The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever.

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever.

NYT critics pick the most American things ever — and their answers range from M&Ms and Survivor to a MAGA rap song called "Trump Trump Baby."

Jul 5, 2026 43:02 Difficulty: Beginner Played

TL;DR

A Fourth of July special from The Daily asks NYT critics, editors, and columnists to name the most American thing on their beat. From Aaron Copland's "Rodeo" and the M&M's origin story to Survivor, Grand Theft Auto, Walt Whitman's "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," and a MAGA rap song by Forgiato Blow, the answers range from warm to unsettling. The single most useful takeaway: America is not only what you look at — it's also what you avert your eyes from.

#American identity #pop culture criticism #food history #literary criticism #film criticism #music criticism #cultural contradiction #democracy #capitalism critique #sorority culture #classical music #MAGA culture #Walt Whitman #TV criticism #Fourth of July #America #Americana #culture #music #film #television #food #literature #sports #technology #capitalism #identity #NYT critics #pop culture #history #250th birthday

In celebration of America's 250th birthday, The Daily asked NYT critics, columnists, and editors what the most American thing on their beat is. Answers range from Aaron Copland's Rodeo and the M&M to Survivor, Grand Theft Auto, the Statue of Liberty, and a MAGA rap song.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with a TikTok advertisement celebrating curiosity, learning, and connection on the platform. Michael Barbaro then steps in to frame the day's special: in celebration of America's 250th birthday, The Daily asked colleagues from across the newsroom — critics of books, movies, TV, science, sports, wellness, and food — one deceptively simple question: what is the most American thing on your beat? A rapid-fire montage of their answers — Survivor, Grand Theft Auto, demolition derby, There Will Be Blood — sets the tone for an eclectic, occasionally unsettling, and consistently illuminating journey through American culture.

  • Before diving into full segments, the episode delivers a dizzying preview: TV critic James Poniewozik pitches Survivor, a game columnist goes for Grand Theft Auto, the book critic teases a parking book, there's a mention of There Will Be Blood, August Wilson, demolition derbies, and the trap-like impossibility of picking a single most American novel. The montage deliberately overwhelms — that collision of high and low, serious and absurd, is itself the argument the episode will spend its next 45 minutes making.

  • Joshua Barone makes an elegant case for Aaron Copland's Rodeo as the definitive American classical work. Copland was writing in the 1940s, a moment when American composers were actively trying to carve out a sound distinct from European tradition. His method was to go deep into folk music: Rodeo's first movement draws on 'If He'd Be a Buckaroo by His Trade,' and a waltz section is built from 'I Ride an Old Paint,' a tune Woody Guthrie also recorded. The result created the aesthetic template we now call Americana. Its finale, 'Hoe Down,' became so embedded in mass culture that it ended up as the theme for the 'Beef, It's What's for Dinner' campaign in the 1990s — a trajectory from ballet stage to barbecue backyard that Barone finds perfectly, unselfconsciously American.

  • In just a few sentences, Vanessa Friedman reframes American fashion identity entirely. The conventional wisdom is that jeans and a t-shirt are the American look. But Friedman points out that when you ask people outside the United States how they spot an American, the answer is always workout wear — leggings, sports bras, athleisure. It's a small observation that lands with surprising force: the look America exports to the world is not cowboy mythology but the gym.

  • Eric Piepenburg, the NYT horror film writer, makes the case that only America could produce Get Out — a film that weaponizes the genre against liberal America's self-image. The monster isn't some external threat; it's the racism that well-meaning, progressive Americans convinced themselves they'd transcended. Piepenburg's nomination is a pointed one: the most American horror film is about the horror of American self-delusion. Kevin Roose briefly follows with Amazon Prime as the most American technology, defined by a premise so fundamentally American it almost doesn't need explaining: people want things fast, cheap, and all the time.

  • Mikado Murphy, film editor and self-described resident roller coaster enthusiast at the Times, makes the case for The Beast at Kings Island in Ohio. A massive wooden coaster, it captures something Murphy sees as deeply American: the sensation of something being simultaneously excessive and addictive. Too much, but you can't get enough. It's a small, offbeat segment that prepares the listener for the episode's broader thesis — that America is best understood through its excesses rather than its ideals.

