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What is yellow journalism and how did it develop

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... the late 1800s, including the patriotic classics 'The Stars and Stripes Forever' (1897) ... popular culture for people of all classes and backgrounds. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What is yellow journalism and how did it develop


1
21.3
2
Warm-Up
  • What is yellow journalism and how did it develop?

3
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4
Objective
  • Students will understand why newspapers grew in
    number and importance.

5
Acrobats
Comedy
6
Chaplin
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11
1. What was the impact of the Brooklyn Bridge?
12
  • Designed by German American John Roebling, the
    Brooklyn Bridge was the longest suspension bridge
    in the world when it opened on May 24, 1883.
  • The bridge spans the East River and connects
    Brooklyn and Manhattan.

13
A New Look for Cities
14
2. What happened tot American cities in the late
1800s and what did resourceful planners do about
it?
15
Monadnock Building, Chicago
  • One of the early skyscrapers of the Chicago
    School, the 16-story Monadnock Building, left,
    was designed by the architectural firm of Burnham
    and Root in the 1880s and completed in the 1890s.
    Although its unornamented exterior is sleekly
    modern in appearance, the Monadnock did not take
    advantage of the latest structural technology.
    Instead of steel structural supports, which
    enabled builders to use thinner exterior walls
    for ever higher buildings, the brick walls of the
    Monadnock bear the entire weight of the building,
    and the walls are over 6 ft (2 m) thick at their
    base.

16

First Grand Central Station
  • Railway stations posed an interesting challenge
    for architects in the 1800s. No classical models
    existed for this new building type, and designers
    chose a variety of styles to meet this new
    function. The first Grand Central Station (1895)
    in New York City was built in the Second Empire
    style fashionable in France. Towers at the center
    and the corners were capped with mansard roofs
    that had four sloping sidesa distinctive feature
    of this style.

17
Skyscrapers
18
Chrysler Building
  • The Chrysler Building (1930) in New York City is
    considered the quintessential example of art deco
    architecture. It was designed by William Van
    Alen, who was inspired in part by cubist art and
    machine forms. The building, which rises in a
    series of narrowing arches to the stainless steel
    spire on top, is 319 m (1,046 ft) tall. It was
    the tallest building in the world for one year,
    before the Empire State Building surpassed it.

19
Worlds Columbian Exposition, 1893
  • The 400th anniversary of explorer Christopher
    Columbuss arrival in the Americas was
    commemorated in 1893 by the Worlds Columbian
    Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. The exposition,
    attended by millions, was also known as the White
    City after its central white buildings set along
    canals. The first view visitors had was of the
    domed administration building, shown here, which
    was designed by New York architect William Morris
    Hunt in the Beaux-Arts style. This style, named
    after the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris where
    Hunt and other architects of the exposition
    studied, had a significant impact on American
    architecture over the next several decades.

20
Empire State Building
  • Built in 1931, the Empire State Building in New
    York City, New York, stands 381 m (1250 ft) high.
    The construction of the worlds tallest
    skyscraper was planned by American politician
    Alfred Smith. Although no longer the worlds
    tallest building, it remains a popular tourist
    destination.

21
3. How was Chicago rebuilt and how were people
transported quickly in the new buildings?
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Public transportation
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Open spaces
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  • 4. What effect did cramming people into small
    spaces have and what solutions helped to ease the
    problem?

25
5. Why did some planners want to preserve open
spaces and what were some of the major projects
like?
26
Department stores
27
6. How did department stores change the way that
people shopped?
28
Carson Pirie Scott Department Store
  • The work of 20th-century American architect Louis
    Sullivan was influenced by the movement known as
    Art Nouveau. This picture shows the front facade
    of the Carson Pirie Scott department store in
    Chicago, designed by Sullivan and completed in
    1904. The elaborately decorative cast iron is
    characteristic of the architects love of detail.
    Above the first two floors, the design of the
    remaining twelve is a contrast in simplicity,
    with geometric windows evenly spaced within the
    structural steel skeleton.

29
The Daily Newspaper
30
7. How were newspapers important for the
assimilation of immigrants?
31
Two newspaper giants
32
8. Who created the first modern mass circulation
newspaper, and what was it like?
33
Joseph Pulitzer
  • Hungarian-born American journalist Joseph
    Pulitzer became a successful writer and newspaper
    publisher during the 1800s and early 1900s.
  • After his death in 1911, his estate established
    the Pulitzer Prize, a series of 21 awards given
    annually for achievements in drama, letters,
    music, and journalism.

