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The world felt different when the whole country got its headlines from a handful of familiar voices. We start with a little everyday comedy, then jump into a nostalgic but clear-eyed look at broadcast TV news when ABC, CBS, and NBC shaped how people understood history in real time. We talk Walter Cronkite, Huntley and Brinkley, Peter Jennings, and what it meant to grow up with news that was limited, shared, and oddly grounding.
From there, the memories get bigger and heavier: hearing about JFK’s assassination at school, living through Cold War fear during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and watching families make plans that ranged from practical to almost symbolic. We also wrestle with the political arc that followed, including Lyndon B. Johnson’s complicated legacy, the Vietnam War, civil rights legislation, and the way power worked behind the scenes. Along the way, we remember another unifying media moment: the moon landing, when technology, awe, and national attention lined up on one screen.
Then we bring it straight into the present. Today’s media ecosystem runs on endless choice, confirmation bias, and “news” that can be custom-built to match whatever you already believe. We share a firsthand story about flat earth misinformation and connect it to a bigger problem: how to tell what is true when the internet rewards certainty over evidence. Finally, we look at AI deepfakes and synthetic audio, and we offer grounded, practical ways to evaluate sources without giving up or giving in. If you like thoughtful conversations about trust in the news, media literacy, and modern misinformation, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review.
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thanks for listening
Joe