'War of the Worlds' Radio Broadcast Question

Did the people of 1938 listen to the radio in cars? It seems to me that car radios require solid-state electronics to handle the vibrations. Were tube radios really installed in cars?

Yes. There were car radios with tubes, well before solid state electronics, vibrations or no.

Really? You seriously think that newspapers only carried the story because radio was their competition?

The problem is that radio doesn’t “fossilize” well – recording is less likely than with newspapers. Of course, the story was recorded in magazines as well, but I suppose you’d say they were in competition with radio, as well.

Great post, Cal

A local radio station broadcasts the original recording every year at this time, and I’ve heard it. There’s no way all the events in the broadcast could have happened in real time.

Where’s the break (commercial or otherwise)?

Right after the Martian invasion of New York city. It’s about 3/4 of the way down this webpage (bolding mine):

https://www.sacred-texts.com/ufo/mars/wow.htm

There’s an episode of The Untouchables (1959) where they’re on a boring stakeout and Eliot Ness (Robert Stack) says “Just wait: Someday they’re going to put radios in cars…”

Don’t remember what year that episode was set, but a member of the Civilian Conservation Corps was killed by the FBI during the botched raid to capture John Dillinger in Little Bohemia, WI, in April 1934. He and two colleagues didn’t hear the Feds’ order to halt because the radio in their car was too loud.

I heard it broadcast on Halloween when I was living in Milwaukee in 1988, the fiftieth anniversary of the “panic.”

I finally saw that in the past couple of years; it’s on You Tube. It’s not in real time either, and used a fictional TV network with no-name actors and “reporters.”

A new version of the show was broadcast in Buffalo in 1968.

I’ve read dozens of contemporary stories dealing with the show and its aftermath. Many of them are vague about sourcing and contain sweeping generalizations. Some have greater detail. I haven’t read the recent debunking book so I don’t know how convincing it is.

The main reason I find it hard to believe no panic existed at all is that there are equally credible reports after many of the reairings. The radio station in Quito had its building burned down by people angry about being hoaxed. Real emotions are in play and far too many people don’t parse or evaluate the information they are given. If they don’t expect a hoax it’s trivially easy to fool them. Look at the zillions of people who freak out over satirical or fake online stories. Even the ludicrous ones get taken for real. A deadpan intention to slide the reality button will get believers. I don’t know how many believed Welles. I’m positive the number is not zero or minuscule.

I was really enjoying the music of Ramón Raquello, playing in the Meridian Room of the Park Plaza Hotel, before the stupid invasion began.

Here’s a general discussion of West Coast repeats in the golden age of radio. Until the late 40s, all networks did live rebroadcasts about two hours later for the West Coast audience. That was mainly because transcription discs (the pre-tape way of recording) were noisy and fragile. Sometimes West Coast affiliates aired just the late broadcast, but on weekends a lot of them aired both the early and late broadcast.

Interesting NPR article about the supposed panic, and the reasons why it wasn’t as big as some think.

Too late to edit: And here is a Slate article about the actual “panic” and the roll newspapers played.

Actually the answer is “there probably was no rebroadcast planned”. I looked up on newspapers.com for the Portland, OR and San Francisco radio listings for Oct. 30 1938, and the only listing for Mercury Theater was at 5pm local time–live from the east coast. Why didn’t they bother redoing it? Just a guess, but the program was so low rated it didn’t have a sponsor. With no advertiser to pay for it, CBS may just have thought it wasn’t worth the effort.