Chitika

söndag 13 december 2009

A Television In Every Home.

By Matthew Kerridge

The rating company A. C. Nielsen, in doing its market research has compiled numbers stating the average American citizen, during a sixty-five year life will have spent just over nine full years watching a television. This can translate into nearly 28 hours of TV watching per week and up near a full two months viewing per year! A very simple indication of has become our national obsession.

Households in the United States have the highest ownership rate on earth today per-capita. With numbers over ninety-nine percent owning a minimum one, and standing at an average of not quite three TV sets in each home. These sets are turned on, (if being watched or even not) for almost seven solid hours per day on average, and when the term couch potato is being used, it does not fall too far from base does it?

Recent surveys discover sixty percent, (or even more possibly) of the U. S. General population is able to name all of the members from a comedy team like the nineteen-thirties era Three Stooges, but under fifteen percent of that same number surveyed are able to name any three of the sitting Justices of the United States Supreme Court. Modern television viewing habits have been seen as aiding developmentally in this in recent times.

The television was made commercially available in the early nineteen-thirties time frame. The first actual public broadcasts having been made from the Olympiad of nineteen thirty-six in Berlin Germany to government run stations in that city and Leipzig as well. This availed the games for viewing the first time to a nations populace. Due to sheer cost and a lack of programming, the television was not to make headway into peoples hearth and home until the mid part of the nineteen-fifties.

With the growing sales of sets, the television developed into an unmatched advertising tool as well. Broadcasters currently, use thirty percent or more of time for advertising usage. The average child in the United States alone, sees nearly twenty thousand thirty second commercials per year. The result effects manufacturers, retailers, and they base of the economy itself. Ask yourself if you would have been at that fast food outlet today if not for the children's prodding of you, and their will to get the new toy offered with a meal.

The average American youth spends around nine hundred hours per year in school. That same child spends nearly seventeen hundred hours watching a television in that same year! Since the nineteen-seventies, the disparity in these numbers has been growing steadily. With the addition of inventions like the VCR, DVD, Blu-Ray, DVR and the like we have added to these already high numbers in recent years.

The television is, and can definitely be a valuable tool by use of learning, communications, and wise development. With the over use as a distraction or social crutch being its greatest flaw or detriment. The American public should be aware of this and attempt to monitor its viewing for more productive and responsible things.

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