
Amazing Stories May 1927 — Televised Woman Teleportation Cover
In an era electrified by radio, telephone, and the promise of television, this cover captures America's obsession with transmitting the human body itself across invisible waves. A wide-eyed man in headphones peers at a miniaturized woman projected or transmitted through a camera-like device onto a glowing platform — science as séance, technology as magic. Gernsback's Amazing Stories was selling a utopia of benevolent invention, where the parlor table becomes a portal to the impossible.
The image of a tiny living woman being transmitted through a camera device onto a glowing pedestal is quintessential Gernsback-era pulp wish-fulfillment — technology as wonder, not threat. The bold yellow masthead and wide-eyed observer anchor it firmly in peak Golden Age pulp visual energy.
“May AMAZING STORIES 25 Cents WRNY HUGO GERNSBACK EDITOR Stories by H.G. WELLS A. MERRITT EXPERIMENTER PUBLISHING COMPANY, NEW YORK, PUBLISHERS OF RADIO NEWS · SCIENCE & INVENTION · RADIO REVIEW · AMAZING STORIES · MONEY MAKING · RADIO INTERNACIONAL”





