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Ronald Brownstein - Rock Me on the Water: 1974 - The Year Los Angeles Transformed Movies, Music, Television and Politics


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Rock Me on the Water: 1974 - The Year Los Angeles Transformed Movies, Music, Television and Politics [Audiobook]
English | ASIN: B08BX3TKPX | 2021 | 16 hours and 14 minutes | MP3@128 kbps | 892 MB
Author: Ronald Brownstein
Narrator: Will Damron

In this exceptional cultural history, Atlantic senior editor Ronald Brownstein - “one of America's best political journalists" (The Economist) - tells the kaleidoscopic story of one monumental year that marked the city of Los Angeles’ creative peak, a glittering moment when popular culture was ahead of politics in predicting what America would become.

Los Angeles in 1974 exerted more influence over popular culture than any other city in America. Los Angeles that year, in fact, dominated popular culture more than it ever had before or would again. Working in film, recording, and television studios around Sunset Boulevard, living in Brentwood and Beverly Hills or amid the flickering lights of the Hollywood Hills, a cluster of transformative talents produced an explosion in popular culture that reflected the demographic, social, and cultural realities of a changing America. At a time when Richard Nixon won two presidential elections with a message of backlash against the social changes unleashed by the '60s, popular culture was ahead of politics in predicting what America would become. The early 1970s in Los Angeles was the time and the place where conservatives definitively lost the battle to control popular culture.Rock Me on the Water traces the confluence of movies, music, television, and politics in Los Angeles month by month through that transformative, magical year.

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