  • James Poniewozik opens with a personal declaration — in his family, Survivor is what sports is in other families — and then builds a genuine critical argument. The show's premise is a compressed version of the American founding: disparate people from different backgrounds are dropped into a hostile environment and told to create a functioning society. They form alliances, betray each other, compete for resources, and occasionally show stunning grace. It's a zero-sum game, as Poniewozik acknowledges, and not always a flattering one. But it is filled with a vital, electric energy that he argues is distinctly American: not the red-white-and-blue propaganda version, but the real, complicated, sometimes ugly, sometimes genuinely moving version.

  • Jancy Dunn's contribution is brief but incisive. The Well newsletter, she explains, perpetually oscillates between two imperatives that pull in opposite directions: how to optimize productivity and how to get real rest. That both demands live comfortably side by side in American wellness culture, without apparent irony, is itself the most American thing about it. It's an observation that resonates far beyond wellness writing — it touches the entire structure of American working life.

  • Jennifer Salih makes an unexpected and quietly radical choice. Paved Paradise, Henry Grabar's book about the American obsession with parking, sounds niche until Salih explains its scope: Grabar uses the parking lot as a lens through which every major American urban problem becomes legible. Why can't cities build affordable housing? Parking requirements. How are resources allocated in American neighborhoods? Around parking. The book, Salih says, made her understand the country in a new way — and that quality of revelation, she implies, is what makes it the most American nonfiction book.

  • Bill Wasik admits his team worked backwards from a gut feeling about what felt most American, and landed on the nationally televised rocket launch as the phenomenon — then traced it to Goddard's discovery of liquid rocket fuel as the enabling invention. There's something honest and self-aware about the reasoning: the scientific discovery is important, but what makes it most American is the spectacle it created, the way it became a collective national ritual of fire and noise and wonder. Wasik's deadpan observation that 'big explosions and flames and smoke — what could be more American?' lands somewhere between pride and self-deprecation.

  • Kim Severson promises to tell the story of 20th-century America through a single candy, and she delivers. The M&M begins with Forrest Mars, estranged son of the Milky Way inventor, who spots British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War eating heat-resistant chocolate balls. Back in the U.S., lacking raw materials, he partners with Bruce Murrie, a Hershey heir — the first two nepo babies in American candy history — and creates the M&M in 1941. The U.S. Army is the first customer; returning soldiers create a national market. In 1954, the peanut M&M arrives, requiring a custom peanut variety that Mars eventually engineers with the University of Georgia. Decades later, the brown mascot M&M's stiletto heels become a flashpoint in the culture wars, and then the purple M&M's inclusivity message deepens the controversy further. Severson closes with M&M's current struggle to remove artificial dyes under MAHA pressure — and lands her thesis: the story of American food is the story of innovation, money, and an insatiable need for sweetness.

  • The literary segment runs two tracks simultaneously. MJ Franklin, an editor at the Book Review, chooses Honorée Fanonne Jeffers' sprawling novel The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois for the way it weaves a contemporary girl's coming-of-age with her ancestors' lives on the land that became Georgia, demonstrating that American history is not a distant past but a living presence that shapes how people experience the present. Helen Shaw, chief theater critic, picks August Wilson's Century Cycle — ten plays, each set in a different decade of the 20th century among Black families in Pittsburgh's Hill District — as a statement about what the African American experience was facing in the 20th century and what it was capable of repairing in the spirit. Both choices center Black American life as the essential American story.

  • Alissa Wilkinson's case for There Will Be Blood as the most American film is built on inversion. The Western genre typically frames the lone entrepreneur pushing into untamed land as heroic. Daniel Plainview, Daniel Day-Lewis's oil magnate, does everything the mythology promises: he succeeds spectacularly, builds an empire, acquires a mansion complete with a bowling alley. But Paul Thomas Anderson refuses the triumphant ending. Plainview is utterly destroyed — not financially, but as a human being. Wilkinson argues this makes it the most honest American movie: it doesn't say capitalism is simply bad, it traces what happens when the ideals of unfettered liberty and the pursuit of power are taken to their absolute end. The parallels to 21st-century entrepreneurialism, she notes, are hard to miss.

  • Two contributors arrive at the same American truth from different angles. Zachary Small sees Grand Theft Auto — a game where you're dropped into a fictionalized American city and given total criminal freedom — as the ultimate expression of the American impulse to test limits and see what you can get away with. Elisabeth Vincentelli, who has witnessed demolition derbies in person, describes losing her mind screaming as cars smashed into each other until only one remained. Both find the American character in sanctioned mayhem: the pleasure of destruction within a structured frame, the P.T. Barnum instinct for spectacle.

