Across the country, Americans were transfixed Thursday by television coverage of Christine Blasey Ford and Brett Kavanaugh as they testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee. Ford spoke of her allegation that the Supreme Court nominee had sexually assaulted her when they were teenagers in 1982. Kavanaugh vehemently denied it.Such was the drama that President Trump put off a scheduled meeting with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, the White House issuing a statement that the president "spoke with Rod Rosenstein ... and they plan to meet next week. They do not want to do anything to interfere with the hearing."After hours of emotional testimony and sometimes fiery rhetoric, the day ended with a presidential tweet. Trump praised Kavanaugh, calling the federal appeals court judge's testimony "powerful, honest, and riveting." While Trump's comment was meant as a positive review of his nominee's testimony, it also served as a succinct headline for the entire proceeding.The next step comes Friday morning when the Judiciary Committee is expected to vote on Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court.Here are four takeaways from the hearing:1. A cultural, historical and legal momentSince the allegations of sexual misconduct against Kavanaugh were first reported in the media in recent weeks, comparisons with the 1991 Clarence Thomas-Anita Hill hearings have been everywhere. The hearing Thursday delivered even more fodder for the conversation.At the start of the hearing with Ford, Sen. Dianne Feinstein, recounted how 27 years ago she was passing through an airport when she "saw a large group of people gathered around a TV to listen to Anita Hill tell her story." At the time Feinstein was a former mayor. Today she is the top Democrat on the Judiciary Committee. In 1992, she was one of a record number of women elected in Congress in the "year of the woman."When Hill testified before the then-all male Judiciary Committee, there was no social media, no Twitterverse or Facebook friends. Thursday, there were four women on the Democratic side of the dais, and Americans were watching not just on TVs in airports and bars, but also in parks and streets and even subways on their smartphones.In 1991, there was also no #MeToo movement, the vast cultural and legal reckoning of the last year on the issue of sexual misconduct that has toppled several powerful men in media, entertainment and business — and even the onetime federal appeals court judge Alex Kozinski, who Kavanaugh clerked for early in the 1990s.What will the long-term effects of Thurday's hearing be? Will history record the hearing as an inflection point that changed the Supreme Court confirmation process? Will it change how the public thinks about sexual assault allegations?2. Kavanaugh's opening: Angry, fiery, emotionalBrett Kavanaugh, his nomination to the Supreme Court on the line, gave an opening statement of some 45 minutes in which he angrily denounced the charges against him, showing much more emotion than he did in the initial round of questioning earlier this month or during his interview on Fox News earlier this week. He not only denied being at a party with Ford, but blasted his confirmation process as politicized, declaring, " 'Advice and consent' has been replaced with 'search and destroy.' "What was also striking was his harsh and very un-Supreme-Court-like denunciations of Democrats on the committee and his assertion that the opposition to his confirmation "amounted to revenge on behalf of the Clintons." Kavanaugh served as a staff attorney on independent counsel Kenneth Starr's investigation of President Bill Clinton back in the 1990s.As with much of Thursday's proceeding, Kavanaugh's anger and defiance echoed with the 1991 confirmation hearings of Clarence Thomas when Anita Hill accused Thomas of sexual harassment. Back then, Thomas decried his situation as a "high-tech lynching."The defiant tone Kavanaugh set for his defense won praise from the president immediately as the hearing ended. "Judge Kavanaugh showed America exactly why I nominated him. His testimony was powerful, honest, and riveting," Trump tweeted. "Democrats' search and destroy strategy is disgraceful and this process has been a total sham and effort to delay, obstruct, and resist. The Senate must vote!"3. Ford's testimony elicits outpouring of #MeToo storiesFrom calls to C-SPAN from women who told their own stories of being sexually assaulted to a surge in calls to the National Sexual Assault Hotline, Ford's testimonyevoked an outpouring of women telling their own stories of surviving sexual misconduct and sexual violence. As the Washington Post reported: