it debuted in the West, the Mutual Broadcasting System had affiliates from coast to coast. Its business structure would change after General Tire assumed majority ownership in 1952 through a series of regional and individual station acquisitions.

Once General Tire sold the network in 1957 to a syndicate led by Dr. Armand Hammer, Mutual's ownership was largely disconnected from the stations it served, leading to a more conventional, top-down model of program production and distribution. Due to the multiple sales of the network that followed, Mutual was once described in Broadcasting magazine as "often traded".[3] After a group that involved Hal Roach Studios purchased Mutual from Hammer's group, the new executive team was charged with accepting money to use Mutual as a vehicle for foreign propaganda while the network suffered significant financial losses and affiliate defections.[4] Concurrently filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and sold twice in the span of four months for purposes of raising enough money to remain operational, the network's reputation was severely damaged but soon rebounded under succeeding owner 3M Company. Sold to private interests in 1966 and again to Amway in 1977, Mutual purchased two radio stations in New York and Chicago entering the 1980s, only to sell them after Amway's interest in broadcasting began to fade. Radio syndicator Westwood One acquired Mutual in 1985 and NBC Radio in 1987, merging the two networks together; throughout the 1990s, Mutual was gradually assimilated into Westwood One's operations until the name was finally retired.

History

1934–1935: The launch of Mutual

Attempts at establishing cooperatively owned radio networks had been made since the 1920s. In 1929, a group of four radio stations in the major markets of New York City, Chicago, Cincinnati, and Detroit organized into a loose confederation known as the Quality Network. Five years later (in 1934), a similar or identical group of stations founded the Mutual Broadcasting System.[c] Mutual's original participating stations were WORNewark, New Jersey, just outside New York (owned by the Bamberger Broadcasting Service, a division of R.H. Macy and Company; in 1949, WOR-TV would begin broadcasting and Bamberger would be renamed General Teleradio, due to General Tire & Rubber's increased investment in the TV station[5]), WGN–Chicago (owned by WGN Inc., a subsidiary of the Chicago Tribune), WXYZ–Detroit (owned by Kunsky-Trendle Broadcasting), and WLW–Cincinnati (owned by the Crosley Radio Company). The network was organized on September 29, 1934, with the members contracting for telephone-line transmission facilities and agreeing to collectively enter into contracts with advertisers for their networked shows. WOR and WGN, based in the two largest markets and providing the bulk of the programming, were the acknowledged leaders of the group. On October 29, 1934, Mutual Broadcasting System, Inc. was incorporated, with Bamberger and WGN Inc. each holding 50 percent of the stock—five each of the ten total shares.[6][7][8]

 
Lum and Abner, the latter of whom is seen in this advertisement reaching for a can of Horlick's. The malted milk maker sponsored the show during its entire run on Mutual. It left Mutual for NBC Blue after August 1935.

The three national radio networks already in operation—the Columbia Broadcasting System and the National Broadcasting Company's Red and Blue—were corporate controlled: programming was produced by the network (or by advertising agencies of program sponsors that purchased airtime on the network) and distributed to affiliates, most of which were independently owned. In contrast, the Mutual Broadcasting System was run as a true cooperative venture, with programming produced by and shared between the group's members. The majority of the early programming, from WOR and WGN, consisted of musical features and inexpensive dramatic serials. WOR had The Witch's Tale, a horror anthology series whose "hunner-an'-thirteen-year-old" narrator invited listeners to "douse all [the] lights. Now draw up to the fire an' gaze into the embers ...gaaaaze into 'em deep!... an' soon ye'll be across the seas, in th' jungle land of Africa ... hear that chantin' and them savage drums?"[9] WGN contributed the popular comedy series Lum and Abner. Detroit's WXYZ provided The Lone Ranger, which had debuted in 1933 and was already in demand. It is often claimed that Mutual was launched primarily as a vehicle for the Western serial, but Lum and Abner was no less popular at the time.[b] What WLW brought was sheer power; billing itself as "The Nation's Station," in May 1934 it had begun night broadcasting at a massive 500,000 watts, ten times the clear-channel standard.[16]

On May 24, 1935, the network aired its inaugural live event—the first-ever night baseball game, between the Cincinnati Reds and the Philadelphia Phillies.[17] In September, WXYZ dropped out to join NBC Blue, though contractual obligations kept The Lone Ranger on Mutual, airing three times a week, through spring 1942.[18] The hole in the Detroit market was immediately filled by CKLW in Windsor, Ontario, just across the river.[19] In October, the network began a decades-long run as broadcaster of baseball's World Series, with airtime responsibilities shared between WGN's Bob Elson and Quin Ryan and WLW's Red Barber (NBC and CBS also carried the series that year; the Fall Classic would air on all three networks through 1938).[20][21] Mutual broadcast its first Notre Dame football game that autumn as well, beginning another relationship that would last for decades.[22] As an income-generating business, the Mutual network was a modest endeavor at the start: in the first eleven months of 1935, the cooperative garnered $1.1 million in advertising, compared to NBC's $28.3 million and CBS's $15.8 million.[19]

Late 1930s: National expansion

In the fall of 1936, Mutual lost another of its founding members when WLW departed. The network, however, was in the midst of a major expansion: the first outside group of stations to sign on with Mutual was John Shepard's Colonial Network with its Boston flagship station, WAAB, and thirteen affiliates around New England.[23] There was good reason for this affiliation: Shepard had been involved with the founding of Mutual, and served on its board of directors.[24] Cleveland's WGAR also became an affiliate, albeit a dual one, as they also held a primary NBC Blue hookup.[25] WGAR was joined by five other Midwestern stations: KWK–St. Louis, Mo.; KSO–Des Moines, Iowa; WMT–Cedar Rapids, Iowa; KOIL–Omaha, Neb.; and KFOR–Lincoln, Neb.[26] The big prize came in December, when the Don Lee Network, the leading regional web on the West Coast, left CBS to become a central participant in Mutual. Don Lee brought its four owned-and-operated stationsKHJ–Los Angeles, KFRC–San Francisco, KGB–San Diego, and KDB–Santa Barbara—along with six California affiliates and, via shortwave hookup, two more in Hawaii.[19][27] Mutual now had a nationwide presence. During 1936, as well, an offer by Warner Bros. to purchase the network was apparently made and rejected.[28]

In January 1937, ownership of WAAB was consolidated with that of another Boston station controlled by Shepard: WNAC was flagship of the Yankee Network, a circuit of New England radio stations whose membership partially overlapped with that of Colonial.[29] Yankee flagship WNAC had been an affiliate of CBS Radio, changing affiliation to NBC Red later in 1937 when CBS purchased WEEI in that city. The Texas Network soon added twenty-three more stations to the Mutual affiliate roster.[30] WGAR dropped both their Mutual and NBC Blue affiliations on September 26, 1937, to take CBS exclusively; in turn, WJAY (co-owned with WHK by the United Broadcasting Company, part of The Plain Dealer business) joined Mutual and changed calls to WCLE.[25] The Mutual affiliation in Cleveland moved again in the fall of 1942 from WCLE to WHK, temporarily displacing Blue programming from the market entirely.[31] By the end of 1938, Mutual had 74 exclusive affiliates; though the two leading radio network companies discouraged dual hookups, Mutual shared another 25 affiliates with NBC and 5 with CBS.[32] The total of 104 affiliates put Mutual not far behind the leaders. Because of the corporate strength behind NBC and CBS, however, and the fact that the lion's share of the most powerful stations in the country had already signed with them before Mutual's emergence (the exceptional, and soon departed, WLW aside), the cooperative network would be at a permanent disadvantage.

Programming: The Shadow and diverse political voices

 
Orson Welles as The Shadow. A predecessor in the role delivered the show's intro, with its famous catchphrase, "Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? The Shadow knows ...." According to historian Frank Brady, Welles's "voice as the 'invisible' Shadow was perfect." The intro, however, also called for a sinister chuckle; Welles's effort "seemed more an adolescent giggle than a terrifying threat."[33]

On the programming front, 1936 saw Mutual launch the first network advice show, The Good Will Hour, hosted by John J. Anthony and sponsored by physical culture guru Bernarr Macfadden. The program was a new take on Ask Mister Anthony, which had aired on a local New York station in 1932, "dedicated to helping the sufferers from an antiquated and outmoded domestic relations code." Anthony, whose real name was Lester Kroll, brought a wealth of relevant experience to his work—he had once been jailed for failing to make alimony payments.[34][35] In July 1937 came the premiere of a seven-part adaptation of Les Misérables, produced, written, and directed by Orson Welles and featuring many of his Mercury Theatre performers—Mercury's first appearance on the air. September 26, 1937, proved a particularly momentous date: that evening, The Shadow came to Mutual.[d] The show would become a mainstay of the network for more than a decade and a half and one of the most popular programs in radio history. For the first year of its Mutual run, Welles provided the voice of The Shadow and his newly created alter ego, Lamont Cranston. He played the part anonymously at first. But, as one chronicler put it, "nothing to do with Welles could remain a secret for very long."[39]

In April 1938, the network picked up The Green Hornet from former member WXYZ. Mutual gave the twice-a-week series its first national exposure until November 1939, when it switched to NBC Blue. (The series would return very briefly to Mutual in the fall of 1940).[40] Mutual also provided the national launching pad for Kay Kyser and his Kollege of Musical Knowledge radio show. Kyser's enormous success at Mutual soon allowed his show to move to NBC and its much larger audience.[41] By May 1939, Mutual was broadcasting the Indianapolis 500.[42][e] That autumn, Mutual won exclusive broadcast rights to the World Series. As described in a 1943 Supreme Court ruling upholding the regulatory power of the Federal Communications Commission, Mutual "offered this program of outstanding national interest to stations throughout the country, including NBC and CBS affiliates in communities having no other stations. CBS and NBC immediately invoked the 'exclusive affiliation' clauses of their agreements with these stations, and as a result thousands of persons in many sections of the country were unable to hear the broadcasts of the games." This was the first example given in the ruling of "abuses" perpetrated by the two leading broadcast companies.[32]

Mutual also began building a reputation as a strong news service, rivaling the industry leaders in quality if not budget. The broadcasts of WOR reporter Gabriel Heatter from the Lindbergh kidnapping "trial of the century" in 1935, heard over Mutual, were highly regarded; Heatter soon had his own regularly scheduled newscast, aired nationally five nights a week.[44] In 1936, also via WOR, Mutual began broadcasting the reports of news commentator Raymond Gram Swing, who became one of the country's leading voices on foreign affairs.[45] In November 1937, conservative commentator Fulton Lewis Jr., heard five nights weekly from Mutual affiliate WOL, became the first national news personality to broadcast out of Washington, D.C.; he would remain with the network until his death almost three decades later.[46] In 1938, Mutual started rebroadcasting news reports from the BBC and English-language newscasts from the European mainland. The network also began employing its own reporters in Europe as the continent headed toward crisis, including John Steele, Waverley Root, Arthur Mann, and Victor Lusinchi. Among these was Sigrid Schultz, the first accomplished female foreign correspondent to appear on American news radio.[47][48]

1940s: One of the "Big Four"

Early in 1940, the corporate organization of Mutual became even more inclusive, as described by scholar Cornelia B. Rose:

Until January, 1940, six groups bore the expense of the network operation in varying degree: stations WGN and WOR owned all the stock of the corporation and guaranteed to make up any deficit; the Colonial Network in New England, the Don Lee System on the Pacific Coast, and the group of stations owned by the Cleveland Plain Dealer, participated in responsibility for running expenses. A new contract effective February 1, 1940, provides for contributing membership by all the above group[s] plus station CKLW in Detroit-Windsor. These groups now agree to underwrite expenses and become stockholders in the network.... An operating board for the network is comprised of representatives from each of these groups, together with additional representation appointed by other affiliated stations.[49]

 
Mutual featured a variety of political voices, but none for so long as that of conservative commentator Fulton Lewis Jr. Many later pundits "copied his style—mocking, ridiculing, full of denials, full of sweeping generalizations, and full of inside-dopesterism."[50] WKIC was Mutual's affiliate in Hazard, Kentucky.

The new cooperative structure was also joined by the owners of WKRC in Cincinnati, which had replaced Mutual cofounder WLW in that market. The Mutual corporation now had 100 shares, apportioned as follows:[51]

Shareholders of the Mutual Broadcasting System, 1940
Shareholder Lead station Shares
Bamberger Broadcasting WOR 25
WGN Inc. WGN 25
Don Lee Network KHJ 25
Colonial Network WAAB 6
United Broadcasting WHK 6
Western Ontario Broadcasting CKLW 6
The Cincinnati Times-Star WKRC 6
Fred Weber Mutual general manager 1
Total 100

In 1941, WOR's official city of license was changed to New York. Within two years, the Colonial Network's affiliate roster and shares in Mutual had been fully absorbed into the Yankee Network by John Shepard III; WNAC was the sole flagship, WAAB having been moved to Worcester, in central Massachusetts, to avoid duopoly restrictions. With WBZ taking over the slot as the NBC Red affiliate in Boston, WNAC switched to Mutual. In January 1943, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the sale of the Yankee Network—with WNAC, its three other owned-and-operated stations, its contracts with 17 additional affiliates, and its Mutual shares—to the Ohio-based General Tire and Rubber Company.[29][52][53]

By 1940, Mutual was already on a par with the industry leaders in terms of affiliate roster size.[f] Still, because Mutual affiliates were mostly in small markets or lesser stations in large ones, the network lagged way behind in advertising revenue—NBC took in eleven times as much as Mutual that year.[55][g] In 1941, the FCC, calling for NBC to divest one of its two networks, observed that the company "has utilized the Blue to forestall competition with the Red .... Mutual is excluded from, or only lamely admitted to, many important markets."[57][58] On January 10, 1942, Mutual filed a $10.275 million suit against NBC and its parent company, RCA, alleging a conspiracy "hindering and restricting Mutual freely and fairly to compete in the transmission in interstate commerce of nationwide network programs."[59] The FCC's Supreme Court victory in 1943 led to the sale of the Blue Network and Mutual dropping its lawsuit.[60]

These developments appear to have been of more symbolic than practical value to Mutual—the transfer of the NBC Blue stations to the new American Broadcasting Company did little to help Mutual's competitive position. In 1945 it reached 384 affiliates, and by December 1948, Mutual Broadcasting was heard on more than 500 stations in the United States.[54][61] But this growth did not reflect any ability on Mutual's part to attract leading stations from the corporate-controlled networks. Rather, the FCC had eased its technical standards for local stations, facilitating the establishment of new outlets in small markets: between 1945 and 1952, the number of AM stations rose from around 940 to more than 2,350.[62] It was these new, relatively weak stations Mutual kept picking up. Though by now it had many more affiliates than any other U.S. radio network, for the most part they remained "less desirable in frequency, power, and coverage," as the Supreme Court had put it.[32] For instance, in the postwar era CBS and NBC covered all of North Carolina each with only four stations. Mutual needed fourteen affiliates to deliver comparable statewide coverage.[12]

 
Logo for KFRC, the Mutual station in San Francisco, owned by the Don Lee Broadcasting System

Late in the decade, there was a brief exploration into the idea of launching a Mutual television network, serious enough to prompt talks with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer as a potential source of programming talent.[63] In fact, Bamberger Broadcasting's WOR-TV and WOIC (the latter a Washington, D.C. video outlet) maintained letterhead with "Mutual Television" decorating their identifications. Beyond this, there is no confirmation, however, that a cooperative video service was ever seriously considered.[64] The plans never got off the ground and Mutual thus became the only one of the "Big Four" U.S. radio networks not to start (and eventually be dominated by) a television network. While there was no Mutual TV network, this did not mean the group did not have an influence over commercial television's early development. Several Mutual radio affiliates launched their own television stations that would often be affiliated with the television networks of ABC, NBC, CBS or DuMont.

The cooperative also held the rights to a number of valuable radio properties that made the transition to the new medium, including two of the era's most popular variations on what would later become known as the tabloid talk show and "reality" programming: the crabby gabfest Leave It to the Girls and, in particular, Queen for a Day, which both started on Mutual radio in 1945. Referred to by some as a "misery show," Queen for a Day "awarded prizes to women who could come up with the most heart-stabbing stories told by the sick and the downtrodden .... On one show, a mother of nine requested a washing machine to replace one that broke when it fell on her husband and disabled him—and who, by the way, also needed heart surgery."[65] In May 1947, a simulcast version began airing on the Don Lee system's experimental TV station in Los Angeles, W6XAO (later KTSL). It was a smash hit, and by the turn of the decade TV stations all along the coast were broadcasting it to high ratings.[66][h] In the 1950s, Mutual would stare down NBC for four years as the mighty network sought to take control of the show.

Programming: World War II and Superman

 
President Franklin D. Roosevelt at his home in Hyde Park, New York, December 24, 1943, delivering one of his nationwide radio 'Fireside chats' on the Tehran Conference and Cairo Conference[69]

Offscreen, Mutual remained an enterprising broadcaster. In 1940, a program featuring Cedric Foster joined Mutual's respected schedule of news and opinion shows. Foster's claim to fame was as the first daytime commentator to be heard nationally on a daily basis.[70] The network aired that year's NFL Championship Game on December 8, the first national broadcast of the annual event.[71] Over the following half-decade, Mutual's war coverage held its own with that of the wealthier networks, featuring field correspondents such as Henry Shapiro and Piet Van T Veer and commentators such as Cecil Brown, formerly of CBS.[72] At 2:26 p.m. Eastern time, on Sunday, December 7, 1941, Mutual flagship station WOR interrupted a football game broadcast with a news flash reporting the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. It was the first public announcement of the attack heard on the U.S. mainland. The first bombs had dropped 63 minutes earlier.[73] In May 1945, Sigrid Schultz reported from one of the last Nazi concentration camps to be discovered, Ravensbrück.[74] The following month, Meet the Press premiered with Martha Rountree as moderator.[75] For a year and a half in the late 1940s, William Shirer came over from CBS to do current events commentary after his famous falling out with Edward Murrow.[76] In 1948, Mutual's four-part series To Secure These Rights, dramatizing the findings of President Truman's Committee on Civil Rights, outraged many politicians and the network's own affiliates in the segregated South.[77]

 
A recording session for The Mysterious Traveler, with the entire cast clustered around one microphone. Host Maurice Tarplin is directly behind the mic, third from the right. To the rear, a sound-effect artist and three phonographs (at least) provide music and effects.

