Indeed, Scopes vs. State is the first major experiment broadcast on public broadcasting and further demonstrates that it is from the 1920s. Radio is one of the most influential ones invented so far. The technology used to create the radio is the foundation for creating television, wireless phone, and ultimately WiFi and mobile phone technology. After the invention of the radio in the 1920s, television was invented. The function of the TV is based on the same principle as the radio, and it receives radio waves wirelessly.
In the 1920s, America worked hard to build the foundation of the world leadership after the Second World War. American companies are everywhere; American loans allow resurgence of the German industry; American motors, refrigerators, typewriters, telephones and other products are sold all over the world. In the Far East, the United States promised to lead the negotiations on the 9 Roy Treaty of 1922 and respect China's sovereignty and integrity with other major countries including Japan. When Democratic president Franklin Roosevelt boycotted that Japan is trying to absorb China and other Far East regions, he was following the path under the guidance of the Republican Party.
In the early 1920s, under the guidance of the Commerce Secretary, Calbert Coolidge, the project was completed under the guidance of President Franklin Roosevelt for 10 years. In most cases, it was unrelated to the freelance leadership, but Roosevelt was unable to complete the project and many other unauthorized projects.
In the 1920 's, when Franklin D. Roosevelt was the governor of New York' s Democratic Party, he made it possible for politicians to talk to Americans directly, many of them, without having to deal with local newspapers. There is a Republican leader. After he was elected President of the United States in 1933, these fire-side talks continued and provided millions of Americans with information about the New Deal, the US banking crisis, and the Second World War . Over time, these broadcasts are standardized and viewed as a popular source of comfort and vital information for many Americans. According to the Library of Congress, these broadcasts actively "redefine the relationship between President Roosevelt and the American people."