After the Roaring 20s, a great turning point happened with not only America’s economic downfall but on the American popular culture as well. In the 1930s, the Great Depression lurched the entertainment industries causing the citizens to escape from the depression of reality during the time . The Great Depression was charged with many contradictions, but once the economy became a downfall, popular culture collapsed as well. Popular culture reflected and advocated the activities of presidential decisions, such as President Franklin Roosevelt with the decision of the “New Deal” programs for economic recovery . It also brought competing images and different meanings of propaganda. For example, many social scientists advertised that people should spend less time with entertainment and more time with education. Those concerns invigorated censorship campaigns against commercial amusements, still judged low- class diversions . Meanwhile, because it sent conflicting messages, Walt Disney made the first cartoon movie Snow White and the …show more content…
Almost a decade before this, sales in the recording industry were making millions of dollars. The improved technology enhanced advertising, new talent, and a recognition of diverse audiences, the record business had rebounded, momentarily holding off the growing threat of radio, which, by 1926, was only half a number of phonographs (220). Tragically, the industrial production dropped sixty percent of their wages when the Great Depression happened. The nation income we 81 billion dollars into about 41 billion dollars in just 2 and a half years. The unprecedented heights and levels of influence to which popular culture had risen hardly prepared it for the horrifying economic collapse that became a financial and industrial slump (220). All businesses collapsed from the record businesses to theaters, amusement parks, and athletic