This is an iHeart podcast. Guaranteed human. I turned off news altogether. I hate to say it, but I don't trust much of anything.
Alright. It's the rage bait. It feels like it's trying to divide people. If we got clear facts, maybe we could calm down a little. NBC News brings you clear reporting.
Let's meet at the facts. Let's move forward from there. NBC News reporting for America. Uh This July 4th, come celebrate at America's Block Party, hosted by America 250. America's Block Party is a can't-miss 4th of July concert happening at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
Experience music performances from major artists, patriotic tributes, and the kickoff to Giving Forth, helping to make July 4th the largest day of giving in American history. It's more than just fireworks. Learn more about this landmark celebration at America250.org. Hi, it's Karen in Georgia from My Favorite Murder. We cruised around LA in the Hyundai Ionic 5 and dove into the fascinating life of actress and inventor Hedi Lamar.
Want the full story? Take a listen. She starts dating Howard Hughes. And in fact, she helps him design a faster plane.
So she finds the fastest bird and the fastest fish and sketches out a drawing of what the two would look like as a plane. And that becomes the plane that we know today. And he calls her a genius. Check out our new episode, Spotlighting Groundbreaking Innovators like Hedi Lamar and Billie Jean King. Presented by the Hyundai Ionic 5.
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Mom, are we there yet? 10 more minutes. Only 10 minutes? Can you drive slower? What's up with them today?
Lingo Kids. That app we downloaded last week? They love it. The games, this funny baby bot character. Kids, we're almost there.
No! With more than 4,000 interactive games, songs, and shows little ones can't get enough of, Lingo Kids is the number one entertainment platform for young kids. Why didn't we download this sooner? Everything kids love. Download it for free.
This is Lee Habib, and this is Our American Stories, the show where America is the star and the American people. To search for the Our American Stories podcast, go to the iHeartRadio app. Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts. Our next storyteller is an economist and best-selling author of 50 Things That Shaped the Modern Economy. Here is Tim Harford to tell the story about three of those.
starting with the plow. It's a wonderful example of how technology has profound effects on society. We think about Technologies as solving problems.
So, with the plow, what's the problem? I want to grow crops, the soil's not very fertile, I need to break up the surface of the soil, so I invent the plow. But of course, that's just the beginning. Then all the social changes begin.
So, with the case of the plow, it created a surplus, it created a harvest that you could store somewhere at the end of the year, which meant you had an incentive to form up in big gangs. These days, we call them armies and go and take the grain in someone else's barn. It meant that you could support An elite, people who thought, who planned, bureaucrats, accountants, priests. I mean, you could support cities, and with cities, of course, comes the whole of civilization.
So uh you could really say this is where the whole thing started, whether you like it or not, with the plow. You say this. There was a reason that American farmers were so hungry for barbed wire. A few years earlier in 1862, President Abraham Lincoln had signed the Homestead Act.
So that act said Anybody who wants to move to the to the west, to the midwest. and to put up a fence and to farm some land for five years. Men, women, freed slaves, anyone who who wants to do that, that land will be theirs at the end of a few years.
So it seems like a huge opportunity. The only trouble is when these new settlers get to the the great American prairie. They realize There is no wood, or certainly, there's not enough wood to spare putting up. and miles and miles of fences. And so if they want to claim land, and in particular to keep off these tough longhorn cattle from trampling all over the place, they need a source of fencing.
So this is one of those situations.
Sometimes people invent things and They never know what it's going to be used for.
So, the classic is the laser. The laser is invented and it's a solution looking for a problem. Complete opposite with barbed wire. Everybody knew what the problem was. It's how do we make Inexpensive fencing That doesn't require a lot of wood.
And there were huge efforts, lots and lots of patents for different fencing techniques emerged from the American Midwest at the time. Lots of people trying to solve the problem. The American government issuing reports saying we need fencing material. And then about 10 years later, J.F. Gliddon.
of DeKalb, Illinois. Produces this patent for this technology, and it is the first recognizably modern. Barbed wire where you have a little twist, you have two pieces of wire together, you twist one around the other. In order to keep these barbs secure so they don't slide up and down the wire. And that's really barbed wire as we know it even today.
And it was immediately a sensational hit.