In the field of entertainment, Mutual built on the incomparable success of The Shadow. WGN's Chicago Theater of the Air, featuring hour-long opera and musical theater productions before a live audience, was broadcast for the first time in May 1940. By 1943, the weekly show was being recorded in front of houses 4,000 strong, gathered to see performances featuring a full orchestra and chorus. Chicago Theater of the Air would run on Mutual through March 1955.[78] Mutual provided an early national outlet for the influential, iconoclastic satirist Henry Morgan, whose show Here's Morgan began its network run in October 1940. Though The Lone Ranger moved over to NBC Blue in May 1942, within a few months Mutual had another reliable, and no less famous, action hero. The Adventures of Superman, picked up from WOR, would run on the network from August 1942 to June 1949. In April 1943, Mutual launched what would turn into one of its longest-lasting shows: debuting as The Return of Nick Carter and later retitled Nick Carter, Master Detective, it would be a network staple through September 1955. From May 1943 through May 1946, Mutual aired The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, reprising their roles from the Universal film series. An earlier incarnation of the show had run briefly on the network in 1936; a less starry version would return to Mutual from September 1947 through June 1949.[79] The Mysterious Traveler, a proto–Twilight Zone anthology series, aired every week on Mutual from December 1943 until September 1952.

In February 1946, Mutual introduced a quiz show, Twenty Questions, that would run for more than seven years. In October, the detective series Let George Do It, starring Bob Bailey, launched as a Mutual/Don Lee presentation; it would also run into the mid-1950s. For two years, starting in 1946 as well, Steve Allen got his first network exposure on the Mutual/Don Lee morning show Smile Time, out of Los Angeles's KHJ. In February 1947, the religiously oriented Family Theater premiered; with frequent appearances by major Hollywood stars, the series aired on Mutual for ten and a half years. That March, Kate Smith, a major star on CBS since 1931, moved over to Mutual. During most of her initial run at the network, which lasted until September 1951, she had two distinct weekday shows, each 15 minutes long: Kate Smith Speaks, at noon, and Kate Smith Sings, later in the hour.[80] The network gave an outlet to radio dramatist Wyllis Cooper and his highly regarded suspense anthology Quiet, Please, which ran on Mutual from June 1947 to September 1948. It also aired actor Alan Ladd's similarly lauded drama about a crime-solving mystery novelist, Box 13, which ran for precisely a year. Its 52 episodes, which aired every Sunday beginning August 22, 1948, were produced by Ladd's own company, Mayfair Productions.

1950s: New ownership

General Tire asserts control, then sells

 
On the radio in the morning, on TV in the afternoon—audiences couldn't get enough of Queen for a Day. At the end of each episode, host Jack Bailey would proclaim, "We wish we could make every lady in America a queen for every single day!"[81]

Toward the end of 1950, the executors of the estate of Thomas S. Lee (the son of Don Lee, who had died in 1934) liquidated the estate's broadcasting interests. The Don Lee Broadcasting System and its shares in Mutual was sold to General Tire for $12.3 million (equivalent to $139 million in 2021), which already had a sizable stake in Mutual via the Yankee Network.[82][83][i] The sale prompted a challenge by Edwin W. Pauley, who led a failed bid for the group, claiming it violated Mutual bylaws stating no group could hold more than 25 percent of network stock.[85][86] General Tire retained KHJ, KFRC and KGB, divesting the other stations.[83] At the same time, Mutual acquired the television broadcast rights to the World Series and All-Star Game for the next six years. Mutual was likely re-indulging in TV network dreams or was simply taking advantage of a long-standing business relationship; in either case, Mutual sold the broadcast rights to NBC in time for the following season's games at an enormous profit.[87][j]

Early in 1952, General Tire purchased General Teleradio from R.H. Macy and Company. With the deal, General Tire acquired the WOR radio and TV stations and the rights to the General Teleradio brand, under which the company merged its broadcasting interests as a new division (Bamberger had previously sold its TV station in the nation's capital, WOIC, to CBS and the Washington Post).[88] Most importantly, WOR's founding shares in Mutual, when added to the Yankee and Don Lee holdings, gave General Tire majority control of the network.[89] General Tire head Thomas F. O'Neil, who had already taken over as president of the Don Lee stations,[82] became president of Mutual in an executive shakeup.[90]

While Mutual did not have a television network,[k] it held rights to one of the most profitable shows in the medium: an early adaptation of Queen for a Day on General Teleradio/Don Lee's KHJ-TV boasted an audience triple that of the city's six other television stations combined.[67] It was also the largest U.S. radio network in affiliate numbers, by far—it had around 560, almost three times as many as its most powerful competitors, CBS (194) and NBC (191).[91][l] Still, the radio industry started to feel effects of major advertisers abandoning radio for television, with commercial rates being cut among all four networks, Mutual included.[93] O'Neil proposed a barter-style restructuring at a July 1953 affiliates' conference in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, called "The Cape Cod Plan": the network would provide five hours of sponsored programming daily and 14 hours of additional programming weekly that affiliates could sell commercial time for.[94] The "Cape Cod Plan" eventually met with resistance from the affiliates, some of which saw it as an attempt by Mutual to make money at their expense; by the time of the next affiliates' conference in January 1954, O'Neil called the barter plan "dead".[95]

In 1955, General Tire expanded its media holdings by acquiring RKO Pictures from Howard Hughes, renaming General Teleradio as RKO Teleradio Pictures.[93] The next year, a Canadian subsidiary of RKO purchased a governing interest in Mutual shareholder, Western Ontario Broadcasting, owner of CKLW; when the deal closed, two of Western Ontario Broadcasting's directors were U.S. citizens.[96] RKO Teleradio Pictures also purchased Washington, D.C. station WGMS-AM-FM in April 1956, with WGMS joining Mutual.[97] Closing the movie studio a year and a half later, the broadcasting division was renamed RKO Teleradio in 1957, and again to RKO General in 1958.[98] The "Mutual Dealer Plan", another attempt to revamp the network's operations containing elements of the barter-style "Cape Cod Plan", was unveiled to affiliates at an April 1956 conference to favorable reception.[99] The plan, however, could not prevent two remaining minority shareholders in Mutual from leaving: United Broadcasting's WHK switched to NBC in July,[100] while founding station WGN became an independent on August 31, 1956, with ABC/Prairie Farmer-owned WLS becoming Mutual's Chicago affiliate.[101][102]

By this point, Mutual was foundering. Even with the "Mutual Dealer Plan" and staff cutbacks, the network suffered a loss of $400,000 (equivalent to $3.86 million in 2021) in 1956.[93] In early July 1957, advertisers were notified the network could end operations at the end of the month, one of three options General Tire was considering for Mutual.[93] Another option—spinning off Mutual while retaining the stations that had given it control—was ultimately taken, as a group led by Dr. Armand Hammer bought the network later in the month.[103] Limited sponsorship packages were also introduced in which an advertiser could back a show for an abbreviated period rather than an entire season, but there was no reversing the trend of television usurping radio.[104] The radio networks were left with the bills for an increasing number of sustaining programs, which had no sponsors.[105] The loss of mainstay advertisers was accompanied by what historian Ronald Garay describes as the "mass desertion of network radio talent, management and technicians for television .... [T]hese people were taking with them the programming that had popularized the radio networks."[106]

Turmoil, propaganda allegations, and bankruptcy

 
Hal Roach Jr.

The network soon changed hands again: in September 1958, it was acquired by the Scranton Corporation for $2 million (equivalent to $18.8 million in 2021).[107] Scranton was under the control of the F. L. Jacobs Company, whose chairman, Alexander Guterma, envisioned a media empire uniting Mutual with another recent purchase, Hal Roach Studios.[108] Guterma's tenure as Mutual president was brief: he resigned on February 13, 1959, amid increasing financial shortfalls, overdue payments to affiliates, unpaid phone bills with AT&T, and an ongoing investigation by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).[109] Hal Roach Jr. took over as president,[110] but the SEC labeled him "a Guterma puppet" due to how he assumed Guterma's shares and questioned his ability to run the network.[109] A week after resigning, the SEC indicted Guterma on federal securities fraud charges[4] which led Roach to be removed as president of the film studio, though he retained his position as Mutual president.[110] The SEC also ordered stock trading for the F. L. Jacobs Company suspended.[111]

Scranton was under pressure to sell Mutual. The March 9, 1959, issue of Broadcasting magazine stated Mutual had a deficit of $1.05 million (equivalent to $9.76 million in 2021) and was losing up to $100,000 a month. AT&T threatened to cut off Mutual's telephone service within 24 hours if all outstanding charges were not paid, which would sever the network from its affiliates.[109] An attempt to sell the network to Max Factor collapsed after the cosmetics manufacturer could not find a way to create a tax advantage from the existing financial losses.[112][109] When AT&T made another threat to disconnect phone service, network news director Robert F. Hurleigh engineered a last-minute deal with businessman Malcolm Smith, whose transaction to buy the network included $1 million of advertising time and payment of the outstanding AT&T phone bill, which totaled over $400,000.[113] The deal, however, failed to stop KALL in Salt Lake City and its 41-station regional "Intermountain Network" from switching to ABC.[114] The Don Lee Network folded on April 26, with all 20 affiliates switching from Mutual to ABC and ABC purchasing Don Lee's remaining programming.[115] Yankee Network lead station WNAC severed ties with Mutual in August to become independent, but Mutual was allowed to affiliate with the other Yankee stations individually.[116]

Mutual apparently refuses to believe that we have disaffiliated. We are sympathetic to their problem, but we have definitely affiliated with ABC Radio.

Lynn Meyer, president of the Intermountain Network/KALL, on their March 1959 disaffiliation from Mutual[114]

The troubles with Mutual worsened. While on a press junket to Ciudad Trujillo in May 1959, Hurleigh received confirmation that Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Trujillo secretly provided money to Guterma, Roach and Scranton Corp. vice president Garland Culpepper. Guterma accepted up to $750,000 from Trujillo, and in turn, Mutual newscasts were to have up to 425 minutes of puff pieces favorable to Trujillo's regime broadcast per month.[4] One story read by Walter Winchell regarded plans by Hal Roach Studios to film future movies in the country, while another story about Castro allies planning attacks against the Trujillo regime was read by Fulton Lewis Jr.; assorted "news releases" were also sent intended for newscasts but never broadcast.[117] Outraged over the arrangement, Hurleigh went to the U.S. Justice Department, which also received a complaint from a Trujillo lawyer after Guterma failed to give the money back. By September, Guterma was indicted for failing to register as a foreign agent, with Roach and Culpepper as defendants.[4][118] Guterma, who pleaded no contest to the charge, was sentenced to federal prison for stock fraud, but it was never proven that he actually fulfilled his part of the deal and arranged for slanted coverage.[111] Nonetheless, the incident, combined with the network's precarious financial position, led to a reported 130 stations ending their Mutual affiliations.[119][120]

In the wake of the Trujillo scandal and affiliate defections, Smith sold Mutual to Hurleigh for $1 on July 1, 1959, which was followed by a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing. Businessman Albert G. McCarthy took over operations, arranging to settle the network's over $3 million in debts (equivalent to $27.9 million in 2021) while seeking an owner interested in running it on an ongoing basis.[121] WOR signed a new contract with Mutual despite previously indicating the station would drop the network,[122] becoming the lone RKO Teleradio station to renew ties as WGMS, KFRC, KHJ and WHBQ joined WNAC in independence.[116] At the same time, WOR started to identify as "WOR-AM-FM, owned by RKO General," eschewing on-air mentions of Mutual after listeners mistakenly thought WOR was also in bankruptcy; concurrently, Mutual changed their station cue to "the Network of Independent Stations".[123] A three-part reorganization plan resolving all debts was approved in bankruptcy court on December 23, 1959, allowing Mutual to emerge from Chapter 11; a network spokesperson commented, "this means we start out with a clean slate; we are now divorced from any previous managements."[124]

The Korean War and original drama's decline

 
 
"Mutual makes music" with Perry Como and Eddie Fisher in 1954, the twilight of live entertainment and music on network radio.[94]

Before the Guterma fiasco, the network had maintained its reputation for running a strong and respected news organization. As the conflict on the Korean peninsula began to escalate in mid-1950, Mutual began airing two special nightly reports on the situation, featuring the commentary of Major George Fielding Eliot, military analyst for CBS during World War II. By August 1950, Mutual was represented by six correspondents in Korea, more than NBC or ABC.[125] On occasion, Mutual's commentary programs made the news: On March 11, 1954, Fulton Lewis Jr. featured Senator Joseph McCarthy as his guest, two days after the senator's ethics had been called into question on the CBS TV show See It Now, hosted by Edward R. Murrow. In his radio interview, McCarthy dismissed Murrow as "the extreme left-wing, bleeding-heart element of television."[126] In 1957, Mutual refused to air an episode of Clarence Manion's Manion Forum featuring Herbert V. Kohler Sr. due to controversy over the Kohler strikes.[127]

Mutual began the 1950s by entering the realm of adult science fiction with 2000 Plus on March 15, 1950, almost a month before NBC premiered the similarly themed Dimension X.[128] The network picked up adventure series Challenge of the Yukon from ABC Radio, which originated at Mutual cofounder WXYZ in 1938 (but after the station left the network). Renamed Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, this show launched on Mutual on July 10, 1951.[129] A partnership with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer at the end of 1951 had the film studio supply up to six hours of programming per week starting in 1952 with The MGM Theater of the Air as its centerpiece,[130] but the programs lasted for only one year.[131] Another established drama, Phillips H. Lord's Counterspy, moved to Mutual in 1953 after a prior run on ABC.[132] The network's other new offerings in 1953 were a further sign of the times—transcription reruns of Coke Time with Eddie Fisher (utilizing soundtracks from Fisher's NBC-TV show) and an audio simulcast of CBS-TV's Perry Como Chesterfield Show.[94] The Shadow's long run finally ended in December 1954,[133] followed by Sergeant Preston in June 1955.[129] Gang Busters, another Lord serial which had runs on ABC, CBS and NBC throughout the 1940s and early 1950s, moved to Mutual in October 1955.[134] In November 1957, the final episodes of Counterspy and Gang Busters aired, ending the network's last two remaining half-hour original dramatic shows.[135] Mutual had forsworn the genre and would not broadcast a new dramatic series until 1973 with the short-lived Rod Serling vehicle The Zero Hour.[m]

In 1955, the famous comedy team Bob and Ray came over from NBC for a five-day-a-week afternoon show.[137] Kate Smith returned in January 1958 for her final radio series, which ran until August.[80] In June 1958, just a few months before the Scranton takeover, the network had launched a nightly 25-minute newscast, The World Today, hosted by Westbrook Van Voorhis, famous as the voice of The March of Time. Sports began to occupy an increasing portion of Mutual's schedule: the network began regularly airing a Major League Baseball Game of the Day, every day except Sunday. This expansion into daily sports programming would run well into the 1960s.[n] While baseball's World Series and All-Star Game would go to rival NBC in 1957, Mutual secured national radio rights to Notre Dame Fighting Irish football in 1954.[141][99] The rights would switch between networks over the following decade before Mutual became the exclusive broadcaster in 1968,[142] which would remain a cornerstone for the rest of the network's existence.[143][144]

1960s–1970s: Narrowed focus

From 3M to Amway

In the spring of 1960, the 3M Company stepped in, purchasing Mutual and restoring much-needed stability to the operation.[145] Despite the late 1950s Guterma scandal, Mutual still had 443 affiliates, easily the most of any network. By this time, as historian Jim Cox describes, both Mutual and ABC "had largely wiped their slates clean of most of their network programming—save news and sporting events and a few long-running features".[146] This would characterize Mutual's essential approach for the next three and a half decades, through a further series of ownership changes.

In July 1966, 3M sold the network to the privately held Mutual Industries, Inc., headed by John P. Fraim and Loren M. Berry, for $3.1 million (equivalent to $25.9 million in 2021); Fraim was vice-president of Berry's Dayton, Ohio–based telephone directory publishing company.[3][147] Upon Mutual Industries's acquisition of Mutual, it was renamed to "Mutual Broadcasting Corporation".[148] The following month, after the death of Mutual stalwart Fulton Lewis Jr., his son Fulton Lewis III took over his nightly 7 p.m. slot.[149] Another Ohio businessman, Daniel H. Overmyer, sought a merger with Mutual in 1967 amid plans to start his own TV network. The offer was rebuffed, but three Mutual stockholders joined eleven other investors to buy Overmyer's hookup and rename it the United Network.[150] The network and its only offering, The Las Vegas Show, folded after only a month on the air.[151]

When ABC Radio[a] "split" into four demographically targeted networks on January 1, 1968, Mutual unsuccessfully sued to block the move. Meanwhile, the network was undergoing some management instability, with frequent changes at the top: for example, Matthew J. Culligan was Mutual's president from October 1966 to June 1968. He was replaced by Robert R. Pauley, who came over from the ABC radio division, where he had served as president for nearly seven years.[152] But Pauley only lasted a year, and resigned after clashes with the board over the need for cost-cutting, and other decisions with which he disagreed. His replacement was Victor C. Diehm, owner of several Mutual-affiliated radio stations and active on the Mutual Affiliates Advisory Council.[153]

 
Advertisement for the Mutual Black Network, featuring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and poet Nikki Giovanni

Diehm was succeeded early in 1972 by C. Edward Little, a former executive and owner of Hollywood, Florida, Mutual affiliate WGMA. Little arrived in the position with a commitment to expand Mutual's news service and program offerings, conceding that Mutual had long been fourth among the legacy "big four" radio networks.[154] Taking a page from ABC's move to split its radio network years earlier, Little launched two additional news services, the Mutual Black Network (MBN) and the Mutual Spanish Network (Mutual Cadena Hispánica) on May 1, 1972.[155] Targeting Black audiences, MBN supplied 100 five-minute-long news and sports reports weekly along with other programming,[156] with Mutual Cadena featuring similar fare aimed at Spanish-language listeners.[155] By July 1972, Mutual had 550 affiliates, MBN had 55 and Mutual Cadena had 21.[111] While Mutual Cadena lasted only six months, by 1974 MBN grew to 98 affiliates.[157]

Another change in July 1974 was more subtle—Mutual began using two-toned "Mutualert" network cue tones at the beginning and end of newscasts, programs, between commercials and during network identification breaks.[158] Referred to as "bee-doops", these cue tones would be used by Mutual for the rest of its existence.[159] The youth-oriented Mutual Progressive News[160] was launched for Top 40 and country outlets and was also made available for non-commercial educational stations in markets without an existing Mutual affiliate.[158] Little later oversaw the 1978 launch of the Mutual Southwest Network, a regional "mininetwork" that handled distribution for the Dallas Cowboys Radio Network and featured Southwest Conference football games.[161] In 1976, 49 percent of MBN ownership was sold to the Sheridan Broadcasting Corporation[162] followed by the remaining 51 percent in 1979, at which point MBN was renamed the Sheridan Broadcasting Network[111][163] and later merged into National Black Network to create American Urban Radio Networks.[164]

While Mutual Broadcasting Corp. was initially a group controlled by Fraim and Berry, investor Benjamin D. Gilbert and his wife quietly bought out their stakes and that of the other investors, becoming the principal owners.[3] The Gilberts would attract unwanted attention for themselves over one particular program. In 1974, the Liberty Lobby, a think tank and lobby group that espoused far-right views and antisemitism, purchased airtime for a daily five-minute show, This Is Liberty Lobby, which also offered the organization's "America First" pamphlet at the end of every episode. While not directly from Mutual, it was made available to the network's over 600 stations, with 126 carrying it by July. The Anti-Defamation League alleged the Mutual connection came as the Gilberts personally contributed thousands of dollars to the Liberty Lobby since 1966.[165] After refusing to transmit two specific episodes in November, Mutual cancelled the Liberty Lobby contract at year's end.[166][158]

In the March 21, 1977, issue of Broadcasting magazine, publisher John P. McGoff disclosed he had been in talks to purchase Mutual.[167] A bidding war followed between Amway, a multi-level marketing company known for selling home care products, and Columbus, Georgia–based insurer American Family Corp., which dropped out after the asking price approached $20 million (equivalent to $89.4 million in 2021).[3] On September 30, 1977, Amway bought the network.[168] After the purchase, Mutual began to develop what would become the first nationwide commercial broadcast satellite network, leading to the end of decades of reliance on telephone lines for the broadcast industry's transmission capacity.[169] This proposal received FCC approval in late 1979.[170] The biggest change to Mutual happened in 1978, when Amway purchased WCFL from the Chicago Federation of Labor for $12 million (equivalent to $49.9 million in 2021); for the first time, the network founded by radio stations directly owned a station of its own, and in one of the country's largest markets.[171][172] Mutual also reached its greatest number of affiliates that year with 950, fewer than ABC—whose multipronged approach had proven very successful—but far in front of NBC and CBS.[30]

Rise of the call-in talk show

 
Larry King

One of the few primary network programs outside of news and sports that Mutual initiated during this era, rapidly became one of the most successful in its history—the first nationwide, all-night call-in talk radio program, which launched on November 3, 1975, with Herb Jepko as host.[173][158] Jepko's show, which originated from KSL in Salt Lake City in 1964 as Nitecap, was fed by Mutual for eight hours beginning at midnight ET, allowing for stations on the West Coast to carry it live. Mutual also signed up 12 high-powered AM stations to ensure coast-to-coast reception.[174] Jepko so determinedly avoided controversial topics on the program that some callers simply talked about the weather where they lived. Fellow broadcaster Hilly Rose said of Jepko, "he is the exact opposite of Joe Pyne and 99% of the successful talk show hosts in America. If (he) were any nicer, he would make Mary Poppins look like a witch."[175]

Mutual dropped Jepko's show in May 1977, replacing it with the husband and wife team Long John Nebel and Candy Jones from WMCA in New York City, whose program fared little better than Jepko's.[176][158] Nebel and Jones left Mutual by the end of the year and Mutual then hired a virtually unknown local talk show host at WIOD in Miami: Larry King. On January 30, 1978, the Larry King Show made its national debut on Mutual.[177] Initially heard over 28 stations, by late 1979, King's all-night program became increasingly popular, carried by nearly 200 stations[178] with a nightly audience of around 2 million listeners.[179] During the early 1980s, the Larry King Show continued to attract new affiliates to the network.[178][180] Like Jepko, King also shied away from controversial subjects on the show, with regular callers to the show being given pseudonyms or nicknames by King himself.[180]

Originally a five-and-a-half hour program, the last half hour was relaunched as America in The Morning, a morning news magazine hosted by WCFL alumnus Jim Bohannon, in September 1984.[181][182] King continued with his Mutual call-in show until 1994, long after he began hosting Larry King Live for CNN in 1985.[179][183] King's success soon prompted NBC Radio and ABC Radio to launch NBC Talknet and ABC TalkRadio, respectively, both featured call-in shows airing into the late-evening and overnight hours.[178] The Larry King Show also won a Peabody Award for Mutual in 1982.[179]

Mutual made additional ventures beyond talk programming and newscasts. Along with the network's existing sports coverage, Mutual was the national radio broadcaster for Monday Night Football from 1970 through 1977.[184] Mutual began nationally distributing Jamboree USA from WWVA in Wheeling, West Virginia, on February 23, 1979, marking the first time in years that the network featured a regularly scheduled live music program.[185] Jamboree USA also became the first music program on radio to be transmitted by satellite;[170] the new technology now further enabled Mutual to offer additional music programming to affiliates, including anthologies and concerts.[186]

1980s–1990s: The end of Mutual

Joining up with Westwood One

 
Ad for Dick Clark's National Music Survey, among the last entertainment shows to originate on Mutual

With their purchase of WCFL still pending, Amway acquired a second station for Mutual with New York City's WHN from Storer Broadcasting on February 26, 1979, for $14 million (equivalent to $52.3 million in 2021), at the time the second-highest purchase price for a radio station.[187] Supplanting WMCA as Mutual's New York outlet, the deal closed on March 3, 1980.[188] Re-branded "Mutual/CFL", WCFL was relaunched in August 1979 as the flagship for Mutual Lifestyle Radio, a form of talk radio oriented towards light conversation.[189] On a Country Road, a country music show hosted by WHN's Lee Arnold, was given national distribution.[190] Also in March 1980, Mutual picked up the Sears Radio Theater after CBS Radio dropped it, renaming it Mutual Radio Theater. While a number of well-regarded episodes were produced, the series ended on December 19, 1980,[191][192] and was Mutual's final radio drama.[193] The Mutual Southwest Network also closed at the end of 1980; in both cases, Mutual Radio Theater and Mutual Southwest suffered from a lack of advertising support.[192]

In 1981, Mutual launched Dick Clark's National Music Survey, a three-hour-long weekly program combining music and interviews, a show Clark continued to host for even after having co-founded a competing syndicator, United Stations Radio Networks, earlier in the year.[190][194] Sports commentaries were added featuring the likes of Tommy Lasorda and Pat Summerall, along with hourly "Wide Weekend of Sports" sportscasts throughout the weekend; the network also held play-by-play rights to Notre Dame college football, the PGA Tour, the LPGA, the United States Tennis Association and regional rights for four NFL teams.[181]

When I entered this business, everybody I'd meet wanted to talk to me about O&O's and I remember the first staff meeting I ever had at Mutual after we bought it, and I went in and I met everybody, and they said, "What about O&O's?" And I remember my answer was, "What's an O&O?" Well they all kind of laughed. Then they all told me that that was the way to go. We had to own a bunch of radio stations. Well, I didn't buy a network to think I had to buy a bunch of radio stations—I thought I'd already bought something.

Richard DeVos[195]

Mutual's satellite network was fully online by 1982, but the new technology allowed for additional networks to emerge, some—including efforts from NBC, ABC, CBS, RKO, Satellite Music Network and Transtar—providing continuous programming to radio stations on a "turnkey" basis.[196] WCFL also failed to meet the network's expectations. Chuck Swirsky, hired as an evening sports talk host, later called WCFL "... the lowest rated 50-thousand watts station in American broadcast history. We had blank pages for logs. Zero commercial inventory. Any PSA content our traffic department received we immediately played on the air that night."[197] As Mutual celebrated its 50th anniversary, Amway denied rumors of a possible sale[181] but executive Richard DeVos admitted the company was disappointed with their venture into broadcasting, calling Mutual "a learning experience" and their stewardship of WCFL "not a very good one ... I began to question whether our people really knew how to run a radio station".[195] Network president John Brian Clements asserted "this network is not for sale",[198] but the radio stations were: WCFL was sold to Statewide Broadcasting in November 1983 at a $4 million loss[199] and WHN was sold to Doubleday Broadcasting in October 1984 at a $1 million loss.[200] Clements took over as president when Amway's board called for the resignation of several executives and followed downsizing due to "softening sales".[198][111]

In 1985, Westwood One, a radio production company and syndicator based in Culver City, California, sought to expand its operations. Westwood and Mutual were a good match: the demographics of Mutual affiliates tended to be adult, while most of the stations that bought Westwood's music-oriented programming had substantially younger audiences.[201] Mutual had news operations Westwood lacked, and although down from its peak, still commanded 860 affiliates and generated $25 million in revenue, a strong second among the Big Four.[202][203] In September 1985, Amway sold the network to Westwood One for $39 million (equivalent to $98.3 million in 2021)[204] outside of the satellite services division and uplink facility, which Amway retained.[202][205] "It's a perfect fit," declared Westwood head Norman J. Pattiz. Referring to the united company's ability to give advertisers access to a broad demographic sweep, he called it "a classic case of two plus two equaling five."[206] On July 20, 1987, the number got even bigger: Westwood One snapped up the NBC Radio Network for $50 million (equivalent to $119 million in 2021),[207] pursing Mutual's long-time competitor since a planned sale of the network and NBC's radio stations to Westinghouse Broadcasting fell through.[208]

Mutual was now part of a much larger programming service, and its identity was being gradually phased out. In 1987, Mutual's longform fare, including Larry King and Toni Grant, were placed in a new service called "Mutual P.M.", which Westwood One touted as "clon(ing) a new network from the existing network" in hopes of attracting new advertisers.[209] NBC Radio's news and engineering staff was combined with Mutual personnel at the Arlington facility in 1989, and by 1992, programming between the two networks began to undergo consolidation, particularly in overnights and weekends.[205][207] King switched his all-night radio show to a shorter daytime version on February 1, 1993, with the late-night slot going to Jim Bohannon;[210] in addition to hosting America in The Morning, Bohannon had been King's fill-in host and hosted a weekend call-in show on Mutual identical to King's.[211] King's daytime show ended in June 1994[183][212] and was replaced with a talk show hosted by comedian David Brenner, which lasted for two years.[213] Westwood One began simulcasting the television audio of King's nightly CNN talk show Larry King Live,[205] which continued through the end of 2009.[214] Outside of Bohannon's show, most Mutual programming was now being heard on smaller market stations, with many affiliates using it as a "backup" to a different primary affiliation; by 1999, Mutual News was down to approximately 300 affiliates.[207]

Consolidation, streamlining and dissolution

Meanwhile, Westwood One began to be subject to larger mergers and acquisitions. Westwood One purchased competing syndicator Unistar Radio Networks from Infinity Broadcasting in 1994; as part of the deal, Infinity purchased 25 percent of Westwood One, becoming its largest shareholder and effectively taking it over.[215] Westinghouse, which recently bought out CBS and was renamed CBS Corporation shortly thereafter, then acquired Infinity in June 1996 for just shy of $5 billion (equivalent to $8.64 billion in 2021).[216] The direct descendants of the three original U.S. radio network companies had merged,[211] with Mutual little more than one of several brand names for programming under the aegis of Westwood One, itself under the control of a major conglomerate.[207] Mutual and NBC Radio newscasters sat back to back in the Westwood One studio, the former main Mutual facility in Crystal City, Virginia, which now also fed CBS Radio News from New York City and CNN Radio feeds—which Westwood One also distributed[217]—from Atlanta; despite newsroom signage still reading "Mutual Broadcasting System" as late as 1998, it was referred to internally as "the Westwood One newsroom".[211] The newsroom itself closed on August 31, 1998, with Mutual and NBC newscasts originating from the CBS Radio News facilities.[218][205]

In this world of media brand names, there's so much synergy that's involved, and Mutual had to hang out there by itself. It was very hard to support it.

Nick Kiernan, Westwood One vice president of affiliate relations, on the 1999 retirement of the "Mutual News" name[207]

In early 1999, Westwood One announced that it would retire the Mutual name and end newscast production, with CNN Radio, CBS or Fox News Radio[207] offered as replacements to affiliates. The majority of NBC Radio's remaining services would also cease outside of morning drive hours.[217] In addition to producing NBC, CBS and Mutual newscasts and distributing CNN content, Westwood One also began distributing Fox News; as a result, the company was marketing five different newscast brands in what one company representative called "wasteful".[207] A former staffer for Mutual's news service described the end: "Official time of Mutual Radio's death was Midnight 4/17/99. No tribute, no mention it was the last newscast ... it just died."[219][217] The closure of Mutual News resulted in 12 staffers being dismissed from CBS Radio News, which itself underwent a recent series of cutbacks involving on-air talent.[207]

While the dropping of the Mutual name was attributed to mass consolidation, in particular following passage of the 1996 Telecommunications Act,[217] Dick Rosse, a correspondent for the network for 36 years before retiring in 1998, said the following in an op-ed for Broadcasting & Cable:[2]

The Mutual Broadcasting System died (this week) and, aside from the folks who worked there, you'd have to go a long way to find anyone who was saddened, or even cared. Certainly, word of Mutual's demise was not a subject of discussion among the suits over lunch at "21" or the Four Seasons. Maybe out there, in the boonies (Mutual's natural habitat) some listener might sense that something had vanished from his radio universe. Old age killed Mutual. That, and increasing irrelevance in a world that associates "radio" with Rush, Howard and Doctor Laura. So when Jack Kevorkian (in the guise of CBS head Mel Karmazin) paid his call, Mutual didn't need much of a push.

The Crystal City facility was closed in March 2001, with Westwood One's primary operations transferred to the CBS Broadcast Center in New York City.[220]

Legacy

 
Jim Bohannon

Westwood One's corporate fate proved almost as complicated as the fate of Mutual itself. Spun off by majority owner CBS Corporation (one of two successors to the first Viacom, which acquired the first CBS Corporation in 1999[221]) to The Gores Group in 2007, it was merged into Dial Global—a subsidiary of Oaktree Capital Management's Triton Media Group unit—in 2011, ultimately taking that company's name.[222] Prior to its 2013 merger into Cumulus Media Networks,[223] Dial Global reverted to using the Westwood One name.[224][225] Even with all these changes, some current programming both on Westwood One (owned by Cumulus Media) and other syndicators can still trace their lineage directly to Mutual:

Jim Bohannon's interview/call-in show, which debuted on Mutual in 1985 (and was a direct descendant of Larry King and Herb Jepko's shows), continued until his abrupt retirement on October 14, 2022.[226] Rich Valdés took over hosting duties for the program.[227] Bohannon missed much of the summer of 2022 for what were initially unexplained reasons but later revealed to be a diagnosis with terminal stage 4 esophageal cancer,[226] and died 29 days after his final show. Bohannon also hosted the morning news magazine America in the Morning from its 1984 premiere over Mutual until 2015;[228][229] which continues to this day as a Westwood One program under succeeding host John Trout.[182]

Since 2004, the current incarnation of Meet the Press, first broadcast over Mutual in 1945, has had an audio simulcast over Westwood One.[230][231] Country Countdown USA, founded in 1992 as a Mutual-branded program after the Westwood One purchase, continues to air in its original format but moved to Compass Media Networks in August 2022.[232] Radio broadcasts of Notre Dame Fighting Irish football were eventually re-branded as from Westwood One a few years before the end of the Mutual network itself.[144] At the conclusion of the 2007 football season, Notre Dame ended its relationship with Westwood One, citing financial reasons,[233] and subsequently announced a deal with ISP Sports.[234]

After taking over Westwood One in 2013, Cumulus Media launched a white-label news service, Westwood One News under a content-sharing deal with CNN.[235] Launching on January 1, 2015, as a replacement service among Cumulus's radio stations that previously affiliated with ABC News Radio, CBS News Radio and NBC News Radio (the latter having replaced CNN Radio in 2012[236]), it ended operations on August 30, 2020.[237]

Mutual founding stations WOR and WLW are now both owned by iHeartMedia, who operates their own syndication unit, Premiere Networks. Prior to being purchased by iHeartMedia in 2012 (as Clear Channel Communications), WOR operated a syndication service of their own, the WOR Radio Network.[238] The other founding station, WGN, is owned by television broadcaster Nexstar Media Group as the lone radio station in their portfolio.[239] WGN previously syndicated Orion Samuelson farm reports through its Tribune Radio Network,[240] which carried Chicago Cubs broadcasts until the 2014 season.[241]

Awards and honors

The Mutual Broadcasting System has been the recipient of the following Peabody Awards:[242]

See also

Notable programs

Shows heard over the Mutual Broadcasting System during the "Golden Age of Radio" included the following:[o]

Notable staff

Notes

  1. ^ a b Not to be confused with ABC Audio.
  2. ^ a b The following sources argue that Mutual was primarily a vehicle for The Lone Ranger.[10][11][12] These sources, however, counterargue that Mutual was built on the popularity of Lum and Abner.[13][14][15]
  3. ^ All available sources concur that Mutual cofounders WOR–Newark, N.J./New York, WXYZ–Detroit, and WLW–Cincinnati were also founding members of the Quality Network. Sources differ on whether WGN–Chicago, Mutual's fourth original member, or another Chicago station, WLS, represented the city in the Quality Network. In addition, there is no consensus on the fundamental matter of the degree of connection involved: some sources claim the Quality Network had ceased to exist by the end of 1929; others that it carried on and simply changed its name and formalized its structure in 1934. As scholar James Schwoch (1994) puts it, "The origins of the Mutual Broadcasting System are somewhat murky and open to dispute." Indeed, a claim Schwoch makes just two sentences later—that "the permanent establishment of the Mutual network is bound up in the popularity of a single radio program, 'The Lone Ranger'"—is disputed by several scholars.[b]
  4. ^ Start and end dates for original dramatic and quiz series given in the main text are based on the standard and most comprehensive reference work, On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio, by John Dunning.[36] Dunning's detailed information has been checked, where available, against the even more detailed reports of Jerry Haendiges[37] and against the much less detailed but more recently published The Encyclopedia of American Radio: An A–Z Guide to Radio from Jack Benny to Howard Stern, by Ron Lackmann.[38] Dunning and Haendiges agree in almost all cases where they both cover a show. In the few cases where they differ slightly, a specific citation is given to the one whose data appears better supported, internally and/or by reference to Lackmann.
  5. ^ There are anecdotal suggestions that the network aired the Indianapolis 500 in previous years, but to date no concrete evidence has been found. For later Mutual coverage of the race, see:[43]
  6. ^ The two available authoritative sources differ widely on the affiliate figures for the year. Media historians F. Leslie Smith et al. give Mutual—140, NBC—113 (53 with Red, 60 with Blue), and CBS—112.[54] Media historian James Schwoch gives NBC—182, Mutual—160, and CBS—122.[12] It is unclear what different methodologies were employed to produce these varying results.
  7. ^ For advertising sales in the first eight months of 1941, see "Happy Birthday MBS", from the September 15, 1941, issue of Time.[56] NBC's take was now less than eight times as much as Mutual's. All available reports suggest that the gap did not close much further during the decade.
  8. ^ Media historian Marsha Francis Cassidy also refers to Mutual's wish-fulfillment show Heart's Desire as one of those that "made the shift to local or regional television",[67] but it has not been possible to confirm this. For a detailed account of this model of radio art, see:[68]
  9. ^ A scholarly journal article claims that the Don Lee purchase brought with it a "19 percent interest in the Mutual Broadcasting System," which would be down from the 25 percent of the 1940 restructuring. However, the reliability of this source is questionable, as it incorrectly claims in the same paragraph that the "East Coast-based Yankee Network ... was also acquired at this time" by General Tire.[84] As detailed above, General Tire in fact acquired Yankee in 1943.
  10. ^ Marshall (1998) and Day (2004) describe the details of the original deal very differently, agreeing only that it was for six years at $1 million a year. Marshall says that a contract was signed on December 26, 1950, between baseball's major leagues, in the person of Commissioner Happy Chandler, on one side and Mutual and the Gillette Safety Razor Company on the other for the television rights. Day says baseball's contract was solely with Gillette, that it was for both radio and television rights, and that Gillette "[l]ess than a year after acquiring the broadcast rights ... transferred" them to Mutual. They also characterize the original contract rather differently. Marshall calls it "one of the outstanding achievements of the Chandler commissionership." Day credits Chandler with "deftly avoid[ing] a financial crisis," but agrees with the prevailing opinion of the players that Chandler "vastly underestimated the value" of the rights. The fact, which Day provides, that Mutual sold the package to NBC for $4 million a year lends support to his position.[87]
  11. ^ Mutual does have a TV network in the realm of imagination. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, by novelist Michael Chabon, refers to The Escapist, a show starring Peter Graves said to have run from 1951 to 1955 on the Mutual Television Network (p. 596).
  12. ^ In August 1951, the low-powered, baseball-oriented Liberty Broadcasting System (LBS) had 431 affiliates.[92]
  13. ^ For more on The Zero Hour, see:[136]
  14. ^ Radio historian Ronald Garay says Mutual launched its Game of the Day in 1949.[138] Sports historians Jerry Gorman et al. say it was 1950.[139] Garay indicates that the concept was picked up from the Liberty Broadcasting System, founded in 1947. Yet the National Baseball Hall of Fame lists among famed broadcaster France Laux's credits "Mutual Game of the Day (1939–41, '44)."[140]
  15. ^ Run dates on Mutual are per Dunning (1998), checked against Lackmann (2000). Note that Dunning does not list The Sea Hound as ever running on Mutual, but Lackmann does. Neither lists Skyroads.

References

  1. ^ Browne, Ray Broadus; Browne, Pat (2001). The Guide to United States Popular Culture. Popular Press. p. 97. ISBN 9780879728212. from the original on February 10, 2023. Retrieved November 18, 2020. Mutual Reports eventually became Mutual Black Network (MBN)
  2. ^ a b Rosse, Dick (April 19, 1999). "How Sweet It Was" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. Vol. 129, no. 16. pp. 74, 76. (PDF) from the original on January 31, 2023. Retrieved February 9, 2023 – via World Radio History.
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External links

  • How Far Should the Government Control Radio? text of G.I. Roundtable pamphlet with details on Mutual in first section ("Who Is It That Fills The Air With Radio Waves?"), ca. 1945; part of American Historical Association website
  • radio broadcast transcript of group interview with guest U.S. Senator Everett M. Dirksen on weekly Mutual news program, September 16, 1957; part of Everett Dirksen Center website
  • Truman Library—Charter Heslep Papers summary introduction to and listing of archive holdings of Mutual broadcaster's papers (note that the Collection Description text incorrectly states that Chicago station WLS was an original member of Mutual; while it may have been involved in the predecessor Quality Network, it was not part of Mutual); part of Truman Presidential Museum and Library website

Listening

  • audio extract from news report, May 10, 1942; part of Authentic History Center website
  • audio extract from news report, December 8, 1941; part of Authentic History Center website
  • links to audio samples of classic Mutual shows (note that the Lone Ranger sample comes from 1948, after the show had left Mutual); part of Digital Deli Online
  • audio clip of news flash, December 7, 1941; part of Authentic History Center website

