Category: Environmental Myth

  • Radio and Rain

    Radio and Rain was the belief that heavy radio broadcasting was changing the atmosphere in a way that reduced rainfall. In its strongest form, the theory claimed that excessive electrical energy from radio towers, transmitters, and ether waves dried the air, disrupted natural cloud formation, and helped create or prolong drought. The theory drew power from the early radio age itself: invisible power was now filling the sky, towers multiplied across the landscape, and weather remained only partly understood by the public. By 1930, newspapers were already reporting the claim that radio was being blamed both when there was too much rain and when there was too little. The conspiracy version turned the broadcast age into climate sabotage by electricity.