Hollywood and the State: Media Manipulation from WWII to the Cold War
Media Mobilization in World War II (1939–1945)
During World War II, sovereign governments recognized the profound power of mass media to mobilize populations and engineer public consensus. To harness this resource, the United States government offered distinct privileges to capitalists and media tycoons. Through nationwide propaganda posters, Washington utilized an early form of carrot-and-stick diplomacy (“carrot and stick”), warning capitalists that German and Japanese triumphs would jeopardize free markets and labor unions. Concurrently, Hollywood transformed into a virtual subsidiary of the Department of Defense, operating under direct state directives.
This era marked the “Golden Age of Hollywood,” peaking in 1946 with historic theater attendance. Iconic cinematic masterpieces like Gone with the Wind (1939), The Wizard of Oz (1939), and Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939) deeply enchanted domestic and international audiences. Although contemporary media pundits initially predicted this boom would be temporary, the federal government actively incentivized further capital investments by systematically instilling public anxiety over Axis threats.
The state’s alignment with film conglomerates was starkly illustrated by the antitrust case against Paramount Pictures. Accused of monopolizing the industry in 1938, the government abruptly halted Paramount’s trial in 1940 via executive decree, allowing the studio to fulfill its assigned wartime propaganda role. The legal dispute was deferred until 1948, and its structural dissolution was delayed until 1950, serving as reciprocity for Paramount’s wartime compliance.
The Rise of Central Figures and William Wyler
This sociopolitical landscape saw the rise of prominent artistic figures, notably Ashkenazi Jewish emigrees fleeing Eastern European persecution and Nazi asset seizures. Integrating into American society, they utilized cinema to counter hostility and generate public empathy for their plight.
Among them, director William Wyler (1902–1981) convinced the Department of War to establish the First Motion Picture Unit. This specialized military branch produced over 400 training and recruitment films. When General Hap Arnold sought assistance to recruit 2 million airmen, industry titans stepped in; Jacob Warner (Warner Bros.) was commissioned as a colonel, and stars like James Stewart attained high military ranks. This collaboration yielded the Oscar-nominated recruitment film Winning Your Wings (1942).
Wyler’s cinematic legacy, fostered by Universal Studios founder Carl Laemmle and producer Paul Kohner, is marked by artistic ambiguity. His 1929 feature, Hell’s Heroes, subtly manipulated audience empathy toward lawbreakers who committed murder yet redeemed themselves through sacrificial acts. This approach laid the groundwork for Hollywood’s long-standing trend of romanticizing anti-heroes, a technique Wyler later utilized to subtly back Zionist causes. Wyler earned 13 Academy Award nominations, winning his first for Mrs. Miniver (1943), and produced critical post-war films like The Best Years of Our Lives (1946), highlighting veteran reintegration challenges.
The Cold War, Chicago Economics, and Anti-Heroes
The 1950s ushered in the Cold War, catalyzed by rising geopolitical tensions over Poland between Western leaders and Joseph Stalin. Following Franklin D. Roosevelt’s sudden passing, Harry S. Truman assumed the presidency. Truman’s tenure aligned with the rise of the Chicago School of Economics, which championed unbridled free-market capitalism and public-choice theory—a framework designed to align foreign economies with U.S. capital interests, as later demonstrated by the interventionist Chile Project.
[Mass Media Transformed] │ ├──► Consumption Boost: Fast food popularity & 10M+ TV sets by 1950. └──► Cultural Shift: The “Baby Boomer” generation embraces subversion.
In this climate, traditional, dignified protagonists were supplanted by anti-heroes embodied by James Dean, Marlon Brando, and Paul Newman. Mirroring concepts from Dostoevsky and Sartre, these morally ambiguous characters captivated youths, transforming their on-screen attire and behaviors into cultural trends. Marketers quickly commercialized this through Product Placement, embedding luxury items like Rolex watches and Aston Martin cars into major films. Concurrently, the rise of Rock ‘n’ Roll music accelerated societal rhythms, fostering rapid consumerism.
Walt Disney and FBI Collaboration
Confronting domestic anxieties, Walt Disney testified before the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) on October 24, 1947. He vehemently denounced communism, accusing labor leaders of orchestrating strikes.
By 1954, the FBI sought to expand its covert ties with Disney. In 1956, Disney offered to allocate segments of the Mickey Mouse Newsreel—viewed by 20 million Americans—to polish the FBI’s image among children, while dedicating Disneyland space to showcase bureau techniques. This 25-year partnership granted the FBI complete intelligence access to censor, vet, and alter Disney scripts through embedded internal agents, transforming entertainment into an apparatus of state surveillance.





























































