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  • 2021-06-14 (xsd:date)
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  • Did a 1934 'Television Newspaper' Cartoon Predict Internet News? (en)
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  • In the summer of 2021, social media users enthusiastically shared what appeared to be a near-century old cartoon that, amusingly, seemed to anticipate the era of internet news consumption with a sketch about a television newspaper. The cartoon showed a man and woman sitting in front of a large television screen that featured the front page of a newspaper, complete with the headline Dirigible is Downed at Sea. The man muses Hm — Twenty dead and fifteen missing! and the caption at the bottom reads: The cartoon was entirely authentic and really did originate in 1934, as shown in these clippings. It came from the mind of Ray Gross, an American inventor, writer, and humorist, who created a series of cartoons under the title Can it be done? which was syndicated to newspapers across the United States in the 1930s and 1940s. Among the other suggestions that Gross included in his series were: an inflatable couch,automatic nail polisher, capless toothpaste tube and a cigarette dispenser. Simon & Schuster published a compendium of his would-be inventions in 1933 and in 1935. Vitaphone produced a pair of short films based on Gross' work, one of which can be viewed below: (en)
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