Americana
A cultural aesthetic celebrating traditional American rural life, folk music, and frontier history, often associated with nostalgia for an idealized national past.
Nepo baby
Informal term for a person who benefits professionally from a famous or powerful parent or family member; used here to describe Forrest Mars and Bruce Murrie as the first generation of candy-industry heirs.
Post-racial
The contested idea that racism no longer significantly affects social outcomes, often attributed to liberal America after the election of Barack Obama; used critically in the context of Get Out.
Century Cycle
August Wilson's sequence of ten plays, each set in a different decade of the 20th century, chronicling the African American experience in Pittsburgh's Hill District.
Meritocracy
A system in which advancement is based on individual ability and effort rather than class or social connection; invoked here to describe the aspirational but often illusory promise of sorority rush.
Georgia-09B
A high-oleic, TSWV-resistant peanut variety developed by the University of Georgia in partnership with Mars to meet the quality requirements of the peanut M&M.
High-oleic
Describes a variety of peanut or oil with elevated oleic acid content, which significantly extends shelf life and reduces rancidity — critical for a mass-market candy like the peanut M&M.
Jingoistic
Characterised by aggressive or extreme patriotism, especially with a bellicose foreign policy stance; used to describe the narrator of Randy Newman's 'Political Science.'
Smithereens
Small fragments or pieces; used colloquially to mean complete destruction, as in bombing the world 'into smithereens' in Newman's satirical song.
Armature
The internal skeleton or framework of a sculpture; here referring to Gustave Eiffel's iron structure that supports the Statue of Liberty's copper exterior.
Malleability
The property of a material that allows it to be shaped or bent without breaking; used by Jason Ferrago to describe the copper of the Statue of Liberty and, by extension, the flexibility of American ideals.
Appalachian Spring
A 1944 ballet by Martha Graham set to music by Aaron Copland, depicting a frontier couple beginning their life together; considered one of the most American works in the dance canon.
Demimonde
Not used literally here, but 'social capital' is the episode's equivalent: the informal, often invisible network of connections, status, and influence that determines access to exclusive social groups like sororities.
Geopolitical
Relating to the influence of geography and power on international politics; used by Jason Zinoman to contrast Randy Newman's irrational motivations for bombing the world with legitimate strategic reasoning.
Utopian
Relating to an ideally perfect place or society; A.O. Scott uses it to describe Whitman's vision of America as a democratic community defined by shared aspiration rather than shared origin.
MAHA
Make America Healthy Again; a political and public health movement associated with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. that advocates removing artificial additives from food, relevant to M&M's effort to eliminate synthetic dyes.
Unfettered
Not restrained or controlled; used multiple times to describe the unchecked pursuit of liberty, capitalism, and power in There Will Be Blood.
Quintessentially
Representing the most perfect or typical example of a quality; used throughout the episode to describe things that most purely embody the American character.

Chapter 3 · 02:02

Classical Music: Aaron Copland's Rodeo

Joshua Barone makes an elegant case for Aaron Copland's Rodeo as the definitive American classical work. Copland was writing in the 1940s, a moment when American composers were actively trying to carve out a sound distinct from European tradition. His method was to go deep into folk music: Rodeo's first movement draws on 'If He'd Be a Buckaroo by His Trade,' and a waltz section is built from 'I Ride an Old Paint,' a tune Woody Guthrie also recorded. The result created the aesthetic template we now call Americana. Its finale, 'Hoe Down,' became so embedded in mass culture that it ended up as the theme for the 'Beef, It's What's for Dinner' campaign in the 1990s — a trajectory from ballet stage to barbecue backyard that Barone finds perfectly, unselfconsciously American.

Claims made here

Aaron Copland's 'Rodeo' incorporates the folk tune 'If He'd Be a Buckaroo by His Trade' in its first movement.

Joshua Barone no source cited

The late-night waltz in Rodeo is based on the tune 'I Ride an Old Paint,' a song also recorded by Woody Guthrie.

Joshua Barone no source cited

The beef industry used 'Hoe Down' from Copland's Rodeo in their 'Beef, It's What's for Dinner' advertising campaign in the 1990s.

Joshua Barone no source cited

Music
Aaron Copland's Rodeo: The Sound America Made for Itself

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026 Music

Aaron Copland didn't invent Americana — he excavated it from folk songs already in the American soil. His ballet Rodeo, built on tunes Woody Guthrie also recorded, created the vibe of a nation trying to distinguish itself from Europe, and its 'Hoe Down' finale ended up selling beef on national TV. That's the arc from serious art form to mass culture in one piece.