mutual, broadcasting, system, commonly, referred, simply, mutual, sometimes, referred, mutual, radio, mutual, radio, network, american, commercial, radio, network, operation, from, 1934, 1999, golden, radio, drama, mutual, best, known, original, network, home,. The Mutual Broadcasting System commonly referred to simply as Mutual sometimes referred to as MBS Mutual Radio or the Mutual Radio Network was an American commercial radio network in operation from 1934 to 1999 In the golden age of U S radio drama Mutual was best known as the original network home of The Lone Ranger and The Adventures of Superman and as the long time radio residence of The Shadow For many years it was a national broadcaster for Major League Baseball including the All Star Game and World Series the National Football League and Notre Dame Fighting Irish football From the mid 1930s and until the retirement of the network in 1999 Mutual ran a highly respected news service accompanied by a variety of popular commentary shows Mutual pioneered the nationwide late night call in talk radio program in the late 1970s introducing the country to Larry King and later Jim Bohannon Mutual Broadcasting SystemTypeRadio network Cooperative 1934 1952 Corporate controlled 1952 1999 CountryUnited StatesCanada limited OwnershipParentGeneral Tire 1952 1957 Armand Hammer 1957 1958 Scranton Corp 1958 1959 Malcolm Smith 1959 Robert F Hurleigh 1959 1960 3M Company 1960 1966 Mutual Broadcasting Corp 1966 1977 Amway 1977 1985 Westwood One 1985 1999 HistoryFoundedSeptember 29 1934 88 years ago 1934 09 29 ClosedApril 17 1999 1999 04 17 64 years 200 days CoverageAffiliates4 founders 1934 104 1938 384 1945 543 1950 443 1960 950 1979 810 1985 approx 300 1999 In the 1970s acting in much the same style as rival ABC Radio a had splitting their network in 1968 Mutual launched four sister radio networks Mutual Black Network MBN initially launched as Mutual Reports 1 which evolved to today s American Urban Radio Networks AURN Mutual Cadena Hispanica or in English Mutual Spanish Network Mutual Southwest Network and Mutual Progressive Network later re branded Mutual Lifestyle Radio in 1980 then retired in 1983 Of the four national networks of American radio s classic era Mutual had for decades the largest number of affiliates but the least certain financial position 2 which prevented Mutual from expanding into television broadcasting after World War II as NBC CBS and ABC did For the first 18 years of its existence Mutual was owned and operated as a cooperative a system similar to that of today s National Public Radio setting the network apart from its corporate owned competitors Mutual s member stations shared their own original programming transmission and promotion expenses and advertising revenues From December 30 1936 when it debuted in the West the Mutual Broadcasting System had affiliates from coast to coast Its business structure would change after General Tire assumed majority ownership in 1952 through a series of regional and individual station acquisitions Once General Tire sold the network in 1957 to a syndicate led by Dr Armand Hammer Mutual s ownership was largely disconnected from the stations it served leading to a more conventional top down model of program production and distribution Due to the multiple sales of the network that followed Mutual was once described in Broadcasting magazine as often traded 3 After a group that involved Hal Roach Studios purchased Mutual from Hammer s group the new executive team was charged with accepting money to use Mutual as a vehicle for foreign propaganda while the network suffered significant financial losses and affiliate defections 4 Concurrently filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and sold twice in the span of four months for purposes of raising enough money to remain operational the network s reputation was severely damaged but soon rebounded under succeeding owner 3M Company Sold to private interests in 1966 and again to Amway in 1977 Mutual purchased two radio stations in New York and Chicago entering the 1980s only to sell them after Amway s interest in broadcasting began to fade Radio syndicator Westwood One acquired Mutual in 1985 and NBC Radio in 1987 merging the two networks together throughout the 1990s Mutual was gradually assimilated into Westwood One s operations until the name was finally retired Contents 1 History 1 1 1934 1935 The launch of Mutual 1 2 Late 1930s National expansion 1 2 1 Programming The Shadow and diverse political voices 1 3 1940s One of the Big Four 1 3 1 Programming World War II and Superman 1 4 1950s New ownership 1 4 1 General Tire asserts control then sells 1 4 2 Turmoil propaganda allegations and bankruptcy 1 4 3 The Korean War and original drama s decline 1 5 1960s 1970s Narrowed focus 1 5 1 From 3M to Amway 1 5 2 Rise of the call in talk show 1 6 1980s 1990s The end of Mutual 1 6 1 Joining up with Westwood One 1 6 2 Consolidation streamlining and dissolution 2 Legacy 3 Awards and honors 4 See also 4 1 Notable programs 4 2 Notable staff 5 Notes 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External links 8 1 ListeningHistory Edit1934 1935 The launch of Mutual Edit Attempts at establishing cooperatively owned radio networks had been made since the 1920s In 1929 a group of four radio stations in the major markets of New York City Chicago Cincinnati and Detroit organized into a loose confederation known as the Quality Network Five years later in 1934 a similar or identical group of stations founded the Mutual Broadcasting System c Mutual s original participating stations were WOR Newark New Jersey just outside New York owned by the Bamberger Broadcasting Service a division of R H Macy and Company in 1949 WOR TV would begin broadcasting and Bamberger would be renamed General Teleradio due to General Tire amp Rubber s increased investment in the TV station 5 WGN Chicago owned by WGN Inc a subsidiary of the Chicago Tribune WXYZ Detroit owned by Kunsky Trendle Broadcasting and WLW Cincinnati owned by the Crosley Radio Company The network was organized on September 29 1934 with the members contracting for telephone line transmission facilities and agreeing to collectively enter into contracts with advertisers for their networked shows WOR and WGN based in the two largest markets and providing the bulk of the programming were the acknowledged leaders of the group On October 29 1934 Mutual Broadcasting System Inc was incorporated with Bamberger and WGN Inc each holding 50 percent of the stock five each of the ten total shares 6 7 8 Lum and Abner the latter of whom is seen in this advertisement reaching for a can of Horlick s The malted milk maker sponsored the show during its entire run on Mutual It left Mutual for NBC Blue after August 1935 The three national radio networks already in operation the Columbia Broadcasting System and the National Broadcasting Company s Red and Blue were corporate controlled programming was produced by the network or by advertising agencies of program sponsors that purchased airtime on the network and distributed to affiliates most of which were independently owned In contrast the Mutual Broadcasting System was run as a true cooperative venture with programming produced by and shared between the group s members The majority of the early programming from WOR and WGN consisted of musical features and inexpensive dramatic serials WOR had The Witch s Tale a horror anthology series whose hunner an thirteen year old narrator invited listeners to douse all the lights Now draw up to the fire an gaze into the embers gaaaaze into em deep an soon ye ll be across the seas in th jungle land of Africa hear that chantin and them savage drums 9 WGN contributed the popular comedy series Lum and Abner Detroit s WXYZ provided The Lone Ranger which had debuted in 1933 and was already in demand It is often claimed that Mutual was launched primarily as a vehicle for the Western serial but Lum and Abner was no less popular at the time b What WLW brought was sheer power billing itself as The Nation s Station in May 1934 it had begun night broadcasting at a massive 500 000 watts ten times the clear channel standard 16 On May 24 1935 the network aired its inaugural live event the first ever night baseball game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Philadelphia Phillies 17 In September WXYZ dropped out to join NBC Blue though contractual obligations kept The Lone Ranger on Mutual airing three times a week through spring 1942 18 The hole in the Detroit market was immediately filled by CKLW in Windsor Ontario just across the river 19 In October the network began a decades long run as broadcaster of baseball s World Series with airtime responsibilities shared between WGN s Bob Elson and Quin Ryan and WLW s Red Barber NBC and CBS also carried the series that year the Fall Classic would air on all three networks through 1938 20 21 Mutual broadcast its first Notre Dame football game that autumn as well beginning another relationship that would last for decades 22 As an income generating business the Mutual network was a modest endeavor at the start in the first eleven months of 1935 the cooperative garnered 1 1 million in advertising compared to NBC s 28 3 million and CBS s 15 8 million 19 Late 1930s National expansion Edit In the fall of 1936 Mutual lost another of its founding members when WLW departed The network however was in the midst of a major expansion the first outside group of stations to sign on with Mutual was John Shepard s Colonial Network with its Boston flagship station WAAB and thirteen affiliates around New England 23 There was good reason for this affiliation Shepard had been involved with the founding of Mutual and served on its board of directors 24 Cleveland s WGAR also became an affiliate albeit a dual one as they also held a primary NBC Blue hookup 25 WGAR was joined by five other Midwestern stations KWK St Louis Mo KSO Des Moines Iowa WMT Cedar Rapids Iowa KOIL Omaha Neb and KFOR Lincoln Neb 26 The big prize came in December when the Don Lee Network the leading regional web on the West Coast left CBS to become a central participant in Mutual Don Lee brought its four owned and operated stations KHJ Los Angeles KFRC San Francisco KGB San Diego and KDB Santa Barbara along with six California affiliates and via shortwave hookup two more in Hawaii 19 27 Mutual now had a nationwide presence During 1936 as well an offer by Warner Bros to purchase the network was apparently made and rejected 28 In January 1937 ownership of WAAB was consolidated with that of another Boston station controlled by Shepard WNAC was flagship of the Yankee Network a circuit of New England radio stations whose membership partially overlapped with that of Colonial 29 Yankee flagship WNAC had been an affiliate of CBS Radio changing affiliation to NBC Red later in 1937 when CBS purchased WEEI in that city The Texas Network soon added twenty three more stations to the Mutual affiliate roster 30 WGAR dropped both their Mutual and NBC Blue affiliations on September 26 1937 to take CBS exclusively in turn WJAY co owned with WHK by the United Broadcasting Company part of The Plain Dealer business joined Mutual and changed calls to WCLE 25 The Mutual affiliation in Cleveland moved again in the fall of 1942 from WCLE to WHK temporarily displacing Blue programming from the market entirely 31 By the end of 1938 Mutual had 74 exclusive affiliates though the two leading radio network companies discouraged dual hookups Mutual shared another 25 affiliates with NBC and 5 with CBS 32 The total of 104 affiliates put Mutual not far behind the leaders Because of the corporate strength behind NBC and CBS however and the fact that the lion s share of the most powerful stations in the country had already signed with them before Mutual s emergence the exceptional and soon departed WLW aside the cooperative network would be at a permanent disadvantage Programming The Shadow and diverse political voices Edit Orson Welles as The Shadow A predecessor in the role delivered the show s intro with its famous catchphrase Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men The Shadow knows According to historian Frank Brady Welles s voice as the invisible Shadow was perfect The intro however also called for a sinister chuckle Welles s effort seemed more an adolescent giggle than a terrifying threat 33 On the programming front 1936 saw Mutual launch the first network advice show The Good Will Hour hosted by John J Anthony and sponsored by physical culture guru Bernarr Macfadden The program was a new take on Ask Mister Anthony which had aired on a local New York station in 1932 dedicated to helping the sufferers from an antiquated and outmoded domestic relations code Anthony whose real name was Lester Kroll brought a wealth of relevant experience to his work he had once been jailed for failing to make alimony payments 34 35 In July 1937 came the premiere of a seven part adaptation of Les Miserables produced written and directed by Orson Welles and featuring many of his Mercury Theatre performers Mercury s first appearance on the air September 26 1937 proved a particularly momentous date that evening The Shadow came to Mutual d The show would become a mainstay of the network for more than a decade and a half and one of the most popular programs in radio history For the first year of its Mutual run Welles provided the voice of The Shadow and his newly created alter ego Lamont Cranston He played the part anonymously at first But as one chronicler put it nothing to do with Welles could remain a secret for very long 39 In April 1938 the network picked up The Green Hornet from former member WXYZ Mutual gave the twice a week series its first national exposure until November 1939 when it switched to NBC Blue The series would return very briefly to Mutual in the fall of 1940 40 Mutual also provided the national launching pad for Kay Kyser and his Kollege of Musical Knowledge radio show Kyser s enormous success at Mutual soon allowed his show to move to NBC and its much larger audience 41 By May 1939 Mutual was broadcasting the Indianapolis 500 42 e That autumn Mutual won exclusive broadcast rights to the World Series As described in a 1943 Supreme Court ruling upholding the regulatory power of the Federal Communications Commission Mutual offered this program of outstanding national interest to stations throughout the country including NBC and CBS affiliates in communities having no other stations CBS and NBC immediately invoked the exclusive affiliation clauses of their agreements with these stations and as a result thousands of persons in many sections of the country were unable to hear the broadcasts of the games This was the first example given in the ruling of abuses perpetrated by the two leading broadcast companies 32 Mutual also began building a reputation as a strong news service rivaling the industry leaders in quality if not budget The broadcasts of WOR reporter Gabriel Heatter from the Lindbergh kidnapping trial of the century in 1935 heard over Mutual were highly regarded Heatter soon had his own regularly scheduled newscast aired nationally five nights a week 44 In 1936 also via WOR Mutual began broadcasting the reports of news commentator Raymond Gram Swing who became one of the country s leading voices on foreign affairs 45 In November 1937 conservative commentator Fulton Lewis Jr heard five nights weekly from Mutual affiliate WOL became the first national news personality to broadcast out of Washington D C he would remain with the network until his death almost three decades later 46 In 1938 Mutual started rebroadcasting news reports from the BBC and English language newscasts from the European mainland The network also began employing its own reporters in Europe as the continent headed toward crisis including John Steele Waverley Root Arthur Mann and Victor Lusinchi Among these was Sigrid Schultz the first accomplished female foreign correspondent to appear on American news radio 47 48 1940s One of the Big Four Edit Early in 1940 the corporate organization of Mutual became even more inclusive as described by scholar Cornelia B Rose Until January 1940 six groups bore the expense of the network operation in varying degree stations WGN and WOR owned all the stock of the corporation and guaranteed to make up any deficit the Colonial Network in New England the Don Lee System on the Pacific Coast and the group of stations owned by the Cleveland Plain Dealer participated in responsibility for running expenses A new contract effective February 1 1940 provides for contributing membership by all the above group s plus station CKLW in Detroit Windsor These groups now agree to underwrite expenses and become stockholders in the network An operating board for the network is comprised of representatives from each of these groups together with additional representation appointed by other affiliated stations 49 Mutual featured a variety of political voices but none for so long as that of conservative commentator Fulton Lewis Jr Many later pundits copied his style mocking ridiculing full of denials full of sweeping generalizations and full of inside dopesterism 50 WKIC was Mutual s affiliate in Hazard Kentucky The new cooperative structure was also joined by the owners of WKRC in Cincinnati which had replaced Mutual cofounder WLW in that market The Mutual corporation now had 100 shares apportioned as follows 51 Shareholders of the Mutual Broadcasting System 1940 Shareholder Lead station SharesBamberger Broadcasting WOR 25WGN Inc WGN 25Don Lee Network KHJ 25Colonial Network WAAB 6United Broadcasting WHK 6Western Ontario Broadcasting CKLW 6The Cincinnati Times Star WKRC 6Fred Weber Mutual general manager 1Total 100In 1941 WOR s official city of license was changed to New York Within two years the Colonial Network s affiliate roster and shares in Mutual had been fully absorbed into the Yankee Network by John Shepard III WNAC was the sole flagship WAAB having been moved to Worcester in central Massachusetts to avoid duopoly restrictions With WBZ taking over the slot as the NBC Red affiliate in Boston WNAC switched to Mutual In January 1943 the Federal Communications Commission FCC approved the sale of the Yankee Network with WNAC its three other owned and operated stations its contracts with 17 additional affiliates and its Mutual shares to the Ohio based General Tire and Rubber Company 29 52 53 By 1940 Mutual was already on a par with the industry leaders in terms of affiliate roster size f Still because Mutual affiliates were mostly in small markets or lesser stations in large ones the network lagged way behind in advertising revenue NBC took in eleven times as much as Mutual that year 55 g In 1941 the FCC calling for NBC to divest one of its two networks observed that the company has utilized the Blue to forestall competition with the Red Mutual is excluded from or only lamely admitted to many important markets 57 58 On January 10 1942 Mutual filed a 10 275 million suit against NBC and its parent company RCA alleging a conspiracy hindering and restricting Mutual freely and fairly to compete in the transmission in interstate commerce of nationwide network programs 59 The FCC s Supreme Court victory in 1943 led to the sale of the Blue Network and Mutual dropping its lawsuit 60 These developments appear to have been of more symbolic than practical value to Mutual the transfer of the NBC Blue stations to the new American Broadcasting Company did little to help Mutual s competitive position In 1945 it reached 384 affiliates and by December 1948 Mutual Broadcasting was heard on more than 500 stations in the United States 54 61 But this growth did not reflect any ability on Mutual s part to attract leading stations from the corporate controlled networks Rather the FCC had eased its technical standards for local stations facilitating the establishment of new outlets in small markets between 1945 and 1952 the number of AM stations rose from around 940 to more than 2 350 62 It was these new relatively weak stations Mutual kept picking up Though by now it had many more affiliates than any other U S radio network for the most part they remained less desirable in frequency power and coverage as the Supreme Court had put it 32 For instance in the postwar era CBS and NBC covered all of North Carolina each with only four stations Mutual needed fourteen affiliates to deliver comparable statewide coverage 12 Logo for KFRC the Mutual station in San Francisco owned by the Don Lee Broadcasting System Late in the decade there was a brief exploration into the idea of launching a Mutual television network serious enough to prompt talks with Metro Goldwyn Mayer as a potential source of programming talent 63 In fact Bamberger Broadcasting s WOR TV and WOIC the latter a Washington D C video outlet maintained letterhead with Mutual Television decorating their identifications Beyond this there is no confirmation however that a cooperative video service was ever seriously considered 64 The plans never got off the ground and Mutual thus became the only one of the Big Four U S radio networks not to start and eventually be dominated by a television network While there was no Mutual TV network this did not mean the group did not have an influence over commercial television s early development Several Mutual radio affiliates launched their own television stations that would often be affiliated with the television networks of ABC NBC CBS or DuMont The cooperative also held the rights to a number of valuable radio properties that made the transition to the new medium including two of the era s most popular variations on what would later become known as the tabloid talk show and reality programming the crabby gabfest Leave It to the Girls and in particular Queen for a Day which both started on Mutual radio in 1945 Referred to by some as a misery show Queen for a Day awarded prizes to women who could come up with the most heart stabbing stories told by the sick and the downtrodden On one show a mother of nine requested a washing machine to replace one that broke when it fell on her husband and disabled him and who by the way also needed heart surgery 65 In May 1947 a simulcast version began airing on the Don Lee system s experimental TV station in Los Angeles W6XAO later KTSL It was a smash hit and by the turn of the decade TV stations all along the coast were broadcasting it to high ratings 66 h In the 1950s Mutual would stare down NBC for four years as the mighty network sought to take control of the show Programming World War II and Superman Edit President Franklin D Roosevelt at his home in Hyde Park New York December 24 1943 delivering one of his nationwide radio Fireside chats on the Tehran Conference and Cairo Conference 69 Offscreen Mutual remained an enterprising broadcaster In 1940 a program featuring Cedric Foster joined Mutual s respected schedule of news and opinion shows Foster s claim to fame was as the first daytime commentator to be heard nationally on a daily basis 70 The network aired that year s NFL Championship Game on December 8 the first national broadcast of the annual event 71 Over the following half decade Mutual s war coverage held its own with that of the wealthier networks featuring field correspondents such as Henry Shapiro and Piet Van T Veer and commentators such as Cecil Brown formerly of CBS 72 At 2 26 p m Eastern time on Sunday December 7 1941 Mutual flagship station WOR interrupted a football game broadcast with a news flash reporting the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor It was the first public announcement of the attack heard on the U S mainland The first bombs had dropped 63 minutes earlier 73 In May 1945 Sigrid Schultz reported from one of the last Nazi concentration camps to be discovered Ravensbruck 74 The following month Meet the Press premiered with Martha Rountree as moderator 75 For a year and a half in the late 1940s William Shirer