When Tipper Gore and the PMRC called rock and rap stars to testify in front of Congress about explicit lyrics, did this affect college radio? How could it not? Prof. Kate Jewell is examining the relationship between college stations and the culture wars as part of a new book project. Jewell is Associate Professor of […]


The post Podcast #164 – College Radio and the Culture Wars appeared first on Radio Survivor.





When Tipper Gore and the PMRC called rock and rap stars to testify in front of Congress about explicit lyrics, did this affect college radio? How could it not? Prof. Kate Jewell is examining the relationship between college stations and the culture wars as part of a new book project.


Jewell is Associate Professor of History at Fitchburg State University and a Fellow at the University Connecticut Humanities Institute. She joins the show to talk about how college broadcasts triggered conservative community reaction and outrage, and how stations internalized the cultural controversies that dominated the zeitgeist from the 1960s through the turn of the century.

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Show Notes:

KatherineJewell.com
Why musical innovation will continue, even as local radio disappears” by Kate Jewell, in Washington Post
Wikipedia: The Parents’ Music Resource Center (PMRC)
Rolling Stone: PMRC’s ‘Filthy 15’: Where Are They Now?
Radio by and for the Public: The Death and Resurrection of Low Power Radio,” by Paul Riismandel in The Radio Reader

The post Podcast #164 – College Radio and the Culture Wars appeared first on Radio Survivor.