Wednesday, May 7, 2025

#popculture27: Louis Armstrong Turns His Hot Five Into a Hot Seven

The future jazz superstar, when he first headlined his own band, and the woman who helped him along the way.

by Rich Watson 


Louis Armstrong was a legend. He’s in the Halls of Fame for not just jazz, but rhythm and blues AND rock. He was a Grammy winner. He appeared in movies and TV, and was the first black radio show host in American history. There’s even an asteroid named after him.

In 1927, his career was still rising. After headlining his first band, he expanded it.

Wednesday, April 23, 2025

#popculture27: Helen Wills Moody Dominates the Tennis World, Inspires Art


The Michael Jordan of tennis in the early twentieth century was this unassuming Californian who also had ties to the art world.

by Rich Watson 


In a Hall of Fame career that spanned two decades, Helen Wills Moody had a pretty good 1927. 

The tennis superstar already had two Olympic gold medals on her shelf. But in that year, she won the women’s singles at Wimbledon (the first of four in a row and eight in twelve years) and the US (her fourth in five years), plus the Wimbledon doubles, and began a 180-match win streak.

One could argue that the story of American women athletes in the twentieth century begins with her.

Wednesday, April 9, 2025

#popculture27: Walt Disney Creates Oswald the Lucky Rabbit


The animation master’s first successful character, made for a different studio—and how his own studio acquired him.
by Rich Watson 

Before Disney, the company, became an entertainment juggernaut, there was Walt Disney, the animator. In 1927, a year before his most famous creation captured the world’s imagination, he achieved his first big success was with Oswald the Lucky Rabbit. 

He may not have become as big as the mouse or the duck, but in recent years, he’s made a comeback.