came over from CBS to do current events commentary after his famous falling out with Edward Murrow 76 In 1948 Mutual s four part series To Secure These Rights dramatizing the findings of President Truman s Committee on Civil Rights outraged many politicians and the network s own affiliates in the segregated South 77 A recording session for The Mysterious Traveler with the entire cast clustered around one microphone Host Maurice Tarplin is directly behind the mic third from the right To the rear a sound effect artist and three phonographs at least provide music and effects In the field of entertainment Mutual built on the incomparable success of The Shadow WGN s Chicago Theater of the Air featuring hour long opera and musical theater productions before a live audience was broadcast for the first time in May 1940 By 1943 the weekly show was being recorded in front of houses 4 000 strong gathered to see performances featuring a full orchestra and chorus Chicago Theater of the Air would run on Mutual through March 1955 78 Mutual provided an early national outlet for the influential iconoclastic satirist Henry Morgan whose show Here s Morgan began its network run in October 1940 Though The Lone Ranger moved over to NBC Blue in May 1942 within a few months Mutual had another reliable and no less famous action hero The Adventures of Superman picked up from WOR would run on the network from August 1942 to June 1949 In April 1943 Mutual launched what would turn into one of its longest lasting shows debuting as The Return of Nick Carter and later retitled Nick Carter Master Detective it would be a network staple through September 1955 From May 1943 through May 1946 Mutual aired The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce reprising their roles from the Universal film series An earlier incarnation of the show had run briefly on the network in 1936 a less starry version would return to Mutual from September 1947 through June 1949 79 The Mysterious Traveler a proto Twilight Zone anthology series aired every week on Mutual from December 1943 until September 1952 In February 1946 Mutual introduced a quiz show Twenty Questions that would run for more than seven years In October the detective series Let George Do It starring Bob Bailey launched as a Mutual Don Lee presentation it would also run into the mid 1950s For two years starting in 1946 as well Steve Allen got his first network exposure on the Mutual Don Lee morning show Smile Time out of Los Angeles s KHJ In February 1947 the religiously oriented Family Theater premiered with frequent appearances by major Hollywood stars the series aired on Mutual for ten and a half years That March Kate Smith a major star on CBS since 1931 moved over to Mutual During most of her initial run at the network which lasted until September 1951 she had two distinct weekday shows each 15 minutes long Kate Smith Speaks at noon and Kate Smith Sings later in the hour 80 The network gave an outlet to radio dramatist Wyllis Cooper and his highly regarded suspense anthology Quiet Please which ran on Mutual from June 1947 to September 1948 It also aired actor Alan Ladd s similarly lauded drama about a crime solving mystery novelist Box 13 which ran for precisely a year Its 52 episodes which aired every Sunday beginning August 22 1948 were produced by Ladd s own company Mayfair Productions 1950s New ownership Edit General Tire asserts control then sells Edit On the radio in the morning on TV in the afternoon audiences couldn t get enough of Queen for a Day At the end of each episode host Jack Bailey would proclaim We wish we could make every lady in America a queen for every single day 81 Toward the end of 1950 the executors of the estate of Thomas S Lee the son of Don Lee who had died in 1934 liquidated the estate s broadcasting interests The Don Lee Broadcasting System and its shares in Mutual was sold to General Tire for 12 3 million equivalent to 139 million in 2021 which already had a sizable stake in Mutual via the Yankee Network 82 83 i The sale prompted a challenge by Edwin W Pauley who led a failed bid for the group claiming it violated Mutual bylaws stating no group could hold more than 25 percent of network stock 85 86 General Tire retained KHJ KFRC and KGB divesting the other stations 83 At the same time Mutual acquired the television broadcast rights to the World Series and All Star Game for the next six years Mutual was likely re indulging in TV network dreams or was simply taking advantage of a long standing business relationship in either case Mutual sold the broadcast rights to NBC in time for the following season s games at an enormous profit 87 j Early in 1952 General Tire purchased General Teleradio from R H Macy and Company With the deal General Tire acquired the WOR radio and TV stations and the rights to the General Teleradio brand under which the company merged its broadcasting interests as a new division Bamberger had previously sold its TV station in the nation s capital WOIC to CBS and the Washington Post 88 Most importantly WOR s founding shares in Mutual when added to the Yankee and Don Lee holdings gave General Tire majority control of the network 89 General Tire head Thomas F O Neil who had already taken over as president of the Don Lee stations 82 became president of Mutual in an executive shakeup 90 While Mutual did not have a television network k it held rights to one of the most profitable shows in the medium an early adaptation of Queen for a Day on General Teleradio Don Lee s KHJ TV boasted an audience triple that of the city s six other television stations combined 67 It was also the largest U S radio network in affiliate numbers by far it had around 560 almost three times as many as its most powerful competitors CBS 194 and NBC 191 91 l Still the radio industry started to feel effects of major advertisers abandoning radio for television with commercial rates being cut among all four networks Mutual included 93 O Neil proposed a barter style restructuring at a July 1953 affiliates conference in Cape Cod Massachusetts called The Cape Cod Plan the network would provide five hours of sponsored programming daily and 14 hours of additional programming weekly that affiliates could sell commercial time for 94 The Cape Cod Plan eventually met with resistance from the affiliates some of which saw it as an attempt by Mutual to make money at their expense by the time of the next affiliates conference in January 1954 O Neil called the barter plan dead 95 In 1955 General Tire expanded its media holdings by acquiring RKO Pictures from Howard Hughes renaming General Teleradio as RKO Teleradio Pictures 93 The next year a Canadian subsidiary of RKO purchased a governing interest in Mutual shareholder Western Ontario Broadcasting owner of CKLW when the deal closed two of Western Ontario Broadcasting s directors were U S citizens 96 RKO Teleradio Pictures also purchased Washington D C station WGMS AM FM in April 1956 with WGMS joining Mutual 97 Closing the movie studio a year and a half later the broadcasting division was renamed RKO Teleradio in 1957 and again to RKO General in 1958 98 The Mutual Dealer Plan another attempt to revamp the network s operations containing elements of the barter style Cape Cod Plan was unveiled to affiliates at an April 1956 conference to favorable reception 99 The plan however could not prevent two remaining minority shareholders in Mutual from leaving United Broadcasting s WHK switched to NBC in July 100 while founding station WGN became an independent on August 31 1956 with ABC Prairie Farmer owned WLS becoming Mutual s Chicago affiliate 101 102 By this point Mutual was foundering Even with the Mutual Dealer Plan and staff cutbacks the network suffered a loss of 400 000 equivalent to 3 86 million in 2021 in 1956 93 In early July 1957 advertisers were notified the network could end operations at the end of the month one of three options General Tire was considering for Mutual 93 Another option spinning off Mutual while retaining the stations that had given it control was ultimately taken as a group led by Dr Armand Hammer bought the network later in the month 103 Limited sponsorship packages were also introduced in which an advertiser could back a show for an abbreviated period rather than an entire season but there was no reversing the trend of television usurping radio 104 The radio networks were left with the bills for an increasing number of sustaining programs which had no sponsors 105 The loss of mainstay advertisers was accompanied by what historian Ronald Garay describes as the mass desertion of network radio talent management and technicians for television T hese people were taking with them the programming that had popularized the radio networks 106 Turmoil propaganda allegations and bankruptcy Edit Hal Roach Jr The network soon changed hands again in September 1958 it was acquired by the Scranton Corporation for 2 million equivalent to 18 8 million in 2021 107 Scranton was under the control of the F L Jacobs Company whose chairman Alexander Guterma envisioned a media empire uniting Mutual with another recent purchase Hal Roach Studios 108 Guterma s tenure as Mutual president was brief he resigned on February 13 1959 amid increasing financial shortfalls overdue payments to affiliates unpaid phone bills with AT amp T and an ongoing investigation by the U S Securities and Exchange Commission SEC 109 Hal Roach Jr took over as president 110 but the SEC labeled him a Guterma puppet due to how he assumed Guterma s shares and questioned his ability to run the network 109 A week after resigning the SEC indicted Guterma on federal securities fraud charges 4 which led Roach to be removed as president of the film studio though he retained his position as Mutual president 110 The SEC also ordered stock trading for the F L Jacobs Company suspended 111 Scranton was under pressure to sell Mutual The March 9 1959 issue of Broadcasting magazine stated Mutual had a deficit of 1 05 million equivalent to 9 76 million in 2021 and was losing up to 100 000 a month AT amp T threatened to cut off Mutual s telephone service within 24 hours if all outstanding charges were not paid which would sever the network from its affiliates 109 An attempt to sell the network to Max Factor collapsed after the cosmetics manufacturer could not find a way to create a tax advantage from the existing financial losses 112 109 When AT amp T made another threat to disconnect phone service network news director Robert F Hurleigh engineered a last minute deal with businessman Malcolm Smith whose transaction to buy the network included 1 million of advertising time and payment of the outstanding AT amp T phone bill which totaled over 400 000 113 The deal however failed to stop KALL in Salt Lake City and its 41 station regional Intermountain Network from switching to ABC 114 The Don Lee Network folded on April 26 with all 20 affiliates switching from Mutual to ABC and ABC purchasing Don Lee s remaining programming 115 Yankee Network lead station WNAC severed ties with Mutual in August to become independent but Mutual was allowed to affiliate with the other Yankee stations individually 116 Mutual apparently refuses to believe that we have disaffiliated We are sympathetic to their problem but we have definitely affiliated with ABC Radio Lynn Meyer president of the Intermountain Network KALL on their March 1959 disaffiliation from Mutual 114 The troubles with Mutual worsened While on a press junket to Ciudad Trujillo in May 1959 Hurleigh received confirmation that Dominican Republic dictator Rafael Trujillo secretly provided money to Guterma Roach and Scranton Corp vice president Garland Culpepper Guterma accepted up to 750 000 from Trujillo and in turn Mutual newscasts were to have up to 425 minutes of puff pieces favorable to Trujillo s regime broadcast per month 4 One story read by Walter Winchell regarded plans by Hal Roach Studios to film future movies in the country while another story about Castro allies planning attacks against the Trujillo regime was read by Fulton Lewis Jr assorted news releases were also sent intended for newscasts but never broadcast 117 Outraged over the arrangement Hurleigh went to the U S Justice Department which also received a complaint from a Trujillo lawyer after Guterma failed to give the money back By September Guterma was indicted for failing to register as a foreign agent with Roach and Culpepper as defendants 4 118 Guterma who pleaded no contest to the charge was sentenced to federal prison for stock fraud but it was never proven that he actually fulfilled his part of the deal and arranged for slanted coverage 111 Nonetheless the incident combined with the network s precarious financial position led to a reported 130 stations ending their Mutual affiliations 119 120 In the wake of the Trujillo scandal and affiliate defections Smith sold Mutual to Hurleigh for 1 on July 1 1959 which was followed by a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing Businessman Albert G McCarthy took over operations arranging to settle the network s over 3 million in debts equivalent to 27 9 million in 2021 while seeking an owner interested in running it on an ongoing basis 121 WOR signed a new contract with Mutual despite previously indicating the station would drop the network 122 becoming the lone RKO Teleradio station to renew ties as WGMS KFRC KHJ and WHBQ joined WNAC in independence 116 At the same time WOR started to identify as WOR AM FM owned by RKO General eschewing on air mentions of Mutual after listeners mistakenly thought WOR was also in bankruptcy concurrently Mutual changed their station cue to the Network of Independent Stations 123 A three part reorganization plan resolving all debts was approved in bankruptcy court on December 23 1959 allowing Mutual to emerge from Chapter 11 a network spokesperson commented this means we start out with a clean slate we are now divorced from any previous managements 124 The Korean War and original drama s decline Edit Mutual makes music with Perry Como and Eddie Fisher in 1954 the twilight of live entertainment and music on network radio 94 Before the Guterma fiasco the network had maintained its reputation for running a strong and respected news organization As the conflict on the Korean peninsula began to escalate in mid 1950 Mutual began airing two special nightly reports on the situation featuring the commentary of Major George Fielding Eliot military analyst for CBS during World War II By August 1950 Mutual was represented by six correspondents in Korea more than NBC or ABC 125 On occasion Mutual s commentary programs made the news On March 11 1954 Fulton Lewis Jr featured Senator Joseph McCarthy as his guest two days after the senator s ethics had been called into question on the CBS TV show See It Now hosted by Edward R Murrow In his radio interview McCarthy dismissed Murrow as the extreme left wing bleeding heart element of television 126 In 1957 Mutual refused to air an episode of Clarence Manion s Manion Forum featuring Herbert V Kohler Sr due to controversy over the Kohler strikes 127 Mutual began the 1950s by entering the realm of adult science fiction with 2000 Plus on March 15 1950 almost a month before NBC premiered the similarly themed Dimension X 128 The network picked up adventure series Challenge of the Yukon from ABC Radio which originated at Mutual cofounder WXYZ in 1938 but after the station left the network Renamed Sergeant Preston of the Yukon this show launched on Mutual on July 10 1951 129 A partnership with Metro Goldwyn Mayer at the end of 1951 had the film studio supply up to six hours of programming per week starting in 1952 with The MGM Theater of the Air as its centerpiece 130 but the programs lasted for only one year 131 Another established drama Phillips H Lord s Counterspy moved to Mutual in 1953 after a prior run on ABC 132 The network s other new offerings in 1953 were a further sign of the times transcription reruns of Coke Time with Eddie Fisher utilizing soundtracks from Fisher s NBC TV show and an audio simulcast of CBS TV s Perry Como Chesterfield Show 94 The Shadow s long run finally ended in December 1954 133 followed by Sergeant Preston in June 1955 129 Gang Busters another Lord serial which had runs on ABC CBS and NBC throughout the 1940s and early 1950s moved to Mutual in October 1955 134 In November 1957 the final episodes of Counterspy and Gang Busters aired ending the network s last two remaining half hour original dramatic shows 135 Mutual had forsworn the genre and would not broadcast a new dramatic series until 1973 with the short lived Rod Serling vehicle The Zero Hour m In 1955 the famous comedy team Bob and Ray came over from NBC for a five day a week afternoon show 137 Kate Smith returned in January 1958 for her final radio series which ran until August 80 In June 1958 just a few months before the Scranton takeover the network had launched a nightly 25 minute newscast The World Today hosted by Westbrook Van Voorhis famous as the voice of The March of Time Sports began to occupy an increasing portion of Mutual s schedule the network began regularly airing a Major League Baseball Game of the Day every day except Sunday This expansion into daily sports programming would run well into the 1960s n While baseball s World Series and All Star Game would go to rival NBC in 1957 Mutual secured national radio rights to Notre Dame Fighting Irish football in 1954 141 99 The rights would switch between networks over the following decade before Mutual became the exclusive broadcaster in 1968 142 which would remain a cornerstone for the rest of the network s existence 143 144 1960s 1970s Narrowed focus Edit From 3M to Amway Edit In the spring of 1960 the 3M Company stepped in purchasing Mutual and restoring much needed stability to the operation 145 Despite the late 1950s Guterma scandal Mutual still had 443 affiliates easily the most of any network By this time as historian Jim Cox describes both Mutual and ABC had largely wiped their slates clean of most of their network programming save news and sporting events and a few long running features 146 This would characterize Mutual s essential approach for the next three and a half decades through a further series of ownership changes In July 1966 3M sold the network to the privately held Mutual Industries Inc headed by John P Fraim and Loren M Berry for 3 1 million equivalent to 25 9 million in 2021 Fraim was vice president of Berry s Dayton Ohio based telephone directory publishing company 3 147 Upon Mutual Industries s acquisition of Mutual it was renamed to Mutual Broadcasting Corporation 148 The following month after the death of Mutual stalwart Fulton Lewis Jr his son Fulton Lewis III took over his nightly 7 p m slot 149 Another Ohio businessman Daniel H Overmyer sought a merger with Mutual in 1967 amid plans to start his own TV network The offer was rebuffed but three Mutual stockholders joined eleven other investors to buy Overmyer s hookup and rename it the United Network 150 The network and its only offering The Las Vegas Show folded after only a month on the air 151 When ABC Radio a split into four demographically targeted networks on January 1 1968 Mutual unsuccessfully sued to block the move Meanwhile the network was undergoing some management instability with frequent changes at the top for example Matthew J Culligan was Mutual s president from October 1966 to June 1968 He was replaced by Robert R Pauley who came over from the ABC radio division where he had served as president for nearly seven years 152 But Pauley only lasted a year and resigned after clashes with the board over the need for cost cutting and other decisions with which he disagreed His replacement was Victor C Diehm owner of several Mutual affiliated radio stations and active on the Mutual Affiliates Advisory Council 153 Advertisement for the Mutual Black Network featuring Dr Martin Luther King Jr and poet Nikki GiovanniDiehm was succeeded early in 1972 by C Edward Little a former executive and owner of Hollywood Florida Mutual affiliate WGMA Little arrived in the position with a commitment to expand Mutual s news service and program offerings conceding that Mutual had long been fourth among the legacy big four radio networks 154 Taking a page from ABC s move to split its radio network years earlier Little launched two additional news services the Mutual Black Network MBN and the Mutual Spanish Network Mutual Cadena Hispanica on May 1 1972 155 Targeting Black audiences MBN supplied 100 five minute long news and sports reports weekly along with other programming 156 with Mutual Cadena featuring similar fare aimed at Spanish language listeners 155 By July 1972 Mutual had 550 affiliates MBN had 55 and Mutual Cadena had 21 111 While Mutual Cadena lasted only six months by 1974 MBN grew to 98 affiliates 157 Another change in July 1974 was more subtle Mutual began using two toned Mutualert network cue tones at the beginning and end of newscasts programs between commercials and during network identification breaks 158 Referred to as bee doops these cue tones would be used by Mutual for the rest of its existence 159 The youth oriented Mutual Progressive News 160 was launched for Top 40 and country outlets and was also made available for non commercial educational stations in markets without an existing Mutual affiliate 158 Little later oversaw the 1978 launch of the Mutual Southwest Network a regional mininetwork that handled distribution for the Dallas Cowboys Radio Network and featured Southwest Conference football games 161 In 1976 49 percent of MBN ownership was sold to the Sheridan Broadcasting Corporation 162 followed by the remaining 51 percent in 1979 at which point MBN was renamed the Sheridan Broadcasting Network 111 163 and later merged into National Black Network to create American Urban Radio Networks 164 While Mutual Broadcasting Corp was initially a group controlled by Fraim and Berry investor Benjamin D Gilbert and his wife quietly bought out their stakes and that of the other investors becoming the principal owners 3 The Gilberts would attract unwanted attention for themselves over one particular program In 1974 the Liberty Lobby a think tank and lobby group that espoused far right views and antisemitism purchased airtime for a daily five minute show This Is Liberty Lobby which also offered the organization s America First pamphlet at the end of every episode While not directly from Mutual it was made available to the network s over 600 stations with 126 carrying it by July The Anti Defamation League alleged the Mutual connection came as the Gilberts personally contributed thousands of dollars to the Liberty Lobby since 1966 165 After refusing to transmit two specific episodes in November Mutual cancelled the Liberty Lobby contract at year s end 166 158 In the March 21 1977 issue of Broadcasting magazine publisher John P McGoff disclosed he had been in talks to purchase Mutual 167 A bidding war followed between Amway a multi level marketing company known for selling home care products and Columbus Georgia based insurer American Family Corp which dropped out after the asking price approached 20 million equivalent to 89 4 million in 2021 3 On September 30 1977 Amway bought the network 168 After the purchase Mutual began to develop what would become the first nationwide commercial broadcast satellite network leading to the end of decades of reliance on telephone lines for the broadcast industry s transmission capacity 169 This proposal received FCC approval in late 1979 170 The biggest change to Mutual happened in 1978 when Amway purchased WCFL from the Chicago Federation of Labor for 12 million equivalent to 49 9 million in 2021 for the first time the network founded by radio stations directly owned a station of its own and in one of the country s largest markets 171 172 Mutual also reached its greatest number of affiliates that year with 950 fewer than ABC whose multipronged