Published: August 17, 2012
Summer and movies go together like peaches and cream. And that association is not just the product of Hollywood marketing: movie theaters were among the first places to install central air conditioning. In the early decades of the 20th century, the public flocked to the movies to escape August heat waves, and the tradition has stuck.
In this episode, the History Guys consider the advent of air conditioning, and explore its far-reaching implications on everything from architecture and leisure to demography and politics. They also look at what happened when stoves became widely available in the mid-19th century, and how technology altered Americans’ way of life. How did America become the “land of comfort”? And what lessons does the history of climate control hold for us today?

dan barry
an important American from Maine did much for changing climate in the US and Europe. He did make a major political error.
Ask the 18th Century guy about Count Rumford, a redesigner of the fireplace.
dan barry
Ask the 19th century guy about one of the most famous Twain essays on the comfort of the the German stove. A major reader and converser he discussed the ease of use of the stove.
Now the radio is talking about ice, the Mainiacs ( Maine residents in a very local jargon) were cutting trees, making sawdust and cutting ice. They shipped it to India for gin and tonics. (not for Katherine Moore)
Ellen Dadisman
The guy who invented refrigeration (air con) is one Florida’s two statues in Statuary Hall.
Peirce Phelps
Sometimes the AC unit quits working at my home, i might as well go to the movies to beat the heat like the old days. God! I need to find a reliable technician to repair my unit.
Rodriguez
Most of the Movie theater are using central air conditioning but nowadays most of the places they are using central air conditioning, even many restaurant and bars also using the same;.