So within a few years, the factories of Glidden and his associates were producing over 250,000 miles of barbed wire each year. But as with the plow, it created winners and it created losers. It completely reshaped. the American landscape. And it was just one of those things where The President Abraham Lincoln Had granted people property rights, and yet those property rights are really no good unless there's some practical technology for defending the property rights, and it was barbed wire.
Let's talk about Google search. I was trying to describe to my wife the other day, I was using a search engine on a newspaper website and it wasn't working very well. And I was saying, oh, Google works so well, this search engine's so bad, I can't Google anything.
So even when I was trying to describe the process of searching for something, not using Google, I was still using the verb. To Google.
So it's just transformed the way that we access the internet, that we access the World Wide Web. I'm old enough to remember. The world before Google and the internet before Google, and you would discuss strategies for how to find things.
So you would say, Oh, if you know, for example, that a particular person has been working on a problem and you want to find some information, if you search for their name, That might help. Because it's completely useless to search for an actual phrase or a bit of content, that's never going to work. But maybe if you search for someone's name, when Google came along, Suddenly, you would type stuff into the search bar and you would actually find it. And that has been. Completely transformative, and of course, it continues to reshape the economy because now it's become more and more local.
These search engines, they're on our phones.
So your attention is being directed. You want to search for a place to have a drink nearby. You've been locked out of your house. You need to find a locksmith. Google is trying to solve these problems, sometimes with great success.
sometimes not, an enormous amount of effort. Are devoted to where you come on that Google search ranking. If you're on page three of the Google search ranking, you're absolutely nowhere.
So it's an insight into the way that a particular technology can unlock a whole world of information out there. And you've been listening to Tim Harford, author of 50 Things That Shaped the Modern Economy. You heard him talk about the plow. Barbed wire, which was fascinating. What a story he told about all those Americans rushing the settlers.
to populate the American prairie, and there was not enough wood. To make fences to claim that land and protect the property rights of those landholders. And in comes barbed wire, 250,000 miles of barbed wire made every year, and it reshaped the American landscape. By the way, Harford was quick to point out the word patent, patent. He says patent, we say patent.
And of course, intellectual property rights and property rights of all kind are defended by patent rights. And last, of course, Google, which is now a verb. Tim Harford with 50 Things That Shape the Modern Economy The story of the plow. barbed wire, and Google. Here on our American story.
Lee Habib here again, and I'd like to encourage you to subscribe to our podcast on Apple Podcasts: the iHeartRadio app. Or wherever you get your podcasts. Every story we air here is uploaded there daily, and your support goes a long way to keeping the great stories you love from this show. Coming. Again, please subscribe to the Our American Stories podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
U This July 4th, come celebrate at America's Block Party, hosted by America 250. America's Block Party is a can't-miss 4th of July concert happening at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Experience music performances from major artists, patriotic tributes, and the kickoff to Giving Forth, helping to make July 4th the largest day of giving in American history. It's more than just fireworks. Learn more about this landmark celebration at America250.org.
I'm U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy. We all get distracted when we drive, but how we handle these distractions can be a matter of life or death. Please put your phones on silent and take a mental note to focus on driving. Fade 4 by Nitza.
Hi, it's Karen in Georgia from My Favorite Murder. We cruised around LA in the Hyundai Ionic 5 and dove into the fascinating life of actress and inventor Hedi Lamar. Want the full story? Take a listen. She starts dating Howard Hughes.
And in fact, she helps him design a faster plane.
So she finds the fastest bird and the fastest fish and sketches out a drawing of what the two would look like as a plane. And that becomes the plane that we know today. And he calls her a genius. Check out our new episode, Spotlighting Groundbreaking Innovators like Hedy Lamar and Billie Jean King. Presented by the Hyundai Ionic 5.
Goodbye. Mom, are we there yet? 10 more minutes. Only 10 minutes? Can you drive slower?
What's up with them today? Lingo Kids. That app we downloaded last week? They love it. The games, this funny baby bot character.
Kids, we're almost there. No! With more than 4,000 interactive games, songs, and shows little ones can't get enough of, Lingo Kids is the number one entertainment platform for young kids. Why didn't we download this sooner? Lingo!
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