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The arc of news coverage carried by broadcast media over the last century has seen news reporting evolve from short segments offered a few times per day, to longer segments presented multiple times per day, to several different types of news programs aired throughout the day, to the rise of 24/7 radio and cable TV news outlets. One aspect of broadcast news coverage that has remained constant across that timespan is finding enough of it to fill the requisite airtime. It isn't just a modern problem, as exemplified by this meme holding that the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) could find no news at all for its evening report of April 18, 1930: The BBC itself vets this claim as true, stating that: As always, the more interesting element of this item is to understand the context behind it. Back in the 1930s, both broadcast radio and the BBC were in still their infancy, having begun only in the previous few years. As the BBC's program index from April 18, 1930, shows, programming in that era was quite limited and sparse. A mere 15 minutes was devoted to reporting the news of the day back then. That was because, in large part, the ability of radio stations to cover news outside of their local areas was quite limited, leaving them heavily dependent upon wire services and government announcements for news content. On a day when no government announcements were forthcoming and little of interest was moving across the news service wires, radio programmers might very well have felt that there was no news worth relaying to their audience.
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