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Fireside chats

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FDR shortly after giving one of his famous fireside chats
The fireside chats were a series of thirty evening radio addresses given by United States PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt between 1933 and 1944.

Contents

Origin of radio address

According to Pulitzer Prize[1] winning historian and Roosevelt biographer James MacGregor Burns, Roosevelt first used what would become known as "fireside chats" in 1929 as Governor of New York.[2] Roosevelt faced a conservative Republican legislature, so during each legislative session, he would occasionally address the citizens of New York directly.[3] In a New York History Quaterly article on the fireside chats' origin, Geoffrey Storm notes that while a WGY radio "address of April 3, 1929 was FDR's third gubernatorial radio address, historian Frank Freidel asserts that this was the first fireside chat."[3] In these speeches, Roosevelt appealed to radio listeners for help getting his agenda passed.[2] Letters would pour in following each of these "chats," which helped pressure legislators to pass measures Roosevelt had proposed.[4] He began making the informal addresses as president on March 12, 1933, during the Great Depression.[5] According to Russell D. Buhite and David W. Levy, in their introduction to FDR's Fireside Chats, "The term 'Fireside Chat' was not coined by Roosevelt, but by Harry C. Butcher of CBS, who used the two words in a network press release before the speech of May 7, 1933. The term was quickly adopted by press and public, and the president himself later used it."[6]

Chronological list of Presidential fireside chats

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Roosevelt's first Fireside Chat on the Banking Crisis (March 12, 1933)

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  1. On the Bank Crisis - Sunday, March 12, 1933
  2. Outlining the New Deal Program - Sunday, May 7, 1933
  3. On the Purposes and Foundations of the Recovery Program - Monday, July 24, 1933
  4. On the Currency Situation - Sunday, October 22, 1933
  5. Review of the Achievements of the Seventy-third Congress - Thursday, June 28, 1934
  6. On Moving Forward to Greater Freedom and Greater Security - Sunday, September 30, 1934
  7. On the Works Relief Program - Sunday, April 28, 1935
  8. On Drought Conditions - Sunday, September 6, 1936
  9. On the Reorganization of the Judiciary - Tuesday, March 9, 1937
  10. On Legislation to be Recommended to the Extraordinary Session of the Congress - Tuesday, October 12, 1937
  11. On the Unemployment Census - Sunday, November 14, 1937
  12. On Economic Conditions - Thursday, April 14, 1938
  13. On Party - Friday, June 24, 1938
  14. On the European War - Sunday, September 3, 1939
  15. On National Defense - Sunday, May 26, 1940
  16. On National Security - Sunday, December 29, 1940
  17. Announcing Unlimited National Emergency - Tuesday, May 27, 1941 (the longest fireside chat)
  18. On Maintaining Freedom of the Seas - Thursday, September 11, 1941
  19. On the Declaration of War with Japan - Tuesday, December 9, 1941
  20. On Progress of the War - Monday, February 23, 1942
  21. On Our National Economic Policy - Tuesday, April 28, 1942
  22. On Inflation and Progress of the War - Monday, September 7, 1942
  23. Report on the Home Front - Monday, October 12, 1942
  24. On the Coal Crisis - Sunday, May 2, 1943
  25. On Progress of War and Plans for Peace - Wednesday, July 28, 1943
  26. Opening Third War Loan Drive - Wednesday, September 8, 1943
  27. On Tehran and Cairo Conferences - Friday, December 24, 1943
  28. State of the Union Message to Congress - Tuesday, January 11, 1944
  29. On the Fall of Rome - Monday, June 5, 1944
  30. Opening Fifth War Loan Drive - Monday, June 12, 1944

Rhetorical Manner

Sometimes beginning his talks with "Good evening, friends." Roosevelt urged listeners to have faith in the banks and to support his New Deal measures. The "fireside chats" were considered enormously successful and attracted more listeners than the most popular radio shows during the "Golden Age of Radio." Roosevelt continued his broadcasts into the 1940s, as Americans turned their attention to World War II.[7] Roosevelt's first fireside chat was March 12, 1933, which marked the beginning of a series of 30 radio broadcasts to the American people reassuring them the nation was going to recover and shared his hopes and plans for the country. The chats ranged from fifteen to forty-five minutes and eighty percent of the words used were in the one thousand most commonly used words in the English dictionary.[4]

