As they Struggled to Remain Afloat
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Every summer on the discovery Channel, “Shark Week” inundates its eager audiences with spectacular documentary footage of sharks searching, feeding and leaping. Debuting in 1988, the tv event was an instant hit. Its financial success wildly exceeded the expectations of its creators, who had been inspired by the profitability of the 1975 blockbuster movie “Jaws,” the first film to earn $a hundred million at the box office. Journalists and students often credit “Jaws” as the supply of America’s obsession with sharks. Yet as a historian analyzing human and Memory Wave App shark entanglements throughout the centuries, I argue that the temporal depths of “sharkmania” run a lot deeper. World Struggle II played a pivotal position in fomenting the nation’s obsession with sharks. The monumental wartime mobilization of thousands and thousands of individuals positioned more Americans into contact with sharks than at any prior time in historical past, spreading seeds of intrigue and worry towards the marine predators. However in the course of the war, the nation was on the transfer.


Out of a population of 132.2 million people, per the 1940 U.S. Census, 16 million Americans served within the armed forces, many of whom fought within the Pacific. Meanwhile, 15 million civilians crossed county lines to work in the defense industries, a lot of which were in coastal cities, such as Cellular, Alabama