Radio noise caused by interference was part of the experience of tuning into near and distant stations by seasoned radio hobbyists in the 1920s and early 1930s. Yet as radio became a mass medium and listeners learned how to tune in stations, the static produced by other stations on similar frequencies became a nuisance, and public noise complaints rose. In Mexico City, government authorities addressed the problem of radio interference by forcing a handful of radio stations to move from the downtown district beyond the city limits. The higher the transmitter power of the station, the farther away from the city center they were required to move. This article explains the context for this 1930s' directive and traces the ways in which radio noise shifted from being part of an experience to a reason to file a complaint before the authorities. Finally, it illustrates how stations continued to use antennas and radio towers in their iconography years after they moved their infrastructure outside of the city center.
Not All Noise Is an Interruption: Radio Interference in Mexico City, 1920s–1930s Available to Purchase
Sonia Robles is a social and cultural historian of Latin America and Latinx communities. She studies media and communications technologies in Mexico, the US–Mexico border, and among other Spanish-speaking communities in the United States. Her first book, Mexican Waves: Radio Broadcasting Along Mexico’s Northern Border, 1930–1950 (University of Arizona Press, 2019), is a transnational study of Golden Age radio in northern Mexico. An associate professor in the History Department at the University of Delaware, she is currently researching the adoption and use of communication technologies by governments in Latin America.
Sonia Robles; Not All Noise Is an Interruption: Radio Interference in Mexico City, 1920s–1930s. Resonance 1 June 2025; 6 (2): 174–186. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/res.2025.6.2.174
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