Steven Speilberg's got nothing on Orson Welles
Filed under: Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Critical Thought, Steven Spielberg
"Sunday, October 30, 1938, will forever be remembered as a seminal event
in the history of American mass media and their potential impact on our
collective consciousness." Now that Steven Speilberg's version of War of the Worlds is a looming, unavoidable fact, Emmanuel Levy took a second to poder and appreciate the War that started it all - Orson Welles' legendary emergency-simulating, populace-duping radio broadcast. From where we sit, in an era in which most of us spend most of our days ingesting multiple media streams at once (Ted Leo on the headphones, CNN on mute, the ever-blinking Instant Message window ever distracting my attention towards the corner of the Powerbook screen), it's nearly impossible to fathom that a single peice of broadcasting could have such a profound effect on real people and real life. Levy's article is lengthy and dense (it's based on a graduate dissertation), but worth a read if, like me, you have no idea why Speilberg even bothered.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-15-2005 @ 11:55AM
mick du russel said...
Few people realize how important radio was to everyone prior to the advent of television. Whole families would sit around the radio and listen to various shows and news. Just as people today religiously watch their favorite shows, so did the people with their radio programs. Orson Welles' "War of the Worlds" caught a good part of the nation by surprise and unknowingly caused a panic. It really is hard to fathom this in our day and age.
Last year, I had the pleasure of sitting in the studio where this all transpired many years ago. My good friend, talk show legend Joe Franklin, confirmed this as he was broadcasting from the same studio as he told me.
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