Before and during World War Two, the government of Nazi Germany
controlled all information the German people received. The government
controlled all radio broadcasts and newspapers. The people of Germany
only heard or read what the government wanted them to hear or read. It
was illegal for them to listen to a foreign broadcast.
After World War Two, a new invention appeared -- television. In
industrial nations, television quickly became common in most homes.
Large companies were formed to produce television programs. These
companies were called networks. Networks include many television
stations linked together that could broadcast the same program at the
same time.
Most programs were designed to entertain people. There were movies,
music programs and game programs. However, television also broadcast
news and important information about world events. It broadcast some
education programs, too. The number of radio and television stations
around the world increased. It became harder for a dictator to control
information.
In the nineteen fifties, two important events took place that greatly
affected the communication of information. The first was a television
broadcast that showed the East Coast and the West Coast of the United
States at the same time. A cable that carried the pictures linked the
two coasts. So people watching the program saw the Pacific Ocean on the
left side of the screen. They saw the Atlantic Ocean on the right side
of the screen.
It was not a film. People could see two reporters talk to each other
even though a continent separated them. Modern technology made this
possible.
The other event happened on September twenty-fifth, nineteen fifty-six.
That was when the first telephone cable under the Atlantic Ocean made it
possible to make direct telephone calls from the United States to
Europe. Less than six years later, in July, nineteen sixty-two, the
first communications satellite was placed in orbit around the Earth. The
speed of information greatly increased again.
By the year nineteen hundred, big city newspapers could provide people
with information that was only hours old. Now, both radio and
television, with the aid of satellite communications, could provide
information immediately. People who lived in a small village could
listen to or watch world events as they happened.
A good example is when American astronaut Neil Armstrong became the
first person to walk on the moon. Millions of people around the world
watched as he carefully stepped onto the moon on July twentieth,
nineteen sixty-nine.
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