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Beginning
in the later half of the 19th century, a fractured and
increasingly diverse America began to find that common
forms of media and entertainment served as galvanizing
forces in creating a unified United States. Evolving
from the common traveling minstrel shows, to parlor
music, to professional sports, the phonograph, radio,
movies and television, to the Internet and beyond,
America's forms of entertainment evolved in scope and
message while providing a shared culture that became
uniquely American.
Phonograph, Radio, Film and Television
With the invention of the phonograph (record player)
music became a force in American culture to an even greater
degree. While sheet music publication during the 1800's meant
that Americans were playing and singing much the same music on
the pianos in their parlors, Thomas A. Edison's phonograph
meant that Americans from coast to coast were sharing the same
sounds in the same way.
Radio's introduction and rapid, widespread
adoption would become the first true
"mass media". Coming of
age in the 1920's radio introduced Americans to a whole new
form of communication and shared experiences like no
technology had before.
Impact of Radio:
- Commercials on radio broadcasts introduced Americans
to national "brands" of products and services that quickly
began to overtake the smaller regional companies of the
past
- Radio networks such as National Broadcasting
Corporation (NBC) and the Columbia Broadcasting System
(CBS) transmitted signals to nearly all of America,
insuring that the public heard the same entertainment and
the same newscasts, creating a shared experiences and
understandings that had no previously been possible.
- By the year 1929 over 45% of American homes had
radios, eclipsing the rate of introduction seen by even
the telephone.
Film (motion pictures) were introduced to Americans
in the early 1900's and by 1925 had become
the
US's fourth largest industry. Prior to the introduction of the
television over half of Americans went to the movies at least
once a week and more than 30,000 movie theaters were in
business. The movies offered newsreels, or filmed news
coverage, which was the first time Americans were able to see
their political leaders and news makers in motion. The
earliest films were black and white silent movies with stars
such as Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, Clara Bow and Rudolph
Valentino. These stars, among others, helped to launch the
birth of "Hollywood". The first major film with sound, the
1927 Jazz Singer starring Al Jolson ushered in a new
era in film that is still thriving in movie theatres across
the globe.
Impact of Film:
- By 1925 the film industry was the US's fourth largest
business
- The 1927 introduction of "talkies" in The Jazz
Singer with Al Jolson causes movie attendance to
double from 40+ million in 1922 to over 85 million in 1929
- In response to the growing sexual and political
openness of the 1960's the film industry introduced
"ratings" on films starting in 1968 as US films began to
reflect changing US society.
Television however, impacted US society more than
any other new medium. As the natural
extension
of radio, television offered Americans both sound and motion
in the comfort of their own living rooms. Television also
decreased and usurped the importance of both radio and film to
become the most dominate media force in American society and
indeed most of the world's societies.
Impact of Television:
- By 1960 the widespread adoption of television had cut
movie attendance from its 80 million per week high to
under 40 million
- Television played a huge role in the 1960
presidential election between John F. Kennedy and
Richard M. Nixon. The September 26th debate had
over 70+ million Americans viewing and was generally
regarded as the turning point for Kennedy's campaign, as
his youthful appearance and well-spoken manner on
television attracted him legions of new supporters.
- Television also played a huge role in influencing
public opinion on the Vietnam War. Vietnam was the
first US conflict that did not involve government
restriction of the media, as such images from the front
lines of the often disturbing and confusing combat played
nightly on America's television sets. The actual images of
the war played in stark contrast to the optimistic
statements of Lyndon Johnson's administration,
creating a "credibility gap" between what the
government said and what Americans saw. As such,
television coverage is often credited with eroding public
support for the conflict in Vietnam.
Sports
With the economic growth of the industrial age (late
1800's-1900's) and the corresponding growth of
a
larger middle-class, Americans found themselves with
increasing time for leisure activities and money to spend. As
a result there was the development of organized spectator
sports in the United States, starting most notably with
baseball and boxing.
Boxing emerged as the first great spectator sport,
attracting attendance and dollars in record amounts. Early
stars like bare-knuckle boxer John L. Sullivan and
"Gentleman" Jim Corbett helped craft America's first
popular sporting events.
Baseball was originally a child's activity but was
was developed into a professional sport starting in 1869
with the Cincinnati Reds and expanding into a organized
league in 1875 with the formation of the National League,
the American League followed in 1901 and "America's
pastime" was born. Baseball remained a popular, but highly
segregated sport. While all-Negro leagues had existed prior,
it was Jackie Robinson's playing for the 1947 Brooklyn
Dodgers that "broke" the color barrier in professional
baseball. Despite initial insults, opposition from fans and
players and even death threats, Robinson refused to quit. His
heroic stance and exceptional play was rewarded with his being
named the 1949 most valuable player and being the first
African-American player inducted into the National Baseball
Hall of Fame.
Music
While American's had long enjoyed music in concerts and
performances it was the introduction of the
phonograph
and the radio that helped create a selection of music that
many Americans could share. The great mix of cultures that was
the American "melting pot" of the late 1800's also helped
birth the first great, uniquely American form of music Jazz.
Jazz has its roots in the multi-cultural city of
New Orleans, a hodge-podge of European (both
Spanish and French) tastes, as well as African slave
traditions mixed with the unique Creole culture (of
European and African-American decent). This uniquely American
mix created Jazz, which owes its musical stylings to the
traditions of European military brass bands, African drumming
polyrhythm and southern slave works songs. Early New Orleans
pioneers of Jazz included trumpeter Louis Armstrong,
pianist Jelly Roll Morton.
While born in New Orleans, Jazz grew of age in New York
City among the resurgence of African-American
culture that was the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920's.
Influential musicians of the era included the composer/pianist
Edward "Duke" Ellington, band-leader Cab Calloway
and blues singer Bessie Smith. The Harlem
Renaissance and the success of black musicians of the
1920's helped white America to develop a more profound respect
and appreciation for the art and culture of black America.
Impact of Jazz:
- The huge success of Jazz recordings in the 1920's
earned the decade the name, "The Jazz Age"
- While black performers were welcomed to play in clubs
such as the Cotton Club and Savoy Ballroom
in New York City, the patrons of these segregated clubs
were all white.
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