Music
Data point 1940s

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026

Joshua Barone argues Copland's Rodeo is the most American classical piece because it created the vibe of Americana by drawing directly on folk tunes, bridging highbrow and popular culture.

Chapter 4 · 05:40

Fashion: Workout Wear as the Real American Uniform

In just a few sentences, Vanessa Friedman reframes American fashion identity entirely. The conventional wisdom is that jeans and a t-shirt are the American look. But Friedman points out that when you ask people outside the United States how they spot an American, the answer is always workout wear — leggings, sports bras, athleisure. It's a small observation that lands with surprising force: the look America exports to the world is not cowboy mythology but the gym.

Chapter 5 · 06:02

Horror Film: Get Out as America's Mirror

Eric Piepenburg, the NYT horror film writer, makes the case that only America could produce Get Out — a film that weaponizes the genre against liberal America's self-image. The monster isn't some external threat; it's the racism that well-meaning, progressive Americans convinced themselves they'd transcended. Piepenburg's nomination is a pointed one: the most American horror film is about the horror of American self-delusion. Kevin Roose briefly follows with Amazon Prime as the most American technology, defined by a premise so fundamentally American it almost doesn't need explaining: people want things fast, cheap, and all the time.

Chapter 7 · 11:56

Television: CBS's Survivor

James Poniewozik opens with a personal declaration — in his family, Survivor is what sports is in other families — and then builds a genuine critical argument. The show's premise is a compressed version of the American founding: disparate people from different backgrounds are dropped into a hostile environment and told to create a functioning society. They form alliances, betray each other, compete for resources, and occasionally show stunning grace. It's a zero-sum game, as Poniewozik acknowledges, and not always a flattering one. But it is filled with a vital, electric energy that he argues is distinctly American: not the red-white-and-blue propaganda version, but the real, complicated, sometimes ugly, sometimes genuinely moving version.

Society & Culture
Survivor: America's Most Honest Reality Show

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026 Society & Culture

A bunch of strangers from different places are dropped into a hostile environment and told to build a society. They lie, they fight, they form alliances, they occasionally show stunning grace — and only one person wins. James Poniewozik says that is not a game show, that is America.

Chapter 8 · 17:22

Wellness: The Productivity-vs-Rest Paradox

Jancy Dunn's contribution is brief but incisive. The Well newsletter, she explains, perpetually oscillates between two imperatives that pull in opposite directions: how to optimize productivity and how to get real rest. That both demands live comfortably side by side in American wellness culture, without apparent irony, is itself the most American thing about it. It's an observation that resonates far beyond wellness writing — it touches the entire structure of American working life.

Chapter 9 · 18:35

Nonfiction Books: Parking as the Root of American Urban Crisis

Jennifer Salih makes an unexpected and quietly radical choice. Paved Paradise, Henry Grabar's book about the American obsession with parking, sounds niche until Salih explains its scope: Grabar uses the parking lot as a lens through which every major American urban problem becomes legible. Why can't cities build affordable housing? Parking requirements. How are resources allocated in American neighborhoods? Around parking. The book, Salih says, made her understand the country in a new way — and that quality of revelation, she implies, is what makes it the most American nonfiction book.

Claims made here

Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World by Henry Grabar argues that major American urban issues including affordable housing and resource allocation all trace back to the American fixation on parking.

Jennifer Salih Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World by Henry Grabar

Robert Goddard's discovery of liquid rocket fuel is, according to the NYT science desk, the most American scientific discovery because when combined with television it created the nationally televised rocket launch phenomenon.

Bill Wasik no source cited

Chapter 10 · 20:54

Science: Robert Goddard's Liquid Rocket Fuel

Bill Wasik admits his team worked backwards from a gut feeling about what felt most American, and landed on the nationally televised rocket launch as the phenomenon — then traced it to Goddard's discovery of liquid rocket fuel as the enabling invention. There's something honest and self-aware about the reasoning: the scientific discovery is important, but what makes it most American is the spectacle it created, the way it became a collective national ritual of fire and noise and wonder. Wasik's deadpan observation that 'big explosions and flames and smoke — what could be more American?' lands somewhere between pride and self-deprecation.

Society & Culture
Bama Rush: Democracy in a Ruffled Skort

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026 Society & Culture

The promise: anyone can join. The reality: it depends on your jewelry, your network, and your social capital. Madis Malone Kircher argues that Bama Rush is the most American internet phenomenon precisely because it plays out this national contradiction in real time, in front of millions, on TikTok.

