The Good
Call Me a Cab
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- California, USA
Having watched many films and some television shows (these mostly from the '50s and '60s), I have noticed that almost unanimously, the actors and actresses involved tended to speak in a way that is different from the way their modern counterparts would go about it. I would use the term accent (it sounds almost British, but these are Americans I'm referring to), but this manner of speaking seems to have also been something of an affectation, and both the young and old tended to speak like this. Many newscasters especially, spoke this way as well. It's difficult to describe, but for an example, compare any Golden Era film with a later one, perhaps from the 1970s or '80s, and there is a difference, but go ahead a number of years, and that difference is even more pronounced. Could a few of you here explain the background of this phenomenon? These nearly dead speech patterns of old films or TV seem more intelligent than the more "relaxed" or casual form of speech prevalent on the screen today.