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As Postman illustrated, early American culture was used to reading and processing lengthy texts, as seen in the Lincoln-Douglas debates of 1858. These debates lasted three hours, featuring long, structured statements that compelled the audience to focus intensely for significant durations. Fast-forward to the Kennedy-Nixon debates in 1960, televised for the first time, and we witness a stark contrast. The format favored brevity, catering to an audience conditioned by television's immediacy, diminishing their capacity to engage in prolonged, thoughtful discourse.