Chapter 11 · 27:05

Food: The M&M as America's Greatest Candy Story

Kim Severson promises to tell the story of 20th-century America through a single candy, and she delivers. The M&M begins with Forrest Mars, estranged son of the Milky Way inventor, who spots British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War eating heat-resistant chocolate balls. Back in the U.S., lacking raw materials, he partners with Bruce Murrie, a Hershey heir — the first two nepo babies in American candy history — and creates the M&M in 1941. The U.S. Army is the first customer; returning soldiers create a national market. In 1954, the peanut M&M arrives, requiring a custom peanut variety that Mars eventually engineers with the University of Georgia. Decades later, the brown mascot M&M's stiletto heels become a flashpoint in the culture wars, and then the purple M&M's inclusivity message deepens the controversy further. Severson closes with M&M's current struggle to remove artificial dyes under MAHA pressure — and lands her thesis: the story of American food is the story of innovation, money, and an insatiable need for sweetness.

History
The M&M: A Complete History of American Capitalism

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026 History

Two nepo babies from rival candy empires create the M&M in 1941. The U.S. Army becomes their first client. Soldiers come home as loyal customers. A custom peanut variety is engineered at a Georgia university. Then the spokes-candies get flat shoes and trigger a national culture war. Kim Severson's M&M story is the story of America.

Chapter 12 · 36:53

Books & Theater: Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois and August Wilson's Century Cycle

The literary segment runs two tracks simultaneously. MJ Franklin, an editor at the Book Review, chooses Honorée Fanonne Jeffers' sprawling novel The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois for the way it weaves a contemporary girl's coming-of-age with her ancestors' lives on the land that became Georgia, demonstrating that American history is not a distant past but a living presence that shapes how people experience the present. Helen Shaw, chief theater critic, picks August Wilson's Century Cycle — ten plays, each set in a different decade of the 20th century among Black families in Pittsburgh's Hill District — as a statement about what the African American experience was facing in the 20th century and what it was capable of repairing in the spirit. Both choices center Black American life as the essential American story.

Claims made here

August Wilson's Century Cycle consists of ten plays, each set in a different decade of the 20th century, following loosely related Black families in Pittsburgh's Hill District.

Helen Shaw no source cited

Arts
Data point 10 plays

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026

Helen Shaw nominated August Wilson's Century Cycle — 10 plays set in each decade of the 20th century — as the most American play for its comprehensive portrait of Black American life.

Chapter 13 · 40:35

Film: There Will Be Blood and American Capitalism's Dark End

Alissa Wilkinson's case for There Will Be Blood as the most American film is built on inversion. The Western genre typically frames the lone entrepreneur pushing into untamed land as heroic. Daniel Plainview, Daniel Day-Lewis's oil magnate, does everything the mythology promises: he succeeds spectacularly, builds an empire, acquires a mansion complete with a bowling alley. But Paul Thomas Anderson refuses the triumphant ending. Plainview is utterly destroyed — not financially, but as a human being. Wilkinson argues this makes it the most honest American movie: it doesn't say capitalism is simply bad, it traces what happens when the ideals of unfettered liberty and the pursuit of power are taken to their absolute end. The parallels to 21st-century entrepreneurialism, she notes, are hard to miss.

Chapter 14 · 45:13

Video Games & Live Events: Grand Theft Auto and Demolition Derby

Two contributors arrive at the same American truth from different angles. Zachary Small sees Grand Theft Auto — a game where you're dropped into a fictionalized American city and given total criminal freedom — as the ultimate expression of the American impulse to test limits and see what you can get away with. Elisabeth Vincentelli, who has witnessed demolition derbies in person, describes losing her mind screaming as cars smashed into each other until only one remained. Both find the American character in sanctioned mayhem: the pleasure of destruction within a structured frame, the P.T. Barnum instinct for spectacle.

Claims made here

Forgiato Blow's 'Trump Trump Baby' was released in July 2024, a few months before Donald Trump was reelected to the White House.

John Caramanica no source cited

The M&M was created in 1941 by Forrest Mars and Bruce Murrie, son of a Hershey executive, after Forrest Mars observed British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War eating chocolate balls coated in hard candy.

Kim Severson no source cited

Forrest Mars discovered the concept for M&Ms while observing British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War eating chocolate coated in hard candy shells to prevent melting in heat.

