Love, Hate & Propaganda: The Cold War

Turning Up the Heat

Directed by Liam O'Rinn
S1 • E2    Nov 22, 2011    40m
7.2
In the mid 1950s, much of the direct battle between the US and the Soviet Union was not through contact, but non-contact, namely not allowing anything that represented the other to enter the country. As such, the Soviet regime banned something they thought was uniquely American: jazz music. But the new Soviet leader, Nikita Khrushchev, wanted to show the world that his country was not as repressive as many in the west believed. So he hosted the World Youth Festival in Moscow in 1957, inviting youth from around the world to have a basically western styled party. This opened the floodgates of Soviet youth being exposed to western trappings, including jazz music, which he could not suppress in its entirety following. Over the subsequent few years, this would lead to greater contact between the Soviet and US political leaders - much of it through sanctioned nationalistic trade shows - culminating in a propaganda war over of all things the washing machine. Another battleground was the space race, which was seen as synonymous to the arms race. On earth, two emerging areas were also becoming battlegrounds. One was Africa, where a plethora of newly independent countries were looking for financial support and guidance from the two superpowers. The other was Latin America, first specifically in Guatemala, where the United Fruit Company, an American company controlling commercial trade in Guatemala through the export of bananas, launched a Madison Avenue developed publicity campaign to show its newly elected government as being Communist, even though its policies were not Communist but rather anti-United Fruit. Although this campaign would succeed, it would lead to two anti-Imperialist revolutionaries, Ernesto 'Che' Guevara and Fidel Castro, being able to seize control of the government in Cuba. Castro was not Communist but Nationalist, which many Americans believe to be one in the same. Because of the deterioration of relations between Castro and the US, Castro turned to the

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Cast of Turning Up the Heat

  • Catherine MercierElle-même - Animatrice
  • George StroumboulopoulosSelf - Host
  • Maxim MatusevichSelf - Professor of World History, Seaton Hall University
  • Kenneth OsgoodSelf - Author of 'Total Cold War'
  • Steve BittnerSelf - Professor of Russian
  • Nick RutterSelf - Ph.D. Candidate, Yale University
  • David WelchSelf - Director of the Centre for the Study of Propaganda and War, University of Kent
  • Luis Van IsschotSelf - Post-Doctoral Studies, City University of New York
  • Margaret PeacockSelf - History Professor, University of Alabama
  • George WhiteSelf - Professor of US Foreign Policy to Africa, City University of New York
  • Bayo AkinfemiSelf
  • Carlos DiazSelf
  • Michael KanevSelf
  • Daniel MatmorSelf
  • Michael RhoadesSelf
  • Martin RoachSelf
  • Marni Van DykSelf
  • Louis ArmstrongSelf - Jazz Musician
  • Fidel CastroSelf - Cuban Prime Minister
  • Dwight D. EisenhowerSelf - US President
  • Che GuevaraSelf - Revolutionary
  • John F. KennedySelf - US President
  • Nikita KhrushchevSelf - Soviet Premier
  • Maria MininsonSelf - Bomb Shelter Honeymooner
  • Melvin MininsonSelf - Bomb Shelter Honeymooner
  • Richard NixonSelf - US Vice President
  • Ronald ReaganSelf - Actor

 

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