Radio Diaries   /     A Voicemail Valentine

Summary

Nowadays we’re very accustomed to recording and hearing the sound of our own voices. But in the 1930s many people were doing it for the first time. And a surprising trend began. People started sending their voices to each other, through the postal service. It was literally: voice-mail. We recently combed through a large collection of early voicemail at the Phono Post Archive, and we discovered that many of these audio letters are about the same thing: Love. *** This episode is supported by Robinhood, an investing app that lets you buy and sell stocks, ETFs, options, and cryptos, all commission-free. Sign up and get a free stock at diaries.robinhood.com.

Subtitle
Audio love letters from 1930s and 1940s.
Duration
14:04
Publishing date
2019-02-11 18:15
Link
https://beta.prx.org/stories/267086
Contributors
  Radio Diaries
author  
Enclosures
https://dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/media.blubrry.com/radiodiaries/dovetail.prxu.org/radiodiaries/4e3eab2f-c507-4d38-8555-a10df0ad3112/Voicemail_Valentine_Podcast_Rerun_2.11.19.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

Nowadays we’re very accustomed to recording and hearing the sound of our own voices. But in the 1930s many people were doing it for the first time. And a surprising trend began. People started sending their voices to each other, through the postal service. It was literally: voice-mail.

We recently combed through a large collection of early voicemail at the Phono Post Archive, and we discovered that many of these audio letters are about the same thing: Love.

***

This episode is supported by Robinhood, an investing app that lets you buy and sell stocks, ETFs, options, and cryptos, all commission-free. Sign up and get a free stock at diaries.robinhood.com.