Big business political cartoon9/22/2023 ![]() ![]() employers made use of incentive or employee attitude motion pictures. 1, 1949) said, "During the war, 62% of large U.S. During the Depression, companies undergoing union organizing campaigns took every opportunity to reach their workers with anti-union messages, morning, noon and night. As an idea, "luncheon movies" date back to the 'teens, when John Patterson of National Cash Register in Dayton, Ohio pursued what were then advanced media forms to reach NCR employees with messages of inspiration, training and control. There was nothing new about the idea of reaching working people on the job. Ironically, this effort was made feasible by a Federal government initiative: the distribution of war surplus 16mm projectors to educational and nonprofit organizations. The films were intended both for showing in theaters, schools, at community group meetings and in workplaces, often at lunchtime screenings in factories. as producer) to produce a series of nine "short cartoon films, in color, which would portray simple economic truths about the American system of production and distribution in an interesting and entertaining manner." A series of grants totaling $597,870 was made to Harding College, $150,000 of this contributed by the Maurice and Laura Falk Foundation of Pittsburgh. The Sloan Foundation funded a small institution (the pro-free enterprise, staunchly anti-Communist Harding College in Searcy, Arkansas, which hired John Sutherland Productions, Inc. Sloan Foundation, founded by the former chairman of General Motors. ![]() One institution most anxious to spread the news about capitalism was the Alfred P. Launching a giant propaganda offensive, these organizations pumped out press releases, published books, organized public and private meetings, bought advertising (for examples, see "The Pursuit of Profit" and "Freedom of Choice" supplements on this disc) and produced motion pictures. Their intentions were presented as lofty and neutral: to educate Americans about our economic system and its benefits. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers. Both sides characterized their points of view as patriotic and their opponents as un-American.īusiness fought for influence through organizations like the U.S. Corporations sought an end to planning and government influence, to communist, socialist and labor movements, and above all, shrinkage of the public sector, swollen in sixteen years of economic depression and war. To business, however, the end of hostilities promised freedom from New Deal liberalism. To most working people, postwar "normalcy" meant a final farewell to Depression-induced privation, access to consumer goods unavailable during the war years, and a redistribution of the economic pie through the newly powerful labor movement. ![]() Seeking a prize worth much more than public consent, these opposing forces fought to redefine the economic structure of the nation. In the press, on the radio, and increasingly through the newly emerging medium of television, business and labor struggled for power over the national consciousness. Nuclear anxiety, anti-Communism and international political realignments fueled the Cold War and turned our country's media landscape into a battleground. The end of World War II did not bring peace at home. This Cold War-era cartoon uses humor to tout the dangers of Communism and the benefits of capitalism. ![]()
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