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AP U.S. History 4.1 Period 7: 1890-1945 10 Views
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Description:
AP U.S. History 4.1 Period 7: 1890-1945. One direct, long-term effect of the technological development seen in the image was the...what?
Transcript
- 00:04
And here's your shmoop du jour brought to you by pop culture because
- 00:07
even a can of soda can benefit from spending a day at the Museum all right [Can of soda looking at painting]
- 00:12
check out this image right there little girl
- 00:14
listening to radio all right well one direct long-term effect of the
- 00:19
technological development seen in the image was what and here your potential
Full Transcript
- 00:24
answers.........we're guessing
- 00:30
that this kid is in a cyborg so probably it has more to do with the Box you sit [Kid sat on the floor inspecting a box]
- 00:36
next to right let's start with a was a shift in western migration patterns one
- 00:41
direct long-term effect of the development of radio probably take some
- 00:45
seriously good storytelling to get people to up and leave their homes that [Young girl listening to radio]
- 00:49
or maybe a whole lot of subliminal advertising either way the radio is not
- 00:54
the most direct way to go about effecting migration patterns
- 00:57
well technological developments may have helped people to get around but they [technological development examples appear]
- 01:00
most likely didn't cause them to get going which means a can't be right so
- 01:05
moving on to be arrives in xenophobia and patriotism is often linked with war
- 01:10
well discovering a friend has ties to the enemy in war times can really change [Girls in locker room]
- 01:14
how that friend is perceived the mentality of with us or against us tend
- 01:19
to rear its head patriotism is how people demonstrate with us while the
- 01:24
possibility of against us really gets that fear of foreigners company well the [Men walk towards each other and turn away]
- 01:30
radio wasn't merely a strange enough or foreign enough invention to strike fear [Man and woman listening to radio]
- 01:35
in the hearts of the American people no one was afraid that the radio was the
- 01:39
alien enemy within simply biding its time and preparing to destroy the United [Alien radio army marching]
- 01:43
States from its place of comfort in American home so he can give me the boot
- 01:47
option C next knowing that the radios weren't out to get them in the 1930s and
- 01:53
40s was surely a weight off everyone's shoulders on the flip side though no one [People walking around with radios on their shoulder]
- 01:57
really gives the radio or similar technology credit for America's
- 02:00
emergence as an international power well weren't they the driving force behind [Car driving down a road]
- 02:05
the shift in how the world viewed the United States Argentina had their own
- 02:09
radio stations and everything but we didn't see them doing
- 02:12
big things in the international sphere in the same way as the US so the whole
- 02:17
radio thing probably wasn't such a big deal on the emerging international power [Radio wielding a light saber]
- 02:21
front right well what about B so you know that awesome moment of realization
- 02:26
when it turns out someone else loved the very same TV show you do or movie score [Girl celebrating]
- 02:31
flavor of Pringles in other words pop culture binds us that's what the radio
- 02:36
did for people back then suddenly everyone could listen to the same music [Children watching cartoons]
- 02:40
they're the same rad radio dramas and get news about what was happening on the
- 02:45
other side of the country all at about the same time sprinkling
- 02:49
some cars for people to travel all over the place and movies and well suddenly [Car travelling down highway]
- 02:52
people had even more to bond over a shared national culture now that's a [Girls eating popcorn]
- 02:57
long-term development so D is the right answer the frequency at which people
- 03:01
listen to the radio is definitely changing non-state radio isn't getting
- 03:05
this fair share of air let's take a look at the interwebs where digital [Smart phone and radio beside each other]
- 03:09
broadcasting is alive and well still getting the beat drop
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