As Americans moved from farms and small towns to large cities,
they tended to lose a hallmark of their earlier life: comparatively
direct participation in the discourse of pragmatic affairs. The
ubiquitous radio, which became a primary medium of communication
during the Great Depression, tended to make Americans listeners
more than speakers about important issues. Nevertheless, as the
economic catastrophe of the time evoked desires in people to
express their hopes and fears for the future, Americans
nevertheless tended to be reticent. They instead bestowed
leadership on speakers who articulated those hopes and fears on
their behalf--particularly orators who effectively utilized radio.
Possessed with the ability to deliver speeches exceptionally well
and to phrase ideas so eloquently as to be admired by listeners,
Father Charles E. Coughlin emerged as that surrogate spokesperson
for many Americans. Moreover, because the medium of radio endowed
his discourse with a credibility enhanced by his own ethos, he
emerged as a persuader who fulfilled the mass media role known as
opinion leadership. He also capitalized on the inherent advantages
of orality as a significant factor that influenced how people
responded to the myriad messages of the vast communication mosaic
in which Americans lived at the onset of the electronic age. Father
Coughlin exemplifies that speaker who achieves the role of an
opinion leader in contemporary society.
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