Life, 1929-10-04 · page 2 of 37
Life — October 4, 1929 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This is primarily a **Kolster Radio advertisement**, not a political cartoon. The page shows a 1930 radio cabinet (model K-43, priced at $175.00) being promoted as incorporating advanced features like "seven tubes and rectifier" and "screen grid tubes." The small illustration depicts well-dressed people approaching the radio, suggesting it's a social attraction—a common marketing approach of the era. The text emphasizes Kolster's technological superiority and invites readers to visit dealers to experience the "new Kolster Radio for 1930." There is **no political satire or social commentary** here. This is straightforward commercial advertising leveraging the excitement around radio technology's rapid advancement in the early 1930s. The "great things" referenced are technological features, not historical or political events.