Kim Severson no source cited

The first M&M contract was with the U.S. government to supply candy rations to soldiers in World War II.

Kim Severson no source cited

Mars worked with agriculture specialists at the University of Georgia in the 2000s to develop the Georgia-09B peanut variety specifically for the peanut M&M.

Kim Severson UGA's Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development

M&M's is attempting to remove artificial dyes from their products in response to the MAHA (Make America Healthy Again) movement, and can reliably recreate red and yellow with natural ingredients like turmeric and beets but struggles with blue and brown.

Kim Severson no source cited

The Statue of Liberty's copper shell is less than an eighth of an inch thick.

Jason Ferrago no source cited

The internal armature of the Statue of Liberty was designed by Gustave Eiffel, who also designed the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

Jason Ferrago no source cited

Society & Culture
Grand Theft Auto vs. Demolition Derby: Two Flavors of American Mayhem

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026 Society & Culture

One is a video game that lets you commit any crime in a fictionalized American city. The other is a real arena sport where the whole point is to destroy everyone else's car. Zachary Small and Elisabeth Vincentelli each came to the same conclusion from different angles: America loves sanctioned mayhem.

Music
Data point 1972

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026

Jason Zinoman argues Randy Newman's satirical song about bombing the world captures the resentment of the powerful who still feels like the underdog — a distinctly American psychology.

Music
Data point 2024

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026

John Caramanica picked Trump Trump Baby by Forgiato Blow as the most American pop song because it accurately reflects a segment of American culture and politics that cannot be ignored.

History
Data point 1941

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026

Forrest Mars and Bruce Murrie (son of a Hershey executive) partnered to create the M&M in 1941, making them arguably the first two nepo babies in American candy.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

Show stoppers

History
The M&M: A Complete History of American Capitalism

The Most American Episode of The Daily, Ever. · Jul 5, 2026 History

Two nepo babies from rival candy empires create the M&M in 1941. The U.S. Army becomes their first client. Soldiers come home as loyal customers. A custom peanut variety is engineered at a Georgia university. Then the spokes-candies get flat shoes and trigger a national culture war. Kim Severson's M&M story is the story of America.

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1 / 14 cited (7%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Aaron Copland's 'Rodeo' incorporates the folk tune 'If He'd Be a Buckaroo by His Trade' in its first movement.

Joshua Barone no source cited

The late-night waltz in Rodeo is based on the tune 'I Ride an Old Paint,' a song also recorded by Woody Guthrie.

Joshua Barone no source cited

The beef industry used 'Hoe Down' from Copland's Rodeo in their 'Beef, It's What's for Dinner' advertising campaign in the 1990s.

Joshua Barone no source cited

The M&M was created in 1941 by Forrest Mars and Bruce Murrie, son of a Hershey executive, after Forrest Mars observed British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War eating chocolate balls coated in hard candy.

Kim Severson no source cited

The first M&M contract was with the U.S. government to supply candy rations to soldiers in World War II.

Kim Severson no source cited

Mars worked with agriculture specialists at the University of Georgia in the 2000s to develop the Georgia-09B peanut variety specifically for the peanut M&M.

Kim Severson UGA's Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development

M&M's is attempting to remove artificial dyes from their products in response to the MAHA (Make America Healthy Again) movement, and can reliably recreate red and yellow with natural ingredients like turmeric and beets but struggles with blue and brown.

Kim Severson no source cited

The Statue of Liberty's copper shell is less than an eighth of an inch thick.

Jason Ferrago no source cited

The internal armature of the Statue of Liberty was designed by Gustave Eiffel, who also designed the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

Jason Ferrago no source cited

August Wilson's Century Cycle consists of ten plays, each set in a different decade of the 20th century, following loosely related Black families in Pittsburgh's Hill District.

Helen Shaw no source cited

Forgiato Blow's 'Trump Trump Baby' was released in July 2024, a few months before Donald Trump was reelected to the White House.

John Caramanica no source cited

Robert Goddard's discovery of liquid rocket fuel is, according to the NYT science desk, the most American scientific discovery because when combined with television it created the nationally televised rocket launch phenomenon.

Bill Wasik no source cited

Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World by Henry Grabar argues that major American urban issues including affordable housing and resource allocation all trace back to the American fixation on parking.

Jennifer Salih Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World by Henry Grabar

Forrest Mars discovered the concept for M&Ms while observing British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War eating chocolate coated in hard candy shells to prevent melting in heat.

Kim Severson no source cited

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