Weekly address

Every US President since Roosevelt has delivered periodic addresses to the American people, first on radio and later adding television and the internet. These did not become regularly scheduled events until 1982 when President Ronald Reagan started the practice of delivering a weekly Saturday radio broadcast[8] (Although sometimes thought of as weekly events, Roosevelt delivered 30 addresses[4] during the course of a presidency that lasted for 4422 days[9] or 631 weeks. An average of one address every twenty weeks.) Reagan's successors continued his practice of making weekly addresses. When President Barack Obama took office he began providing his address in both audio and video forms, both of which are available online via whitehouse.gov and YouTube.[10] It has long become customary for the President's Weekly Radio Address to be followed an hour later (on the radio) by a 'response' (not always a topical response) by a member of the opposing political party. The respondent from the opposing party changes weekly, while the President is the same for the entirety of their term. Occasionally the Vice President may deliver the address in the absence of the President.[11]

References

  1. ^"History". The Pulitzer Prizes. New York: Columbia University. Retrieved 2 January 2013. "1971 Roosevelt: The Soldier Of Freedom by James MacGregor Burns (The sequel toThe Lion and the Foxwhich discusses the devlopment of the fireside chats)"
  2. ^ ab Burns, James MacGregor (1996). Roosevelt : the lion and the fox. New York, NY: Smithmark. pp. 118. ISBN 978-0831756116.
  3. ^ ab Storm, Geoffrey (Spring 2007). "FDR and WGY: The Origins of the Fireside Chats". New York History: Quarterly Journal of the New York State Historical Association (New York State Historical Association) 88 (2): 183-85. ISSN 0146-437x. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  4. ^ abc Mankowski, Diana, and Raissa Jose (12 March 2003). "The 70th Anniversary of FDR's Fireside Chats". museum.tv. Chicago: The Museum of Broadcast Communications. Retrieved 2 January 2013.
  5. ^""Fireside Chat Microphone," 1930s". National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 2008-07-07.
  6. ^ Buhite, Russell D, and David W Levy (1992). "Introduction". In Russell D Buhite and David W Levy, eds.. FDR's fireside chats (1. ed. ed.). Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. xv. ISBN 9780806123707.
  7. ^ Freidel, Frank (1990). Franklin D. Roosevelt : a rendezvous with destiny (1st pbk. ed. ed.). Boston: Little, Brown. pp. 322, 360, 393, 409, 433, 438, 441, 503, 598. ISBN 978-0316292610.
  8. ^"Reagan signs off with 331st weekly radio address". Deseret News. Associated Press: p. A3. 1989-01-15. Retrieved 2013-01-02.
  9. ^ Skeens, Barbara Seuling ; illustrated by Matthew (2008). One president was born on Independence Day : and other freaky facts about the 26th through 43rd presidents. Minneapolis: Picture Window Books. pp. 14. ISBN 9781404841185. Retrieved 2 January 2013. "Roosevelt ran for and was elected to four presidential terms. He was president for 4,422 days. (4422 days divided by 7 days in a week results in 631.7)"
  10. ^President Obama's Weekly Video Address from the White House website
  11. ^Weekly Address: Tax Cuts & Unemployment Insurance - YouTube

External links

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My Valentine’s Date with Obama: Google Hosts Fireside Chat

By on Feb 12, 2013 in Featured, Politics

imagesOn Tuesday President Obama will deliver his State of the Union address. On the following Thursday the President will sit down with Americans from across the country in an exclusive Google+ Hangout dubbed the Fireside Chat. During this time Mr.Obama promises to field questions from regular Americans regarding the issues that concern them the most. I am beyond thrilled and honored to tell you, dear reader that I will be one of those Americans invited to question the President. The organizers at Google have made a concerted effort to find people from all across the political spectrum. While certainly the White House will have final approval of all questions, as one Google executive told me, “We’re not looking for ‘rah rah Mr.President’ questions; we’re looking for folks who will offer thoughtful, challenging but respectful questions that truly offer the President the chance to answer questions he wouldn’t necessarily hear from the media”. To that end, this conservative blogger and housewife will be asking at least one of those questions on Thursday.
I’ve had a lot of suggestions on what exactly I should ask the President. Some serious, some not-so-serious (no, I’m not going to ask him where he gets his jeans). The bad news is I’ve already submitted my questions for approval and I wouldn’t use my one chance to talk to the leader of the free world to be a smartass. Some of you would, but not me. The good news is that you can pose your own questions and you may see the President answer them. All you need to do is head to YouTube.com/whitehouse and ask a question. Rifle through the questions already there (sorry, I didn’t mean to use a GUN reference; I’m a part of the problem!!!) and vote them up or down. The questions that get voted to the top will be given to Mr.Obama. So far I see a lot of questions about internet access and legalizing marijuana. We can probably do better than that! Go ahead to the site and flood it with common sense and good votes. This is our chance to ask the questions the media won’t. And don’t forget to tune in to Google+ this Thursday at 4:50pm ET to see me! Well, me and that other dude who runs the country…but mostly, me! See you there!
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21st-century fireside chat: Did Obama connect?

