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To paraphrase Al Jolson, “You ain’t seen nothin’ yet!” (If you’re a millennial, I have included an explanation at the end of the blog.) Perhaps the greatest blessing of the Internet is the ability for the ‘little people’ to be introduced to the world. If there were no Internet, these artists would never have had a worldwide audience. The world is entering a new age, a Golden Age. A decade ago, what we saw on the large and small screen was controlled by a dozen large film production companies in Los Angeles. What we read was determined by a dozen big publishers in New York. The latest fashions were showcased by a dozen clothing lines out of Milano. This is no longer the case. The cost of a low budget movie has fallen to no budget. Anyone can upload of a book and a one-woman fashion designer in Ames, Iowa, can showcase her clothing line by email. YouTubes like this one not only bring the world to your small screen, they drag your mind to places it has never been and could never go on its own. [Al Jolson – real name Asa Yoelson – was known in entertainment circles of the 1920s as the “King of Blackface Performers.” Blackface performers were whites who painted their faces black and pretended to be Negroes. Today he is best remembered for his blackface performance in the first talkie, a movie with sound. The movie was The Jazz Singer. When Jolson talked about the new media, the talkies, his memorable response was “You ain’t heard nothin’ yet!” implying that the ‘best was yet to come.’ He was right.)