Updated On: 11 July, 2021 06:54 AM IST | Mumbai | Meher Marfatia
Almost a century ago, India’s first broadcast went out from Bombay. What did the airwaves transmit in the early years?

Kalbadevi friends, optometrist Hemant Samani. Pics/Suresh Karkera
Do I speak into this thing?” Gandhiji enquired, staring at the microphone. There he was, in 1931 England, attempting a radio broadcast for America. Faced with the newish contraption, he floundered, wondering how it received and relayed his speech to crowds.
Techno-sceptic then, the Father of the Nation soon realised broadcast was a sharp weapon to spread the battle cry. Unlike the press, the illiterate masses accessed radio widely. Consummate communicator that he was, Gandhi grew aware it was essential for him to become increasingly media savvy.