Historically speaking, Marconi started radio broadcasting in 1896 with the invention of first wireless telegraph link. It took ten years since then for the first demonstration of radio broadcasting to establish. But it was hard to distinguish words from music.
Another successful demonstration took place
from the Eiffel Tower in
Paris in 1908.
A New York Station transmitted the first radio news bulletin
in 1916 on the occasion of the election of US President.
By
1927, broadcasting
services were started as a major medium of information.
Radio broadcasting in India began as a private venture in 1923 and
1924, when three radio clubs were established in Bombay, Calcutta and
Madras (now Chennai).
The Radio Club broadcast the first radio
programme in India in June 1923.
The daily broadcasts of 2 to 3 hours consisted mainly of music and talks. These
stations had to close down in 1927 for lack of sufficient financial support.
In India in July 1927 on an experimental
basis at Bombay and a month later at Calcutta under an agreement between the Government of India and a
private company called the Indian Broadcasting Company Ltd.
Faced with a widespread public outcry against
the closure of the IBC, the Government acquired its assets and constituted the Indian Broadcasting Service
under the Department of Labour and Industries. Since then, broadcasting
in India has remained under Government control.
In 1936, a radio station was commissioned in
Delhi. In the same year,
the Indian Broadcasting Service was renamed All India Radio (AIR) and
a new signature tune was added. The Delhi station became the center of
broadcasting at the national level.
When India became Independent, the AIR network had only six
stations at Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta, Madras, Lucknow and Tiruchirapalli
Radio broadcasting assumed considerable
importance with the outbreak
of World War II. By 1939, During this period, news and political commentaries were
introduced and special broadcasts were made for the people on the strategic
north eastern and north western borders.
After independence, the broadcast scenario has
dramatically changed with
198 broadcasting centers, including 74 local radio stations, covering more than
97.3 per cent of the country‘s population. Presently, it broadcasts
programmes in a number of languages throughout the day.
Mostly the broadcasting centers are
full-fledged stations with a network of medium wave, short wave and FM transmission.
Besides, the external services Division of AIR are a link with different
regions of world through its programmes in as many as 24 languages for about 72 hours a day.
PRESENT SCENARIO OF RADIO AND
TELEVISION:
Presently, AIR is utilizing satellite
services for transmission of its programmes throughout the country with a radio
networking.
With the introduction of Radio Paging
Service, FM transmitter has become the landmark of AIR.
Today, All India Radio counts among the few
largest broadcasting networks in the world to serve the mass communication
needs of the pluralistic population of India.
3- TIER
BROADCASTING: All India
Radio has evolved a three-tier system of broadcasting, namely, national regional and local.
It caters to the information, education and entertainment needs of the people
through its various stations spread over the length and breadth of the country.
They provide news, music, talks and other programmes in 24 languages and 146 dialects
to almost the entire population of the country.
NEW SERVICES: “This is all India Radio. The News, read
by.........." These words ring all over the country every hour, day and
night, broadcasting news bulletins in Hindi, English and 17 regional languages.
The bulk
of AIR news comes from its own correspondents spread all over the country It
has 90 regulan correspondents in India and has seven special
correspondents/reporters and two hundred and forty six part-time correspondents
stationed in different countries.
REACH OF RADIO:
All India
Radio and Doordarshan are now part of the Praser Bharati the autonomous
broadcasting corporation of India through an Act of Parliament in 1990.
The Prasar Bharati Board took charge of the administration of All India Radio and Doordarshan with effect from 23rd November 1997.
All
India Radio presently has more than 200 Radio Stations including 183
full-fledged stations and nine relay centers and three exclusive Vivldh
Bharati Commercial Centers.
In all AIR has 310 transmitters and provides
radio coverage to a population of 97.3 per cent spread over 90 per cent area of
the country.
All India Radio is broadcasting in 25
languages. Of these 16 are foreign and 9 are Indian languages.
The
National Channel of All India Radio came on air on 18th May 1998. This Channel works as a night
service from 6.50 pm to
6.10 a.m everyday, covering 64% area and almost 76% population.
FUTURE OF RADIO
In a developing country like ours, a special
function of broadcasting should be
·
the coverage of
development its significance, achievements and problems.
·
People‘s
participation in development activities should be highlighted as also
significant work being done by voluntary agencies.
·
The style and
methods of news reporting should reinforce the fundamental principles on which
national policies are based.
The primary purpose of the current affairs programmes
should be to enlighten the
people on various aspects of political, economic, social and cultural
developments.
FM and
Privatization of Radio:
Two very important developments have taken
place in the field of radio broadcasting in India.
With the advent of television the importance
of radio had gradually diminished.
But it seems that radio is reappearing once
again in the form of FM
transmission.
The FM transmission stations are working as local stations catering to
the local needs of the listeners:
The partial privatization of FM broadcasting has also made the
radio an important medium of mass communication.
The programmes broadcast on FM are becoming
very popular with the urban
youth as the programmes cater specifically to them.
Moreover, FM broadcasts are also becoming
popular in cars and other
vehicles.
They provide necessary information regarding
the roadblocks, traffic,
and weather etc. to the motorists.
FM broadcasting has gained a lot of
popularity in last few years.
Prof. Prem raj Pushpakaran writes -- 2023 marks the 100 years of India's radio broadcast and let us celebrate the occasion!!!
ReplyDeletehttps://worldarchitecture.org/profiles/gfhvm/prof-prem-raj-pushpakaran-profile-page.html