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Orson Welles Broadcast Vs Reality

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Several people in 1938 believed Orson Welles broadcast to be true because of the sound effects, eyewitness accounts, and state of the world at the time of the broadcast. To begin, sound effects, such as crowd noises, police car sirens, and clanking of a piece of metal when the “spaceship” landed at Wilmuth Farm, enhanced the broadcast by making it more realistic. Because it was an audio broadcast, the realistic sounds influenced the listeners into thinking that the play is occurring in reality. In addition, eyewitness accounts are a characteristic of the broadcast that made it seem real. Carl Phillips, the news commentator, depicts a scene of “...state police… drawing up a cordon in front of the pit.” He also describes the faces of the aliens

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