
You're Amped Up
05/01/23 • 31 min
You’re presumably reading this description because you like to listen to podcasts. And you can listen to podcasts because clever people invented loudspeakers a century-and-change ago. And loudspeakers were not possible without the invention of electronic amplifiers. Which were not possible without vacuum tubes. Which are a lot like light bulbs.
What was it like to experience electronically amplified sound for the first time? Did it set crowds of people into hysterical panic? Why or why not? Why were there so many innovations in audio tech at around the same time between the 1870s and 1930s? What is a magnavox and what does it have to do with Magnavox-with-a-capital 'M'? Why did the Great Grape Juice Waterfall of 1915 never, in fact, actually take place?
These and many other fascinating interrogative sentences appear in this episode! Plug in now to learn more about how electronic amplification transformed the world into the weird place it is today.
Learn more about this rogue, underdog, Hail Mary pass of a project at findyourselfinhistory.com !
Thanks for listening! To learn more about this history project, check out findyourselfinhistory.com.
You’re presumably reading this description because you like to listen to podcasts. And you can listen to podcasts because clever people invented loudspeakers a century-and-change ago. And loudspeakers were not possible without the invention of electronic amplifiers. Which were not possible without vacuum tubes. Which are a lot like light bulbs.
What was it like to experience electronically amplified sound for the first time? Did it set crowds of people into hysterical panic? Why or why not? Why were there so many innovations in audio tech at around the same time between the 1870s and 1930s? What is a magnavox and what does it have to do with Magnavox-with-a-capital 'M'? Why did the Great Grape Juice Waterfall of 1915 never, in fact, actually take place?
These and many other fascinating interrogative sentences appear in this episode! Plug in now to learn more about how electronic amplification transformed the world into the weird place it is today.
Learn more about this rogue, underdog, Hail Mary pass of a project at findyourselfinhistory.com !
Thanks for listening! To learn more about this history project, check out findyourselfinhistory.com.
Previous Episode

You're Too Loud!
We take for granted our present-day ability to make ourselves as obnoxiously loud as we want to be. Yet being able to pump up the volume of an individual voice—to make it so deafening that it can easily reach all 140,000 ears of a stadium full of 70,000 people—is a brand-new development in the big picture of the human past.
Vibe with your favorite professional historian on this sonic journey through thousands of years. This amped-up episode brings you around the world, from the cities of ancient Greece and the Yucatán peninsula, through the expansive countryside of North America. Experience how Europe’s Scientific Revolution ultimately changed humans’ relations with sound itself. And discover some of the different, creative, occasionally bizarre ways through which people tried to raise their voices for the thousands of years prior to electronic amplification.
Learn more about this rogue, underdog, Hail Mary pass of a project at findyourselfinhistory.com !
Thanks for listening! To learn more about this history project, check out findyourselfinhistory.com.
Next Episode

You're Used To Loudmouths
Understanding the historical rise of mass media is not just about the tech. It’s also about how people used—and abused—those new ways of communicating with the public. That picture becomes clearer when you realize that new innovations in amplification and broadcasting coincided closely with the rise of nationalism in the Western world. Successful nationalist movements in Italy and Germany ushered in new two modern countries by the end of the 1870s. In the first half of the 20th century, those countries’ dictators used new mass-media technology to amplify not just their voices, but their personalities. In so doing, they passed themselves off as larger-than-life figures who claimed to speak for their entire nations.
This episode explores how the convergence between nationalism and industrial mass-media helped prop up these two totalitarian dictatorships, suppressing other voices in the process. Investigating this history allows us to reflect on the nature of nations, how new ways of communication can be disorienting, and how being savvy about the history of media can help to keep you grounded.
Learn more about this rogue, underdog, Hail Mary pass of a project at findyourselfinhistory.com !
Thanks for listening! To learn more about this history project, check out findyourselfinhistory.com.
You Are A Weirdo (with Historian Doug Sofer, Ph.D.) - You're Amped Up
Transcript
YAAW Podcast | Episode 110 | Doug Sofer
You’re Amped Up!
©2023 Doug Sofer
Cold Open
• [Fade in theme]
• Welcome back to this electrifying [zap noise] new podcast about how history helps us all to make sense of the Strangeness of Now.
• [pause]
• [Overly dramatic, plinky piano music in background]
• Previously on You Are A Weirdo.
• [Reintroduce topic with real Ep9 quotes. Intersperse with following dramatic fake sce
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