Joseph Pulitzer
34
9. Who challenged the World with the Journal how
did it lead to the term yellow journalism?
35
William Randolph Hearst
  • William Randolph Hearst built an American
    publishing empire during the late 19th century
    and early 20th century.
  • Hearst attracted readers with sensationalist
    stories, a practice that became known as yellow
    journalism.

36
Women journalists
37
10. How did newspapers compete for women readers?
38
A Popular Newspaper
39
11. Why did newspapers become more important as
cities grew?
40
12. How did the articles of Nellie Bly (the
World) lead to reforms?
41
A World of Entertainment
42
13. Describe how music and other kinds of
entertainment brought Americans of various
ethnic groups together and spread American
culture.
43
Vaudeville
44
George M. Cohan
45
Marx Brothers
Groucho
Harpo
Zeppo
Chico
46
Marx Brothers in A Night at the Opera
47
Will Rogers
  • American humorist Will Rogers gained fame for his
    monologues, which originally accompanied his
    rope-trick performances in vaudeville shows.

48
Ragtime
  • Originating in the American Midwest, ragtime
    music flourished around the world from about 1897
    to 1920.
  • It became the first internationally accepted
    variety of popular music and the first African
    American music to influence world popular music.

Scott Joplin
49
Popular music
50
14. What was Vaudeville all about and who were
some of its stars?
51
15. How did Thomas Edison influence the music
business?
  • Thomas Edison's phonograph sparked a new
    industry.
  • By 1900, millions of phonograph records had been
    sold.

52
16. How did Scott Joplin and John Philip Sousa
influence our nation?
  • Joplin 1st hit
  • Sousa played by marching bands at football
    games, 4th of July

53
John Philip Sousa
  • American bandmaster and composer John Sousa wrote
    many popular marches in the late 1800s, including
    the patriotic classics The Stars and Stripes
    Forever (1897).

54
Sports and Leisure
55
17. How did the rise of factories influence sport
and leisure?
  • With less chance to socialize on the job, there
    was more interest in leisure.
  • In sports, Americans found a great escape from
    factories, stores, and offices.

56
Baseball the national pastime
57
18. How did Baseball become a national sport?
  • The game was first played in New York in the
    1840s. During the Civil War, New York soldiers
    showed other Union troops how to play the game.
    By the 1870s, the country had several
    professional teams and its first league.

58
Football
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19. From where and when does football originate?
  • Football grew out of soccer, which Americans had
    played since colonial times.

60
Basketball
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20. From where and when does basketball
originate?
  • In 1891, James Naismith invented a new sport
    basketball. Naismith was teaching physical
    education at a YMCA in Springfield,
    Massachusetts.
  • He wanted to find a sport that could be played
    indoors in winter. Naismith had two bushel
    baskets nailed to the gym walls. Players tried to
    throw a soccer ball into the baskets.

62
James Naismith
  • James Naismith invented basketball in 1891 as a
    sport to be played indoors during winter months,
    when inclement weather prohibited outdoor
    exercise.

63
Turn to page 574
  • Do the Section 3 Review
  • 3-7

64
3. How did new technology change the face of
American cities?
  • Steel frames and electric elevators led to taller
    buildings and altered city landscapes.
  • New transit systems reduced urban traffic.

65
4. Describe newspapers of the late 1800s
  • They were lively and inexpensive.
  • They resorted to sensationalism and contained
    photos.

66
  • 5. (a) How did entertainment unite Americans?(b)
    What sports were popular in the late 1800s?

67
  • 5. (a) It provided a shared popular culture for
    people of all classes and backgrounds.
  • (b) baseball, football, basketball

68
6. Describe the cause-and-effect relationship
between population growth and development of the
skyscraper.
  • As cities became more crowded, making land
    scarce, architects used vertical space and built
    upward.

69
  • 7. Some journalists defend sensational stories by
    saying they are giving the public what it wants.
  • What types of stories do you think newspapers and
    other media shouldprovide?
  • Explain your answer.

70
  • 7. The media cannot give the public only what it
    wants..sensationalism
  • information on world and national events is also
    important.
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