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2000 documentary film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The First Measured Century: The Other Way of Looking at American History is a three-hour PBS documentary film hosted by Ben J. Wattenberg. The film was produced for PBS by BJW, Inc. and New River Media, Inc. and was first broadcast in December 2000. The film traces American history during the 20th century through a sequence of vignettes of pioneering social scientists who used numerical tools to examine America. The film mixes archival footage, archival still photography and artwork, interviews with contemporary experts, graphical animations of statistical trends, and on-camera narrative appearances by the host. Information from Middletown IV, a 1999 replication of Middletown studies of Muncie, Indiana, first begun by Robert and Helen Lynd in 1924, is included in the film and companion volume.
The First Measured Century includes on-camera interviews with forty experts: Howard M. Bahr, Lee D. Baker, Alan Brinkley, Theodore Caplow, William Chafe, John Milton Cooper, William Cronon, Elliot Currie, Christopher DeMuth, Betty Friedan, Milton Friedman, Francis Fukuyama, Alec Gallup, George Gallup, Jr., Paul Gebhard, Bruce Geelhoed, James Gregory, Kenneth T. Jackson, Matthew Frye Jacobson, Christopher Jencks, James H. Jones, Alfred E. Kahn, David M. Kennedy, Alice Kessler-Harris, Nancy Koehn, Alan Kraut, Seymour Martin Lipset, Glenn Loury, Staughton Lynd, David Moore, Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Robyn Muncy, William O'Neill, Ken Prewitt, Rita Simon, Daphne Spain, Paul Volcker, James Q. Wilson, William Julius Wilson, Daniel Yankelovich.[1] Some scholars have cited the interviews themselves in other writings.[2]
The documentary film is accompanied by a reference book of the same title but different subtitle: The First Measured Century: An Illustrated Guide to Trends in America, 1900-2000.[3] Theodore Caplow, Louis Hicks, and Ben J. Wattenberg are the authors. The AEI Press (in-house publisher for the American Enterprise Institute) published the book. Unusually for a companion book to a documentary film, the book does not follow the synopsis of the film and does not include much of the narrative material. Instead, fifteen chapters provide a dense array of time series data and interpretive essays about American society in the 20th century. The companion volume has become a standard source of reference material about America in the 20th century.[4]
The First Measured Century received a Gold Award for Documentary Production at WorldFest Houston and the bronze medal at the 2001 Telly Awards. The First Measured Century received favorable notice in The New York Times,[5] and Teaching Sociology.[6]
The companion volume was reviewed separately in Population and Development Review,[7] The American Statistician,[8] The New York Times,[9][10] the Washington Post,[11] and Commentary Magazine.[12]
Excerpts from The First Measured Century were used in another documentary film, also produced by New River Media, The Idea Makers: The Women of Hull House (Princeton, NJ: Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 2004).
The authors of the companion volume gave a one-hour presentation about the project to an audience at Olsson's Books and Records in Washington, DC, on May 22, 2001. This is available online from C-SPAN.
The replication of surveys in Muncie, Indiana (Middletown studies) over a 75-year period from 1924 to 1999 is an unusually long timeframe for measuring social trends in America.[13][14][15] Information from the 1999 iteration of the surveys was used to trace trends in the attitudes of adolescents.[16]
PBS maintains an extensive website devoted to The First Measured Century. The site contains complete program transcripts, interview material not used in the broadcast, an interactive timeline, the complete text and charts of the companion volume, and teaching resources such as lesson plans and worksheets. Survey data gathered in Muncie, Indiana in 1999 (known as Middletown IV) is archived at the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) (along with Middletown III data) under study number 4604. According to WorldCat, 325 libraries worldwide hold the video in some form and 985 libraries worldwide hold the companion volume in their collections. The DVD is available directly from PBS and from online vendors. The companion volume is available from online vendors.
The First Measured Century was produced with funding from T. Rowe Price, Pfizer, Inc., PBS, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, The Bernard and Irene Schwartz Foundation, The John M. Olin Foundation, The Smith Richardson Foundation, and The D & D Foundation.[17] The William H. Donner Foundation separately sponsored preparation of the companion volume.[18]
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