approach had proven very successful but far in front of NBC and CBS 30 Rise of the call in talk show Edit Larry King One of the few primary network programs outside of news and sports that Mutual initiated during this era rapidly became one of the most successful in its history the first nationwide all night call in talk radio program which launched on November 3 1975 with Herb Jepko as host 173 158 Jepko s show which originated from KSL in Salt Lake City in 1964 as Nitecap was fed by Mutual for eight hours beginning at midnight ET allowing for stations on the West Coast to carry it live Mutual also signed up 12 high powered AM stations to ensure coast to coast reception 174 Jepko so determinedly avoided controversial topics on the program that some callers simply talked about the weather where they lived Fellow broadcaster Hilly Rose said of Jepko he is the exact opposite of Joe Pyne and 99 of the successful talk show hosts in America If he were any nicer he would make Mary Poppins look like a witch 175 Mutual dropped Jepko s show in May 1977 replacing it with the husband and wife team Long John Nebel and Candy Jones from WMCA in New York City whose program fared little better than Jepko s 176 158 Nebel and Jones left Mutual by the end of the year and Mutual then hired a virtually unknown local talk show host at WIOD in Miami Larry King On January 30 1978 the Larry King Show made its national debut on Mutual 177 Initially heard over 28 stations by late 1979 King s all night program became increasingly popular carried by nearly 200 stations 178 with a nightly audience of around 2 million listeners 179 During the early 1980s the Larry King Show continued to attract new affiliates to the network 178 180 Like Jepko King also shied away from controversial subjects on the show with regular callers to the show being given pseudonyms or nicknames by King himself 180 Originally a five and a half hour program the last half hour was relaunched as America in The Morning a morning news magazine hosted by WCFL alumnus Jim Bohannon in September 1984 181 182 King continued with his Mutual call in show until 1994 long after he began hosting Larry King Live for CNN in 1985 179 183 King s success soon prompted NBC Radio and ABC Radio to launch NBC Talknet and ABC TalkRadio respectively both featured call in shows airing into the late evening and overnight hours 178 The Larry King Show also won a Peabody Award for Mutual in 1982 179 Mutual made additional ventures beyond talk programming and newscasts Along with the network s existing sports coverage Mutual was the national radio broadcaster for Monday Night Football from 1970 through 1977 184 Mutual began nationally distributing Jamboree USA from WWVA in Wheeling West Virginia on February 23 1979 marking the first time in years that the network featured a regularly scheduled live music program 185 Jamboree USA also became the first music program on radio to be transmitted by satellite 170 the new technology now further enabled Mutual to offer additional music programming to affiliates including anthologies and concerts 186 1980s 1990s The end of Mutual Edit Joining up with Westwood One Edit Ad for Dick Clark s National Music Survey among the last entertainment shows to originate on Mutual With their purchase of WCFL still pending Amway acquired a second station for Mutual with New York City s WHN from Storer Broadcasting on February 26 1979 for 14 million equivalent to 52 3 million in 2021 at the time the second highest purchase price for a radio station 187 Supplanting WMCA as Mutual s New York outlet the deal closed on March 3 1980 188 Re branded Mutual CFL WCFL was relaunched in August 1979 as the flagship for Mutual Lifestyle Radio a form of talk radio oriented towards light conversation 189 On a Country Road a country music show hosted by WHN s Lee Arnold was given national distribution 190 Also in March 1980 Mutual picked up the Sears Radio Theater after CBS Radio dropped it renaming it Mutual Radio Theater While a number of well regarded episodes were produced the series ended on December 19 1980 191 192 and was Mutual s final radio drama 193 The Mutual Southwest Network also closed at the end of 1980 in both cases Mutual Radio Theater and Mutual Southwest suffered from a lack of advertising support 192 In 1981 Mutual launched Dick Clark s National Music Survey a three hour long weekly program combining music and interviews a show Clark continued to host for even after having co founded a competing syndicator United Stations Radio Networks earlier in the year 190 194 Sports commentaries were added featuring the likes of Tommy Lasorda and Pat Summerall along with hourly Wide Weekend of Sports sportscasts throughout the weekend the network also held play by play rights to Notre Dame college football the PGA Tour the LPGA the United States Tennis Association and regional rights for four NFL teams 181 When I entered this business everybody I d meet wanted to talk to me about O amp O s and I remember the first staff meeting I ever had at Mutual after we bought it and I went in and I met everybody and they said What about O amp O s And I remember my answer was What s an O amp O Well they all kind of laughed Then they all told me that that was the way to go We had to own a bunch of radio stations Well I didn t buy a network to think I had to buy a bunch of radio stations I thought I d already bought something Richard DeVos 195 Mutual s satellite network was fully online by 1982 but the new technology allowed for additional networks to emerge some including efforts from NBC ABC CBS RKO Satellite Music Network and Transtar providing continuous programming to radio stations on a turnkey basis 196 WCFL also failed to meet the network s expectations Chuck Swirsky hired as an evening sports talk host later called WCFL the lowest rated 50 thousand watts station in American broadcast history We had blank pages for logs Zero commercial inventory Any PSA content our traffic department received we immediately played on the air that night 197 As Mutual celebrated its 50th anniversary Amway denied rumors of a possible sale 181 but executive Richard DeVos admitted the company was disappointed with their venture into broadcasting calling Mutual a learning experience and their stewardship of WCFL not a very good one I began to question whether our people really knew how to run a radio station 195 Network president John Brian Clements asserted this network is not for sale 198 but the radio stations were WCFL was sold to Statewide Broadcasting in November 1983 at a 4 million loss 199 and WHN was sold to Doubleday Broadcasting in October 1984 at a 1 million loss 200 Clements took over as president when Amway s board called for the resignation of several executives and followed downsizing due to softening sales 198 111 In 1985 Westwood One a radio production company and syndicator based in Culver City California sought to expand its operations Westwood and Mutual were a good match the demographics of Mutual affiliates tended to be adult while most of the stations that bought Westwood s music oriented programming had substantially younger audiences 201 Mutual had news operations Westwood lacked and although down from its peak still commanded 860 affiliates and generated 25 million in revenue a strong second among the Big Four 202 203 In September 1985 Amway sold the network to Westwood One for 39 million equivalent to 98 3 million in 2021 204 outside of the satellite services division and uplink facility which Amway retained 202 205 It s a perfect fit declared Westwood head Norman J Pattiz Referring to the united company s ability to give advertisers access to a broad demographic sweep he called it a classic case of two plus two equaling five 206 On July 20 1987 the number got even bigger Westwood One snapped up the NBC Radio Network for 50 million equivalent to 119 million in 2021 207 pursing Mutual s long time competitor since a planned sale of the network and NBC s radio stations to Westinghouse Broadcasting fell through 208 Mutual was now part of a much larger programming service and its identity was being gradually phased out In 1987 Mutual s longform fare including Larry King and Toni Grant were placed in a new service called Mutual P M which Westwood One touted as clon ing a new network from the existing network in hopes of attracting new advertisers 209 NBC Radio s news and engineering staff was combined with Mutual personnel at the Arlington facility in 1989 and by 1992 programming between the two networks began to undergo consolidation particularly in overnights and weekends 205 207 King switched his all night radio show to a shorter daytime version on February 1 1993 with the late night slot going to Jim Bohannon 210 in addition to hosting America in The Morning Bohannon had been King s fill in host and hosted a weekend call in show on Mutual identical to King s 211 King s daytime show ended in June 1994 183 212 and was replaced with a talk show hosted by comedian David Brenner which lasted for two years 213 Westwood One began simulcasting the television audio of King s nightly CNN talk show Larry King Live 205 which continued through the end of 2009 214 Outside of Bohannon s show most Mutual programming was now being heard on smaller market stations with many affiliates using it as a backup to a different primary affiliation by 1999 Mutual News was down to approximately 300 affiliates 207 Consolidation streamlining and dissolution Edit Meanwhile Westwood One began to be subject to larger mergers and acquisitions Westwood One purchased competing syndicator Unistar Radio Networks from Infinity Broadcasting in 1994 as part of the deal Infinity purchased 25 percent of Westwood One becoming its largest shareholder and effectively taking it over 215 Westinghouse which recently bought out CBS and was renamed CBS Corporation shortly thereafter then acquired Infinity in June 1996 for just shy of 5 billion equivalent to 8 64 billion in 2021 216 The direct descendants of the three original U S radio network companies had merged 211 with Mutual little more than one of several brand names for programming under the aegis of Westwood One itself under the control of a major conglomerate 207 Mutual and NBC Radio newscasters sat back to back in the Westwood One studio the former main Mutual facility in Crystal City Virginia which now also fed CBS Radio News from New York City and CNN Radio feeds which Westwood One also distributed 217 from Atlanta despite newsroom signage still reading Mutual Broadcasting System as late as 1998 it was referred to internally as the Westwood One newsroom 211 The newsroom itself closed on August 31 1998 with Mutual and NBC newscasts originating from the CBS Radio News facilities 218 205 In this world of media brand names there s so much synergy that s involved and Mutual had to hang out there by itself It was very hard to support it Nick Kiernan Westwood One vice president of affiliate relations on the 1999 retirement of the Mutual News name 207 In early 1999 Westwood One announced that it would retire the Mutual name and end newscast production with CNN Radio CBS or Fox News Radio 207 offered as replacements to affiliates The majority of NBC Radio s remaining services would also cease outside of morning drive hours 217 In addition to producing NBC CBS and Mutual newscasts and distributing CNN content Westwood One also began distributing Fox News as a result the company was marketing five different newscast brands in what one company representative called wasteful 207 A former staffer for Mutual s news service described the end Official time of Mutual Radio s death was Midnight 4 17 99 No tribute no mention it was the last newscast it just died 219 217 The closure of Mutual News resulted in 12 staffers being dismissed from CBS Radio News which itself underwent a recent series of cutbacks involving on air talent 207 While the dropping of the Mutual name was attributed to mass consolidation in particular following passage of the 1996 Telecommunications Act 217 Dick Rosse a correspondent for the network for 36 years before retiring in 1998 said the following in an op ed for Broadcasting amp Cable 2 The Mutual Broadcasting System died this week and aside from the folks who worked there you d have to go a long way to find anyone who was saddened or even cared Certainly word of Mutual s demise was not a subject of discussion among the suits over lunch at 21 or the Four Seasons Maybe out there in the boonies Mutual s natural habitat some listener might sense that something had vanished from his radio universe Old age killed Mutual That and increasing irrelevance in a world that associates radio with Rush Howard and Doctor Laura So when Jack Kevorkian in the guise of CBS head Mel Karmazin paid his call Mutual didn t need much of a push The Crystal City facility was closed in March 2001 with Westwood One s primary operations transferred to the CBS Broadcast Center in New York City 220 Legacy Edit Jim BohannonWestwood One s corporate fate proved almost as complicated as the fate of Mutual itself Spun off by majority owner CBS Corporation one of two successors to the first Viacom which acquired the first CBS Corporation in 1999 221 to The Gores Group in 2007 it was merged into Dial Global a subsidiary of Oaktree Capital Management s Triton Media Group unit in 2011 ultimately taking that company s name 222 Prior to its 2013 merger into Cumulus Media Networks 223 Dial Global reverted to using the Westwood One name 224 225 Even with all these changes some current programming both on Westwood One owned by Cumulus Media and other syndicators can still trace their lineage directly to Mutual Jim Bohannon s interview call in show which debuted on Mutual in 1985 and was a direct descendant of Larry King and Herb Jepko s shows continued until his abrupt retirement on October 14 2022 226 Rich Valdes took over hosting duties for the program 227 Bohannon missed much of the summer of 2022 for what were initially unexplained reasons but later revealed to be a diagnosis with terminal stage 4 esophageal cancer 226 and died 29 days after his final show Bohannon also hosted the morning news magazine America in the Morning from its 1984 premiere over Mutual until 2015 228 229 which continues to this day as a Westwood One program under succeeding host John Trout 182 Since 2004 the current incarnation of Meet the Press first broadcast over Mutual in 1945 has had an audio simulcast over Westwood One 230 231 Country Countdown USA founded in 1992 as a Mutual branded program after the Westwood One purchase continues to air in its original format but moved to Compass Media Networks in August 2022 232 Radio broadcasts of Notre Dame Fighting Irish football were eventually re branded as from Westwood One a few years before the end of the Mutual network itself 144 At the conclusion of the 2007 football season Notre Dame ended its relationship with Westwood One citing financial reasons 233 and subsequently announced a deal with ISP Sports 234 After taking over Westwood One in 2013 Cumulus Media launched a white label news service Westwood One News under a content sharing deal with CNN 235 Launching on January 1 2015 as a replacement service among Cumulus s radio stations that previously affiliated with ABC News Radio CBS News Radio and NBC News Radio the latter having replaced CNN Radio in 2012 236 it ended operations on August 30 2020 237 Mutual founding stations WOR and WLW are now both owned by iHeartMedia who operates their own syndication unit Premiere Networks Prior to being purchased by iHeartMedia in 2012 as Clear Channel Communications WOR operated a syndication service of their own the WOR Radio Network 238 The other founding station WGN is owned by television broadcaster Nexstar Media Group as the lone radio station in their portfolio 239 WGN previously syndicated Orion Samuelson farm reports through its Tribune Radio Network 240 which carried Chicago Cubs broadcasts until the 2014 season 241 Awards and honors EditThe Mutual Broadcasting System has been the recipient of the following Peabody Awards 242 1941 Peabody Award Outstanding Achievement in Music Alfred Wallenstein co honored with WOR 1944 Peabody Award Outstanding Educational Program Human Adventure 1946 Peabody Award Honorable Mention Meet the Press 1950 Peabody Award Honorable Mention Contribution to International Understanding Pursuit of Peace co honored with United Nations Radio 1956 Peabody Award The Bob and Ray Show co honored with NBC 1982 Peabody Award The Larry King Show 1987 Peabody Award Charities That Give and TakeSee also EditNotable programs Edit Shows heard over the Mutual Broadcasting System during the Golden Age of Radio included the following o Abbott Mysteries 1945 1947 Adventure Parade 1946 1949 The Adventures of Champion 1949 The Adventures of Father Brown 1945 The Adventures of Maisie 1952 The Adventures of Superman 1942 1949 The Amazing Nero Wolfe 1945 A L Alexander s Mediation Board 1943 1952 Archie Andrews 1944 Arch Oboler s Plays 1945 The Black Museum 1952 Blackstone the Magic Detective 1948 1949 243 Captain Midnight 1940 1942 1945 1949 1949 Charlie Chan 1935 1945 original series 1947 1948 reruns Chick Carter Boy Detective 1943 1945 The Cisco Kid 1942 1945 1946 regional The Couple Next Door 1937 The Crime Club 1946 1947 Crime Does Not Pay 1952 Dick Tracy 1935 1937 Family Theater 1947 1957 Hopalong Cassidy 1950 Hop Harrigan 1946 1948 I Love a Mystery 1949 1952 It Pays to Be Ignorant 1942 1943 1944 Johnny Modero Pier 23 1947 Land of the Lost 1945 1946 Mandrake the Magician 1940 1942 Mark Trail 1950 1951 Martin Kane Private Eye 1949 1951 Red Ryder 1942 1942 1949 regional Queen for a Day 1945 1947 The Saint 1949 1950 The Lone Ranger 1933 1954 The Sea Hound 1946 1947 The Sealed Book 1945 The Shadow 1937 1954 Sky King 1950 1954 Skyroads 1939 244 The Two Ton Baker Show 1948 1949 245 Vic and Sade 1946 Voyage of the Scarlet Queen 1947 1948 The Zane Grey Show 1947 1948 Notable staff Edit Jim Bohannon talk show host 228 Tom Cheek sportscaster Raymond Clapper commentator Bud Collyer actor Chuck Connors actor Dizzy Dean sportscaster Gene Elston sportscaster Bob Feller sportscaster Tex Fletcher singing cowboy Eli Gold sportscaster Morton Gould conductor arranger pianist Toni Grant talk show host Ray Heatherton musical actor Gabriel Heatter commentator Skitch Henderson conductor arranger pianist Ernest Holmes religion show host Quincy Howe commentator Wilbur Budd Hulick comic actor Herb Jepko talk show host Candy Jones talk show host Larry King talk show host 179 Fredell Lack violinist Fulton Lewis commentator Fulton Lewis III commentator Tony Marvin newscaster Long John Nebel talk show host Lindsey Nelson sportscaster Van Patrick sportscaster Drew Pearson commentator Robert Ripley trivia show host Ed Salamon programming executive Cesare Sodero conductor Bill Stern sportscaster Raymond Gram Swing commentator Aloysius Michael Sullivan announcer Phil Tonken announcer Westbrook Van Voorhis newscasterNotes Edit a b Not to be confused with ABC Audio a b The following sources argue that Mutual was primarily a vehicle for The Lone Ranger 10 11 12 These sources however counterargue that Mutual was built on the popularity of Lum and Abner 13 14 15 All available sources concur that Mutual cofounders WOR Newark N J New York WXYZ Detroit and WLW Cincinnati were also founding members of the Quality Network Sources differ on whether WGN Chicago Mutual s fourth original member or another Chicago station WLS represented the city in the Quality Network In addition there is no consensus on the fundamental matter of the degree of connection involved some sources claim the Quality Network had ceased to exist by the end of 1929 others that it carried on and simply changed its name and formalized its structure in 1934 As scholar James Schwoch 1994 puts it The origins of the Mutual Broadcasting System are somewhat murky and open to dispute Indeed a claim Schwoch makes just two sentences later that the permanent establishment of the Mutual network is bound up in the popularity of a single radio program The Lone Ranger is disputed by several scholars b Start and end dates for original dramatic and quiz series given in the main text are based on the standard and most comprehensive reference work On the Air The Encyclopedia of Old Time Radio by John Dunning 36 Dunning s detailed information has been checked where available against the even more detailed reports of Jerry Haendiges 37 and against the much less detailed but more recently published The Encyclopedia of American Radio An A Z Guide to Radio from Jack Benny to Howard Stern by Ron Lackmann 38 Dunning and Haendiges agree in almost all cases where they both cover a show In the few cases where they differ slightly a specific citation is given to the one whose data appears better supported internally and or by reference to Lackmann There are anecdotal suggestions that the network aired the Indianapolis 500 in previous years but to date no concrete evidence has been found For later Mutual coverage of the race see 43 The two available authoritative sources differ widely on the affiliate figures for the year Media historians F Leslie Smith et al give Mutual 140 NBC 113 53 with Red 60 with Blue and CBS 112 54 Media historian James Schwoch gives NBC 182 Mutual 160 and CBS 122 12 It is unclear what different methodologies were employed to produce these varying results For advertising sales in the first eight months of 1941 see Happy Birthday MBS from the September 15 1941 issue of Time 56 NBC s take was now less than eight times as much as Mutual s All available reports suggest that the gap did not close much further during the decade Media historian Marsha Francis Cassidy also refers to Mutual s wish fulfillment show Heart s Desire as one of those that made the shift to local or regional television 67 but it has not been possible to confirm this For a detailed account of this model of radio art see 68 A scholarly journal article claims that the Don Lee purchase brought with it a 19 percent interest in the Mutual Broadcasting System which would be down from the 25 percent of the 1940 restructuring However the reliability of this source is questionable as it incorrectly claims in the same paragraph that the East Coast based Yankee Network was also acquired at this time by General Tire 84 As detailed above General Tire in fact acquired Yankee in 1943 Marshall 1998 and Day 2004 describe the details of the original deal very differently agreeing only that it was for six years at 1 million a year Marshall says that a contract was signed on December 26 1950 between baseball s major leagues in the person of Commissioner Happy Chandler on one side and Mutual and the Gillette Safety Razor Company on the other for the television rights Day says baseball s contract was solely with Gillette that it was for both radio and television rights and that Gillette l ess than a year after acquiring the broadcast rights transferred them to Mutual They also characterize the original contract rather differently Marshall calls it one of the outstanding achievements of the Chandler commissionership Day credits Chandler with deftly avoid ing a financial crisis but agrees with the prevailing opinion of the players that Chandler vastly underestimated the value of the rights The fact which Day provides that Mutual sold the package to NBC for 4 million a year lends support to his position 87 Mutual does have a TV network in the realm of imagination The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier amp Clay by novelist Michael Chabon refers to The Escapist a show starring Peter Graves said to have run from 1951 to 1955 on the Mutual Television Network p 596 In August 1951 the low powered baseball oriented Liberty Broadcasting System LBS had 431 affiliates 92 For more on The Zero Hour see 136 Radio historian Ronald Garay says Mutual launched its Game of the Day in 1949 138 Sports historians Jerry