MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE
BBC Focus - Science & Technology|June 2021
How a hand-holding charity stunt launched a social network, way back in the 1980s
ALEKS KROTOSKI
MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE

In 25 May 1986, 6.5 million people joined hands over 6,638km (4,125 miles) from New York to Los Angeles to do an impossible thing. They were part of Hands Across America, a fundraising stunt to improve awareness about hunger and homelessness in the world’s richest country. I was there. We held hands for 15 minutes. It was thrilling.

Hands Across America was organized by a team of people who had their internal threshold of reality skewed by successfully carrying off previously impossible things. The team was the USA for Africa, who, a year before had raised $64m (about £45m) for famine relief with the charity single We Are The World. As Marty Rogol, the executive director of the USA for Africa, explained to me, “we were probably a little full of ourselves in terms of what we could accomplish.”

This story is from the June 2021 edition of BBC Focus - Science & Technology.

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This story is from the June 2021 edition of BBC Focus - Science & Technology.

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