Listeners like president's words, but hope those will translate into action

Below:


updated 2/25/2009 12:35:20 AM ET
ANALYSIS
At a harrowing national moment, Franklin D. Roosevelt commandeered the young airwaves for a "fireside chat" with the American people — a candid talk about big troubles and how to fix them. He was confident and strong, a father figure to a nation that was losing its way.
"My friends," said Roosevelt, freshly inaugurated in 1933, "I want to talk for a few minutes with the people of the United States about banking."
On Tuesday night, three quarters of a century later, Barack Obama stepped up to a less intimate but equally high-stakes version of the national fireplace to do the same thing: talk a good game, draw us a map back toward prosperity and "speak frankly and directly to the men and women who sent us here."
Many chief executives have spoken directly with the American people since FDR's era, and an address to Congress is hardly an intimate radio talk. No president, however, has faced a context so similar. Never have the words felt so aimed at soothing Americans who are scared, broke, rousted from their homes, uncertain about the future of their lives and nation.
"He speaks to people very well," said Fred Elliott, 44, owner of a Coldwell Banker realty office in Lehigh Acres, Fla.
'A kind of self-confidence'
Facing lawmakers and Americans by the millions, Obama traded doomsaying for optimism and invoked an American chestnut — the tenacity of hope. "We will rebuild, we will recover. And the United States of America will emerge stronger than before," he said.
But do we believe him? As in Roosevelt's time, comforter-in-chief is only one hat of many. On Tuesday, though, it seemed to fit.
"He exudes a kind of self-confidence that I don't think we've had for a long time. He kind of carries you along with it," said Terry Swihart of Wakarusa, Ind., who has been laid off twice in the past year — once from a job she held for 28 years. Her husband also lost his job.
Despite her approval, Swihart added this caveat: "I hope it's not just rhetoric."
That is always the fear, particularly for a president whose eloquence was targeted in the campaign as evidence of his disingenuousness. The words Obama chose — empathizing with Americans while also addressing Congress — were the language of hope but also of tough love.
Video: Obama to nation: ‘We will recover’ "He seemed a little more upbeat, instead of just crisis, crisis, crisis," said Melissa Must, who runs a coffee shop in downtown Cincinnati. She stayed up to watch Obama's speech even though she rises before 5 a.m. to get to work.
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"You have to take responsibility for yourself," Must said. And Americans, the president insisted, were ready. He addressed a nation that he insisted does not shy away from challenges — it's in our spirit — and demanded action not only from government but from the people.
No instant gratification
What's more, he acknowledged that progress will not be immediate — bad news for an instant-gratification culture but something that Jaime Silahua, watching the speech in the San Francisco suburb of Antioch, understood well.
"He inherited a country with grave problems," Silahua said. "The change is going to take some time. He'll start it, and probably the next president will finish it."
Silahua is on the front lines of the tanking economy. Antioch has been hit hard by foreclosures, and housing values have dropped by 50 percent in many neighborhoods. Silahua's house, which he bought for $281,000 seven years ago, is now valued, he believes, at about $89,000. He is fighting a bank eviction.
So Obama's plan is, for him, a bit more abstract: "His initiatives are good — they just probably won't help me at this point."
That is often the problem when grand national themes collide with the building blocks of people's lives and bank accounts. Obama invoked the vaunted American optimism and said that yes, another American century was possible. But it can be a hard sell for folks who lie awake at 2 a.m. with the stomach-churning realization that the creditors will be calling at dawn.
"People are really worried about a long-term shift — is the American Dream over?" said Evan Cornog, a Columbia University historian who studies how presidents craft their own narratives.
Looking for more than words
Such fears are personified in Americans like Robert Lombardi, 64, who last month closed his pet store in Pennsylvania's Pocono Mountains, where foreclosures are at record levels and no one is buying pets. "A little soothing," Lombardi said of Obama's speech. But ...
"I love this country, and I hate to see it going where it's going," he said. "It's going down the toilet. But it's a long fight. These are just words, and now we're going to see what the actions are."
When FDR started his fireside chats in the depths of the Depression, hope was a scarce commodity — even more scarce than it is today. The new president, eight years before World War II began, reassured Americans with a voice that was "authoritative but not autocratic, persuasive but not coercive," FDR biographer Jonathan Alter wrote.
That was, of course, long before Vietnam and Watergate and the deep distrust in government that they begat. Jody Baugh, an unemployed Indiana welder, offers the modern equivalent of the warm reception that many Americans gave FDR's chats. Baugh was hungry for hope and, he said, Obama delivered.
"He didn't come across as a used-car salesman," Baugh said. "He came across as someone who legitimately cared about people like me." From Baugh, Obama received high marks on investing in the middle class and holding bankers accountable for their incompetence.
"This is the first time I ever watched the whole speech of any president," Baugh said. "I didn't get up at all. It gave me more confidence. I thought, `At least I've got somebody who is more on my side than before.'"
Demanding that the people act
And though one-third of the nation's history separates them, Obama and Roosevelt shared one thing above all else as they addressed Americans about the economy at the beginning of their presidencies. Each demanded action — not only from government but from we, the people.
Said Roosevelt in 1933: "It is your problem no less than it is mine."
Said Obama in 2009: "The time to take charge of our future is here."
That distinctly American message — that it's up to us, if we can live up to our destiny — sat well with Bill Bibbes, a 68-year-old retiree in Jackson, Miss. Bibbes lost much of his savings to the Enron collapse, then watched lenders foreclose on his son-in-law's house and saw his wife's 401K dwindle as Wall Street tanked.
He thought Obama was being too ambitious with the economic recovery plan until he watched the president address the nation.
"My hope for the country is that we can come together," Bibbes said. "That's what we need more than anything. Everybody has to participate."
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
  • © 2013 NBCNews.com