Gorman et al say it was 1950 139 Garay indicates that the concept was picked up from the Liberty Broadcasting System founded in 1947 Yet the National Baseball Hall of Fame lists among famed broadcaster France Laux s credits Mutual Game of the Day 1939 41 44 140 Run dates on Mutual are per Dunning 1998 checked against Lackmann 2000 Note that Dunning does not list The Sea Hound as ever running on Mutual but Lackmann does Neither lists Skyroads References Edit Browne Ray Broadus Browne Pat 2001 The Guide to United States Popular Culture Popular Press p 97 ISBN 9780879728212 Archived from the original on February 10 2023 Retrieved November 18 2020 Mutual Reports eventually became Mutual Black Network MBN a b Rosse Dick April 19 1999 How Sweet It Was PDF Broadcasting amp Cable Vol 129 no 16 pp 74 76 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 9 2023 via World Radio History a b c d Sale of Mutual reported in work at 15 million PDF Broadcasting Vol 93 no 7 August 15 1977 p 20 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 12 2023 via World Radio History a b c d High Finance The Price of Publicity Time Vol LXXIV no 11 September 14 1959 p 94 Archived from the original on February 10 2023 Retrieved February 9 2023 Lisicky Michael J 2016 Bamberger s New Jersey s Greatest Store Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781439658369 Archived from the original on February 10 2023 Retrieved November 18 2020 Robinson 1979 p 28 Cox 2015 p 177 McLeod Elizabeth 1999 2002 Some History of the Mutual Broadcasting System History of American Broadcasting Jeff Miller Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved March 1 2010 Extensive discussion of the network s history and organization by radio historian Note that the page s introductory content not written by McLeod gives September 15 1934 as the network s organizational date apparently based on a 1999 newspaper article reproduced at the bottom of the page All authoritative sources including McLeod give September 29 The newspaper article also incorrectly states that the network featured commentator Drew Pearson it never did His shows appeared on NBC and NBC Blue ABC See e g Nimmo amp Newsome 1997 p 271 The article also incorrectly suggests that when The Lone Ranger rode into the radio sunset in 1954 it directly affected the network The show hadn t been on Mutual since 1942 Dunning 1998 p 724 Olson 2000 p 173 Head 1976 p 142 a b c Schwoch 1994 Hilmes 1997 pp 107 108 Hollis 2001 p 41 McLeod Elizabeth April 12 1999 Some History of the Mutual Broadcasting System Correspondence Mon 12 APR 99 History of American Broadcasting Jeff Miller Archived from the original on May 13 2008 Retrieved March 1 2010 Whitaker 2002 pp 537 538 Gorman Calhoun amp Rozin 1994 p 105 Adcraft PDF Advertising Age December 5 2005 Archived from the original PDF on March 26 2009 Retrieved March 1 2010 The Lone Ranger Episode Log Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs February 18 2005 Archived from the original on August 24 2000 Retrieved March 1 2010 a b c Business amp Finance M B S Time Vol XXIX no 1 January 4 1937 pp 39 40 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 10 2023 Alexander 2002 p 110 Gorman Calhoun amp Rozin 1994 p 89 See e g Patterson 2004 p 90 The Colonial Network BostonRadio org Archived from the original on May 1 2001 Retrieved March 1 2010 Christopher H Sterling and Michael C Keith Sounds of Change A History of FM Broadcasting in America University of North Carolina Press 2009 p 24 a b Cleveland Switch to Occur Sept 26 PDF Broadcasting Broadcast Advertising Vol 13 no 6 September 15 1937 p 15 Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved December 9 2021 via World Radio History Station Guide WGAR AM Cleveland Broadcast Radio Archives Archived from the original on May 9 2008 Retrieved March 1 2010 A play by play retrospective 1936 PDF Broadcasting Vol 79 no 18 November 2 1970 pp 80 82 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 10 2023 via World Radio History This source also states WLW AM Cincinnati turns in its Mutual stock but remains as outlet which is in error as WLW never held any stock and left the network to join NBC see e g Schramm 1969 p 51 Schneider John F 2009 The History of KFRC San Francisco and the Don Lee Networks Bay Area Radio Museum Archived from the original on September 17 2010 Retrieved March 1 2010 Clarke 1996 ch 11 available online Archived May 16 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b The Boston Radio Timeline BostonRadio org Archived from the original on June 20 2010 Retrieved March 1 2010 a b Cox 2002 p 178 Doran Dorothy November 4 1942 WJW Seeks Move Into Cleveland For Blue Chain Akron Beacon Journal Akron Ohio Knight Newspapers p 21 Archived from the original on February 10 2023 Retrieved October 28 2021 via Newspapers com a b c National Broadcasting Co Inc et al v United States et al U S Supreme Court decision Freedom of Speech in the United States Free Speech Library Boston College May 10 1943 Archived from the original on March 5 2010 Retrieved March 1 2010 Brady 1990 p 78 Hilmes 1997 pp 99 100 Jaker Sulek amp Kanze 1998 p 129 Dunning 1998 Haendiges Jerry 1996 Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs Jerry Haendiges Productions Archived from the original on December 5 2006 Retrieved February 10 2023 Lackmann 2000 Callow 1995 p 321 Green Hornet Episode Log Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs January 29 2004 Archived from the original on February 17 2010 Retrieved March 1 2010 McDougal 2001 p 68 Highway Traveler 11 no 2 April May 1939 p 27 1949 Indianapolis 500 Speedway Audio Archived from the original on March 21 2007 Retrieved March 1 2010 Bliss 1991 pp 34 36 Bliss 1991 pp 60 61 Nimmo amp Newsome 1997 p 173 Brown 1998 p 180 Bliss 1991 pp 97 98 Rose 1971 p 68 Nimmo amp Newsome 1997 p 178 Robinson 1979 p 29 Jaker et al 1998 p 93 Radio Rubber Yankee Time Vol XLI no 3 January 18 1943 p 88 Archived from the original on February 10 2023 Retrieved February 10 2023 a b Smith Wright II amp Ostroff 1998 p 43 See Robinson 1979 pp 26 27 29 Radio Happy Birthday MBS Time Vol XXXVIII no 11 September 15 1941 pp 57 58 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved February 10 2023 Quoted in Robinson 1979 p 116 Chains Unchained Time May 12 1941 available online Quoted in Robinson 1979 p 74 Mutual Seeks to End Action Against RCA Official Says Transfer of Blue Network Will Solve Issue New York Times October 12 1943 AM Network Affiliated Radio Stations 1949 1949 Broadcasting Telecasting Yearbook History of American Broadcasting Jeff Miller December 6 1948 Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved March 1 2010 Leblebici et al 1991 p 17 online pagination Segrave 1999 p 22 For more on the evaporation of Mutual s TV plans see Schwoch 1994 Cox 2002 p 83 Nachmann 2000 p 350 Cassidy 2005 pp 40 43 187 188 a b Cassidy 2005 p 41 Kovacs v Mutual Broadcasting System 1950 99 CA2d 56 California 2d District Court ruling Continuing Education of the Bar California University of California State Bar of California August 18 1950 Archived from the original on February 11 2023 Retrieved March 1 2010 Miller Center Archived from the original on July 9 2015 Retrieved September 14 2015 Roosevelt Franklin D Fireside Chat 27 On the Tehran and Cairo Conferences December 24 1943 Miller Center of Public Affairs University of Virginia Retrieved July 6 2016 Bliss 1991 p 65 History Chronology 1940 to 1959 Pro Football Hall of Fame Archived from the original on April 8 2010 Retrieved March 1 2010 Brown 1998 pp 183 190 Bliss 1991 p 135 WOR Interruption of Giants Dodgers Football Game Authentic History Center December 7 1941 Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Retrieved March 1 2010 Crook 1998 pp 206 207 Nimmo amp Newsome 1997 p 311 Bliss 1991 pp 202 203 Savage 1999 p 345 n 123 WGN Radio Timeline 1940s 1950s WGN Gold Archived from the original on July 18 2011 Retrieved March 1 2010 Chicago Theater of the Air Episode Log Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs April 15 2008 Archived from the original on March 6 2005 Retrieved March 1 2010 Sherlock Holmes Episode Log Jerry Haendiges Vintage Radio Logs July 6 2008 Archived from the original on April 3 2012 Retrieved March 1 2010 a b Dunning 1998 p 382 Cassidy 2005 p 20 a b Executive 35 in Don Lee s Top Role Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California Associated Press December 18 1950 p 10 Section III Archived from the original on February 17 2023 Retrieved February 17 2023 via Newspapers com a b Sale of Don Lee System Approved Cash Payment of 12 320 000 Involved in FCC Decision Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California United Press December 28 1950 p 4 Section I Archived from the original on February 17 2023 Retrieved February 17 2023 via Newspapers com Crane 1980 Pauley Protest Made on Sale of Don Lee Stock Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California December 19 1950 p 23 Part I Archived from the original on February 17 2023 Retrieved February 17 2023 via Newspapers com Arguments on Don Lee Radio Sale Requested Los Angeles Times Los Angeles California December 20 1950 p 22 Section I Archived from the original on February 17 2023 Retrieved February 17 2023 via Newspapers com a b Marshall 1998 p 384 Day 2004 pp 230 231 Radio TV Merger Approved By F C C Deal Covers Macy s Transfer of WOR Interests to General Tire s Don Lee System New York Times January 18 1952 Earnings Fall 5 for Macy System Television s High Cost for Subsidiary General Teleradio Cuts Consolidated Net New York Times October 11 1950 Howard 1979 pp 150 52 General Tire Gets Control of M B S Shareholders at Meeting Vote 2 for 1 Stock Split Company Buys More TV Stations New York Times April 2 1952 O Neil MBS President White Resigns Fineshriber Director PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 42 no 17 April 28 1952 pp 23 34 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Cox 2015 p 178 see also pp 127 128 for the 1950 and 1960 figures for the four major networks Garay 1992 p 32 a b c d MBS may pull the plug this week PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 53 no 3 July 15 1957 pp 31 32 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History a b c Mutual maps drastic moves to bolster sales ratings PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 45 no 1 July 6 1953 p 27 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Mutual affiliates meeting routine program payment plan not revived PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 46 no 4 January 25 1954 p 74 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History CKLW AM TV shares purchased by RKO PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 50 no 15 April 9 1956 p 111 Archived PDF from the original on June 29 2021 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Brisk buying surge swaps four stations 7 7 million PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 50 no 15 April 9 1956 pp 35 36 Archived PDF from the original on June 29 2021 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Thumbnail History of RKO Radio Pictures home earthlink net Archived from the original on September 12 2005 Retrieved August 27 2018 a b MBS unveils sales plan in Chicago PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 50 no 17 April 23 1956 pp 104 107 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History WHK succeeds KYW as NBC affiliate PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 51 no 5 July 30 1956 p 58 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Mutual Seeks Station After WGN Bows Out PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 50 no 19 May 7 1956 p 88 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Mutual Shows for Chicago To Be Carried by ABC s WLS PDF Broadcasting Telecasting Vol 51 no 5 July 30 1956 p 60 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Shepard Richard F July 17 1957 Sale of Mutual Expected Today Radio Network Is Going to Group From West Coast New York Times p 41 Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 Time of trial for radio networks Mutual takes worst buffeting but others have their troubles too PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 10 March 9 1959 pp 35 38 40 42 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History See Bareiss amp Leigh 1998 pp 379 382 in particular p 381 for the development of limited sponsorship Garay 1992 p 64 Mutual Network Brings 2 Million Radio System Is Purchased by Scranton Corporation in Move for Expansion New York Times September 12 1958 p 50 Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 New giant growing in radio TV PDF Broadcasting Vol 55 no 11 September 15 1958 pp 27 28 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History a b c d SOS from Mutual as courts and creditors close in PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 10 March 9 1959 p 36 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History a b Roach Jr Loses His Film Post Independent Press Telegram New York United Press International March 22 1959 p 4 Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via Newspapers com a b c d e After 53 years the feeling s still Mutual PDF Broadcasting Vol 107 no 11 September 10 1984 pp 43 46 51 54 58 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 via World Radio History At Deadline Mutual on the block PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 9 March 2 1959 p 9 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History Mutual keeps walking tightrope Intermountain stations depart as Smith group keeps up talks PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 11 March 16 1959 pp 118 119 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History a b Rescue squad takes over at MBS Creditors okay deferments of old debts to keep network going PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 13 March 30 1959 pp 27 30 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History Don Lee to quit ABC gets 20 affiliations PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 13 March 30 1959 p 30 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History a b Mutual and Yankee plan August divorce PDF Broadcasting Vol 56 no 19 May 11 1959 p 58 Archived PDF from the original on October 21 2020 Retrieved February 25 2020 via World Radio History Grand jury indicts Guterma trio Charged with selling MBS as Dominican propaganda vehicle PDF Broadcasting Vol 57 no 10 September 7 1959 pp 68 70 75 76 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 16 2023 via World Radio History Ward 2005 pp 152 155 Cox 2002 p 127 Jaker Sulek amp Kanze 1998 p 155 Adams Val July 2 1959 Mutual Network 3 Million in Debt Files Petition in U S Court Seeking Settlement While Continuing in Control New York Times p 53 Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 Adams Val July 5 1959 News of TV and Radio Garry Moore To Use Candid Camera As Sporadic Feature in Fall Items New York Times p 6 Section ART Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 WOR New York keeps its Mutual affiliation PDF Broadcasting Vol 57 no 4 July 27 1959 p 50 Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History At Deadline Cue station break PDF Broadcasting Vol 57 no 3 July 20 1959 p 9 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History At Deadline MBS reorganization approved by referee PDF Broadcasting Vol 57 no 26 July 20 1959 pp 9 10 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 via World Radio History Bliss 1991 pp 258 59 Doherty 2003 p 184 Hemmer Nicole 2016 Messengers of the Right Conservative Media and the Transformation of American Politics Philadelphia UNITED STATES University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 978 0 8122 9307 4 Dunning 1998 p 687 a b Harmon 2011 pp 18 25 MBS Promotion Centers On MGM Shows PDF Broadcasting Vol 41 no 24 December 10 1951 p 30 Archived PDF from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved December 27 2014 via World Radio History Dunning 1998 p 458 Dunning 1998 p 181 Harmon 2011 pp 149 168 Dunning 1998 p 276 Dunning 1998 pp 181 276 The Zero Hour 1974 Submitted for Your Perusal The Rod Serling Sound Collection Archived from the original on January 17 2010 Retrieved March 1 2010 Griffith Benjamin January 29 2002 Bob and Ray St James Encyclopedia of Pop Culture BNET CBS Interactive Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved March 1 2010 Garay 1992 p 50 Gorman Calhoun amp Rozin 1994 pp 91 105 2005 Ford C Frick Award Finalists National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum 2005 Archived from the original on May 9 2006 Retrieved February 13 2023 Mutual to Air All Notre Dame Tilts PDF Billboard Vol 66 no 32 August 7 1954 p 14 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Mutual goes Notre Dame PDF Broadcasting Vol 74 no 3 January 15 1968 p 42 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History Fitzpatrick Scott Stump Matt Brown Rich August 15 1988 Football rights pass 600 million PDF Broadcasting Vol 115 no 7 pp 44 45 47 48 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 14 2023 via World Radio History a b Irish Looks To Continue Ten Game Home Win Streak Notre Dame Fighting Irish The Official Athletic Site CBS Interactive September 13 1999 Archived from the original on May 3 2012 Retrieved March 1 2010 This source refers to Mutual Westwood One months after Mutual s dissolution had taken place Mutual Network to Be Sold Again Minnesota Mining Expected to Close Deal This Week New York Times April 18 1960 Cox 2002 p 128 Mutual Network Changes Owners 3M Company Sells System to Newly Formed Group New York Times July 10 1966 p 68 Archived from the original on March 15 2018 Retrieved February 12 2023 New Company Buys Mutual Broadcasting Park City Daily News July 6 1966 Archived from the original on February 3 2021 Retrieved October 28 2014 Bliss 1991 pp 62 63 New Blood in New Network PDF Broadcasting Vol 72 no 11 March 13 1967 pp 23 26 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 11 2023 via World Radio History United Network forced to quit PDF Broadcasting Vol 72 no 23 June 5 1967 pp 34 36 41 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 11 2023 via World Radio History Robert Pauley Heads Radio Network Washington DC Evening Star June 27 1968 p 2 Victor Diehm New Prexy of MBS As Radio Web Regroups Cuts Costs Variety October 22 1969 p 46 Week s Profile C Edward Little out to boost MBS s batting average PDF Broadcasting Vol 82 no 8 April 24 1972 p 63 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 via World Radio History a b MBS to add news services PDF Broadcasting Vol 82 no 8 February 21 1972 p 30 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 via World Radio History Broadcast Journalism Eight affiliate with black networks PDF Broadcasting Vol 82 no 17 April 24 1972 p 44 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 via World Radio History Thompson 1993 p 192 n 85 a b c d e Johannessen Kenneth I 2009 1972 1977 Coming to Life Mutual Radio Tribute Site Archived from the original on February 12 2023 Retrieved February 12 2023 Banel Feliks January 18 2023 Remembering the night Larry King broadcast live from the Space Needle KIRO FM MyNorthwest com Archived from the original on January 21 2023 Retrieved February 16 2023 Networks will go like hell election night PDF Broadcasting Vol 91 no 17 October 25 1976 pp 54 56 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 via World Radio History Big M in Big D Mutual sets up mininetwork to distribute Dallas Cowboys games other sports and news programing from Texas offices PDF Broadcasting Vol 94 no 6 February 8 1978 p 62 Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved February 15 2023 via World Radio History Sheridan acquires 49 share of MBN PDF Broadcasting Vol 90 no 12 March 22 1976 pp 85 88 Archived PDF from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved July 1 2020 via World Radio History In Brief PDF Broadcasting Vol 97 no 11 September 10 1979 pp 32 33 Archived PDF from the original on October 31 2020 Retrieved July 1 2020 via World Radio History Company Profile Leadership American Urban Radio Networks Archived from the original on September 14 2011 Retrieved March 1 2010 ADL Finds Wide Distribution Of Anti Semitic Radio Show St Louis Jewish Light St Louis Missouri July 17 1974 p 19 Archived from the original on April 14 2019 Retrieved February 12 2023 via Newspapers com McLean Robert A December 14 1974 Dial Log MBS to drop controversial radio show The Boston Globe p 19 Archived from the original on February 17 2023 Retrieved February 17 2023 via Newspapers com In Brief PDF Broadcasting Vol 92 no 12 March 21 1977 p 30 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved February 12 2023 via World Radio History In the Matter of the Petition of Mutual Broadcasting System Inc for Redetermination of a Deficiency New York State Tax Commission ruling PDF New York State Division of Tax Appeals August 27 1987 Archived from the original PDF on October 25 2007 Retrieved March 1 2010 Mutual Radio Applies to F C C to Be First All Satellite Network New York Times November 22 1977 U S Congress House Committee on Appropriations Departments of Labor Health and Human Services Education and Related Agencies Appropriations for 1986 p 198 a b Mutual gains FCC OK for satellites PDF Billboard Vol 91 no 44 November 3 1979 pp 3 28 Archived PDF from the original on March 7 2021 Retrieved February 12 2023 via World Radio History Mutual blows into the Windy City PDF Broadcasting Vol 94 no 16 April 17 1978 p 52 Archived PDF from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved August 10 2019 via World Radio History Mutual Purchases WCFL For 12 Million PDF Radio amp Records No 227 April 14 1978 p 1 Archived PDF from the original on January 31 2023 Retrieved August 10 2019 via World Radio History Cox 2002 p 84 Rose 1978 pp 47 48 Rose 1978 p 47 Rose 1978 p 40 Davies Tom January 4 1981 The Radio King From Midnight to Dawn Toledo Blade Toledo Ohio pp C1 C3 Archived from the original on February 3 2021 Retrieved November 28 2014 a b c Goldman Kevin May 2 1982 Radio 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Data New York et al McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 139643 8 Archived from the original on March 9 2002 Retrieved February 10 2023 External links EditHow Far Should the Government Control Radio text of G I Roundtable pamphlet with details on Mutual in first section Who Is It That Fills The Air With Radio Waves ca 1945 part of American Historical Association website Reporters Roundup Transcript radio broadcast transcript of group interview with guest U S Senator Everett M Dirksen on weekly Mutual news program September 16 1957 part of Everett Dirksen Center website Truman Library Charter Heslep Papers summary introduction to and listing of archive holdings of Mutual broadcaster s papers note that the Collection Description text incorrectly states that Chicago station WLS was an original member of Mutual while it may have been involved in the predecessor Quality Network it was not part of Mutual part of Truman Presidential Museum and Library websiteListening Edit Gabriel Heatter on the Doolittle Raid audio extract from news report May 10 1942 part of Authentic History Center website Mutual Blackout on the West Coast audio extract from news report December 8 1941 part of Authentic History Center website Spotlight on Golden Age Networks MBS links to audio samples of classic Mutual shows note that the Lone Ranger sample comes from 1948 after the show had left Mutual part of Digital Deli Online WOR Interruption of Giants Dodgers Football Game audio clip of news flash December 7 1941 part of Authentic History Center website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mutual Broadcasting System amp oldid 1150211687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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