George Orwell uses the 12-hour and 24-hour dials to symbolize the old and new worlds in his novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
analog | Woman's Hour | 25th Hour | 12-hour clock | Rush Hour 2 | Analog Science Fiction and Fact | Dial M for Murder | The Colgate Comedy Hour | Rush Hour 3 | Dial Corporation | Children's Hour | Analog Devices | Analog | The Children's Hour | Rush Hour | The Original Amateur Hour | Hancock's Half Hour | Dial Press | 24 Hour Party People | Zero Hour! | This Hour Has 22 Minutes | The Hour | structural analog | Darkest Hour (band) | Darkest Hour | Analog signal | 24-hour news cycle | Zero Hour (comics) | The Violet Hour | The United States Steel Hour |