The Vincent Voice Library  Collection

Results

1-13 of 13 records
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: January 11, 1944
Summary: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivers his State of the Union address during a fireside chat. He hopes to increase the standard of living, and w...[more]
View Record Details (DB16381)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: June 5, 1944
Summary: President Franklin Roosevelt's fireside chat on the fall of Rome to Allied troops and the recovery measures undertaken for the people of Italy.
View Record Details (DB16391)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: June 12, 1944
Summary: The last fireside chat by President Roosevelt, intended to promote the opening of the Fifth War Loan Drive.
View Record Details (DB16402)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: July 28, 1943
Summary: President Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivers a fireside chat detailing the Allied victories in WWII, including the capture of Sicily, efforts on the h...[more]
View Record Details (DB16371)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Date: September 8, 1943
Summary: Fireside Chat by President Roosevelt announcing the Armistice with Italy and the opening of the Third War Loan Drive.
View Record Details (DB16379)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano).
Date: December 8, 1941
Summary: Pearl Harbor Day fireside chat: message to the American people on the implications and plans for the war by F.D. Roosevelt.
View Record Details (DB5975)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano).
Date: May 27, 1941
Summary: Franklin Roosevelt's fireside chat defining position of U.S. on national defense and alliances with Pan American republics.
View Record Details (DB5976)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: December 29, 1940
Summary: Franklin Roosevelts fireside chat on national defense program giving reasons for American aid to Britain.
View Record Details (DB5972)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: May 26, 1940
Summary: Franklin Roosevelts fireside talk discussing necessity of speed-up in national defense and reviewing accomplishments of military and economic prepared...[more]
View Record Details (DB5973)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano).
Date: 1940
Summary: Fireside Chat. NBC announcers set the stage for the only FDR fireside chat ever delivered before a live audience. FDR asks for broader powers to prote...[more]
View Record Details (DB5974)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
Date: September 3, 1939
Summary: The same day France and England declare war on Germany, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt addresses the nation with a fireside chat emphasizing the ...[more]
View Record Details (DB16335)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: March 9, 1937
Summary: Fireside chat on the reorganization of the the judicial branch of the United States government.
View Record Details (DB5970)
Main Speaker: Roosevelt, Franklin D. (Franklin Delano)
Date: March 9, 1937
Summary: Fireside chat about the changes needed in the U.S. Supreme Court.
View Record Details (DB5971)

