Particle Data Platform

206: American Propaganda: Cap’s Debut, Capra’s War Docs, and Casablanca

5/22/20261 hr 7 min

“Will young, freewheeling American boys take the iron discipline of wartime? … In my judgment the answer is Yes! ... if the answers they get are worth fighting and dying for.” This is the story of propaganda on the home front.  The word “propaganda” has some messy connotations, but it’s fundamentally about pushing a narrative, which can be good or evil. Leaders on all sides of the war thought about how to spur the populace to join in the war effort, and in America, it fell to entertainers and artists to really rally the nation to war.  They utilized every form imaginable: films, comics, cartoons, posters, anything. Movie and comedy stars put on road shows for soldiers. Animation studios enlisted beloved cartoon figures like Donald Duck and Bugs Bunny to sell war bonds, and even invented the hilariously inept Private Snafu to teach soldiers what NOT to do. Captain America, on the other hand, was born ready to punch Hitler’s lights out. We’ll also cover that unassailable masterpiece, Casablanca, as well as some propaganda aimed at US soldiers from the other side: the siren known as “Tokyo Rose.” 


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Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Greg Jackson· Host0:00

    [upbeat music] This refreshing break is brought to you by Snapple. Facts are stubborn things. That's one of my favorite quotes, spoken by John Adams, of course. But facts are also fun things. Here are a few you might throw out as conversation starters during your next break with friends and colleagues. Snapple real fact number 1,477: France used the guillotine as recently as 1977. Yikes. But four years later, they abolished the death penalty. Okay, here's a lighter springtime one. Snapple real fact number 705: every ton of recycled paper saves about 17 trees. Another springtime Snapple real fact: number 2002, on May 1st, 1931, the Empire State Building officially opened in New York City. Check out HTDS episode 180 for more on that. It may no longer be the tallest skyscraper, but it's arguably the loftiest. And here's one more Snapple real fact. Before 1859, some baseball umpires sat behind home plate in rocking chairs. Now, that's a chill image. This chill break has been brought to you by Snapple. Real tea, real juice, Snabsolutely refreshing. [upbeat music] Hey, Professor Jackson here. As we approach America's 250th, many may feel our hyper-partisan discord means that the Republic is failing, but I see it differently. Though our divisions are tough, they're not new. And I argue, proof the American experiment works. My new book, Been There, Done That, explores how historical

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