Imagine the biggest movie star in the world who is also the nation's most trusted political commentator, read daily by 40 million people, and the undisputed voice of the common man. That was Will Rogers, a level of centralized cultural gravity we simply don't see anymore. And he was born not a U.S. citizen, but a citizen of the Cherokee Nation.
This deep dive explores how an Oklahoma trick roper with a profoundly complex heritage became an anchor of stability through the Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression. He roasted the most powerful politicians to their faces, stayed universally beloved, pioneered the mass parasocial relationship, and died at the absolute peak of his influence.
The clashing legacies in his household, his mother's Trail of Tears survivors and his Confederate slave-owning father
How missing rope tricks became misdirection to slip razor-sharp political critique past audiences, including President Wilson
His domination of vaudeville, 71 films, 4,000 newspaper columns, and a radio show timed by an alarm clock
His 1928 mock presidential run on the Anti-Bunk Party, promising to resign if elected
The 1934 on-air racial slur controversy and the fatal 1935 Alaska plane crash with aviator Wiley Post
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