Socolow, often working in collaboration with Jefferson Pooley, has written several articles (both scholarly and popular) dispelling the myth of
The War of the Worlds (1938 radio drama) mass panic. Their collaborative work argues that the panic was "almost non-existent" and significantly overstated by contemporaneous sensational press reporting, and, later, in academic scholarship. In a 2013 interview with
Gizmodo, Socolow denied the idea that he and Pooley originated this mass panic revisionism, citing at least four previous scholars who arrived at the same conclusion about the mass panic being largely a myth. Yet Pooley and Socolow's scholarship has been cited by
Snopes,
Time,
National Geographic, and others to dispel the "War of the Worlds," mass panic myth. In 2010, in
Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly, Socolow published a history of the
New York Times Op-ed page that explained how the Op-ed concept came in to being and detailed the new feature's immediate success. His research on Op-ed has been cited in journalism scholarship and referenced in
The Washington Post, the
Columbia Journalism Review,
Politico, and elsewhere. Socolow's 2016 book,
Six Minutes in Berlin: Broadcast Spectacle and Rowing Gold at the Nazi Olympics, chronicles how the German government invented global broadcast spectacle by developing new radio relay technologies. The book uses one specific Olympic triumph as a case study of the new effects of global Olympic broadcasting: the victory of the
University of Washington eight-oared crew. The book also shows how, ironically, the Nazi government made
Jesse Owens one of the world's first global athletic superstars. In 2018, Socolow was awarded the Broadcast Historian award by the Library of American Broadcasting Foundation and the
Broadcast Education Association for
Six Minutes in Berlin. Socolow was a Fulbright Research Scholar at the News & Media Research Centre at the
University of Canberra, in Australia, in 2019. In July, 2020, Socolow was named the Director of the McGillicuddy Humanities Center at the
University of Maine. ==Personal life==