Entertainment In The 1920's Essay

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Entertainment in the 1920’s was a very complex thing and time. Not only did they have a new age of technology in for that time period, but they also had new kinds of entertainment that hadn't existed before. The radio had been created, along with the ‘talking’ picture.There were many things created and found in the 1920’s that we very much still use to this day in mass productions. Spectator sports were created, and athleticism was a serious point of entertainment. There were many defining features of modern American culture in the 1920’s. Many new appliances entered the nation's homes, including the radio. None of the new appliances had as much of an impact as the radio did. Sales of radios soared from $60 million in 1922 all the way to …show more content…

So many American citizens would spend 83 cents of every dollar going to see the movies that were out. Movies became a daily part of American society and one of biggest forms of entertainment. The movies themselves were teaching the people how to dress, talk, and to appear “sexy”. The early films during the roaring twenties were silent. The year that films actually had sound in them was in 1927. The first words to be said in a movie were “Wait a minute, wait a minute. You ain't heard nothin’ yet”. Theaters were referred to as movie palaces because of their luxurious features and they were adorned with columns and had a sense of royalty to them. Disney studios were created during this decade, to be exact in 1923. When Disney studios was created, it letting the people of 1920 see the first official appearance of Mickey Mouse in the small show ‘Steamboat Willie’. ‘Winnie the Pooh’ also emerged in 1926, being all the rage of that time. Movies were also a way to watch what they called newsreels. Newsreels would allow the audience to see what's going on with the political …show more content…

Audiences loved watching team sports, but mainly baseball. The people to watch the team sports would idolize different players. In baseball we had “Babe” Ruth or the “Sultan of Swat”. Both of those were nicknames for a man named George Herman Ruth. Ruth was a man who played for the New York Yankees, being considered one of the best players in the country of that time period. “Babe” Ruth was immensely popular and had large crowds of people that would come see him every game. He had hit more than sixty home runs in 1927. Heros that the audiences loved consisted of a boxer named Jack Dempsey, a football player named jim thorpe, and a female swimmer named Gertrude Ederle. Jim thorpe started playing sports more often because during his college years. He arrived at a track and field practice, only to jump the 5’9’’ high jump, beating the school record (Biography.com, n.d.). Thorpe enjoyed other leisure sports such as baseball, hockey and even lacrosse. Football was the sport that launched his budding sports career, when he was put in as the halfback, punter, defender, and place

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