American popular culture and its effects on the global community is a hiding plain site idea. The United States has grown into an “I want it now” belief system. The United States has somewhat perfected this idea, from our fast food to our fast everything. But should everyone live in such a luxurious attitude, is the United States popular culture and ideal that the rest of the world should live by? Is this just another phase in our modern society’s history? Lane Crothers’ book Globalization and American Popular Culture shows us the history of America’s rise to popular culture power and how most people are wanting to become Americans without living in the United States. But is this what the world needs or is this just another way for America to control the world and spread our democracy. …show more content…
“By 1998 trade in movies, music, and television programming had become the leading U.S. export…this was true even without factoring in the economic and cultural power of American brands like McDonald’s, Levi’s, and Starbucks, American pop culture is a global phenomenon.” Crothers first compares the two ideas, globalization “…the profound economic, social, political, and cultural changes going on in the modern world…” and popular culture “…the movies, music, and television programs…” how globalization seems “…heavy…” and popular culture seems “…light…” then explains how at the end of the Cold War and the advancements of new technologies “…the internet, cellular phones, and small dish satellites television systems have allowed American popular culture access to an ever bigger global