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"I never saw him - but I knew him. Can you have forgotten how, with his voice, he came into our house, the President of these United States, calling us friends..." - Carl Carmer, April 14, 1945.In the midst of the Great Depression, America in 1933 was suffering. One-third of its work force was unemployed, every bank had been closed for eight days, and the public was barely surviving through a combination of barter and credit.On Sunday evening, March 12, a troubled nation sat down by its radio sets to listen to their president. With his calm and reassuring voice, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt explained how the nation was going to recover from the current banking crisis.
That evening marked the beginning of the historic Fireside Chats, thirty-one radio addresses that covered issues like the renewed Depression and our role in World War II. In his Fireside Chats, Roosevelt shared his hopes and plans for the nation and invited the American people to "tell me your troubles."
Click here to listen to the first Fireside Chat.
All 31 Fireside Chats are available in the Archives.
Roosevelt took special care in preparing each aspect of his Fireside Chats and made his addresses accessible and understandable to ordinary Americans. In order to attract a peak national audience, the Chats were broadcast on all national networks around 10:00 p.m. Eastern time -- early enough that Easterners were still awake but late enough that even people on the West Coast would be home from work.
The Chats were relatively brief, ranging in length from fifteen to forty-five minutes. In addition, FDR and his speechwriters always used basic language when preparing the Fireside Chats. Eighty percent of the words FDR chose were among the 1000 most commonly used words in the English vocabulary.
He also relied on stories, anecdotes, and analogies to explain the complex issues facing the country. For example, he used a baseball analogy to describe the first two months of the New Deal: “I have no expectations of making a hit every time I come to bat. What I seek is the highest possible batting average, not only for myself, but for the team.”
The radio addresses strove to turn listeners into a unified nation of active citizens. FDR was confident in the programs his government put forth, but he reminded the American people that only they could ultimately bring about the desired results.
He believed the American citizens -- individually and together -- could bring about change. By referring to his audience in terms of “you” and “we,” FDR constructed a sense of national identity, encouraged individual participation, and forged an intimate relationship between the president and the public.
The success of the Fireside Chats is evidenced by the millions of letters that flooded the White House. Americans from all walks of life wrote FDR, and many of these letters were written within days, even hours, of hearing their beloved president over the radio. In these letters, people often wrote about how they felt during these radio addresses, as if FDR entered their homes and spoke to each of them.
They also expressed their praise, appreciation, and confidence in their leader and friend. People also wrote of listening to the speeches with a group of friends or relatives, illustrating their collective appeal. Through these letters, Roosevelt became better acquainted with the views of his public and became even more aware of the power of radio.
With almost 90% of all households owning radios at the end of his presidency, it made sense that Roosevelt would choose radio addresses as his means of connecting with the public. And FDR did connect with the public in a way no other president had before.
Not only did his Fireside Chats speak to the people on a personal level and encourage their individual participation, but they also made listeners feel part of a larger whole; a united nation that would overcome the tough times it faced.
A conversation between the people and their president, the Fireside Chats provide a portrait of America during one of its most difficult times and how its leader reminded us of our dreams, our hopes, and the promise of democracy.
- By Diana Mankowski & Raissa Jose, The Museum of Broadcast Communications
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Your Weekly Address

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New York History:

Quarterly Journal of the New York State Historical Association, Volume 88
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New York State Historical Association, 2007

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TitleNew York History: Quarterly Journal of the New York State Historical Association, Volume 88
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Public event
State of the Union: Fireside Hangout with President Obama
Tomorrow, February 14, 4:50 PM
Are you going?
Check my calendar
Created by The White House
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On Thursday, February 14th, President Obama will join the latest in a series of "Fireside Hangouts" – a 21st century take on FDR’s famous radio addresses – to talk about his State of the Union Address.During the +Google+ hangout, the President will answer questions from Americans across the country about the issues and policies laid out in the speech.How you can join:
Right now, you can submit a question for the President and vote on your favorites on the White House +YouTube Channel: http://at.wh.gov/hC22NOn Tuesday, February 12th at 9:00 p.m. ET, watch President Obama's State of the Union Address on the +The White House Google+ page and at http://youtube.com/whitehouseThen, be sure to watch the hangout live on Thursday, February 14th at 4:50 p.m. ET on the +The White House Google+ page and at http://youtube.com/whitehouseLearn more about the State of the Union Address and how you can get involved at http://wh.gov/SOTU#firesidehangout  #sotu

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4 comments

Robert Nuifora6:06 PM

when it comes to social security, why not raise the limit of payroll to $150,000 from $100,000? it seems more in line with the money working people make today!
Sally James6:07 PM

at least he does not have an assault weapon.
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Tatiana Long6:02 PM
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cool
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...and I am Sid Harth@elcidharth.comavatar92

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