Flappers, Flickers & Fallout: The Decade That Broke Reality Audiobook By Dylan Peters cover art

Flappers, Flickers & Fallout: The Decade That Broke Reality

How the Roaring 1920s Accidentally Invented Modern Pop Culture, Shocked Its Own Witnesses, and Rewired Film, TV, and Society Forever

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Flappers, Flickers & Fallout: The Decade That Broke Reality

By: Dylan Peters
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The 1920s promised champagne, jazz, and a shiny modern future. What it delivered instead was a cultural chain reaction that still hasn’t stopped.

Flappers, Flickers & Fallout pulls back the curtain on the decade that quietly invented the world we now live in—on screens, in celebrity culture, in politics, in moral panics, in advertising, in entertainment, and even in how we argue about truth itself.

From silent film scandals that rewrote censorship forever, to Prohibition accidentally creating the gangster mythos, to radio turning politics into performance, to how the 1920s reshaped fame, beauty, crime, romance, and “shock value”—this book reveals how one restless decade set off cultural aftershocks that would echo through Hollywood, television, and mass media for a century.

Even better? Many of the people who lived through the 1920s would be genuinely stunned by what their era actually caused: modern celebrity worship, reality-style scandal cycles, culture wars, brand-driven entertainment, and the birth of media outrage as a business model.

This is not a dry history book. It’s a fast, fascinating, and often jaw-dropping guided tour through the hidden consequences of the Jazz Age—where every chapter connects real, verifiable events to the world we recognize today.
If you like cultural history, media history, shocking true stories, and “wait… that started when?!” moments, this book is going to be dangerously hard to put down.
Americas Popular Culture Social Sciences United States Funny Entertainment
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