Answer:
Step-by-step explanation:
In American history, the Roaring Twenties saw significant social, economic, and political transformation. For the first time, there are more urban dwellers than rural ones in the United States. Between 1920 and 1929, the nation's overall wealth more than doubled, and between 1922 and 1929, the Gross National Product (GNP) rose by 40%. Many Americans were propelled into a thriving "consumption culture" by this economic engine where the same advertisements were shown all throughout the nation. We consume the same goods, enjoy the same music, and participate in the same dances. The racy urban lifestyle, however, made many Americans uneasy, and the decade of Prohibition was marked more by strife than by fun. Nonetheless, for some, the jazz age of the 1920s roared until the economy collapsed, and ended in a downturn, and the excesses of the Roaring Twenties were put to an end.
With the occurrence of two events in 1920, the American period of transition began. On August 18, the Nineteenth Amendment, which gave women the right to vote, became law. And the first radio transmission with a commercial license was made on November 2 by KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In North Carolina, women voted in support of better schools and roads for their children. And radio listening evolved into a shared family activity. Around the radio, the group would gather to listen to music, comedies, and the news. The first radio station in North Carolina, WBT in Charlotte, started broadcasting in 1922.
Both musical and non-musical styles saw modifications in the 1920s. Jazz music originally appeared in 1922, when trumpeter Louis Armstrong started improvising and adding his own melodic touches. Thanks to the flappers, the Charleston became a new dance craze in 1925. In 1927, The Jazz Singer became the first widely watched "talking picture." Up until then, there had been no sound in motion pictures. Both Popeye and Mickey Mouse made their debuts in the Thimble Theater comic strip in 1929 and the Steamboat Willie cartoon in 1928, respectively.
With the aid of developments and improvements in aircraft during World War I, aviation represented another sector where things were changing pretty quickly. Only a few barnstormers and daredevils had flown up until this point. Only twenty-one years after Orville Wright successfully piloted the first powered aircraft here in North Carolina for a mere forty yards, the United States Air Service circumnavigated the globe in airplanes in 1924. Charles Lindbergh flew alone from New York to Paris on May 20–21 of that year, and Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly over the Atlantic on June 17, 1928. The first commercial passenger flights had been made before the decade was over.