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Growths and trends tv
1.
2. Entering 1965, the estimated households
with TV’s were at 52.6 million. Today, the
number of TV homes in the US is more
than twice that amount at 109.6 million.
In 1964, the average TV home viewed 5
hours and 38 minutes of television per
day. In 2004, that jumped to 7 hours and
39 minutes.
3. Many TV sets in 1964 were still black and
white.
There were just three networks.
Cable didn't exist.
4. Tv’s were commercially available in the
1920s.
They are widely seen in almost every
home in the US.
It is used a lot as a main source for
advertising, entertainment, and news.
Now, TV is also seen on the internet by
using sites like iPlayer and
5. “In its early stages of
development, television employed a
combination of optical, mechanical and
electronic technologies to capture, transmit
and display a visual image.”
“All modern television systems rely on the
later, although the knowledge gained from
the work on electromechanical systems
was crucial in the development of fully
electronic television.”
“http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television”
6. In 1884, Paul Gottlieb Nipkow, a 23-year-
old University student in
Germany, invented the first
electromechanical television which
employed a scanning disk (a spinning
disk with a series of holes spiraling toward
the center.)
As an image was focused on the
rotating disk, each hole captured a
horizontal "slice" of the whole image.
7. “In 2009 the global TV market
represented 1,217.2 million TV households
with at least one television, and total
revenues of 268.9 billion.”
8. In January 2011, 80.1% of people had a
LCD TV, 6.6% had a PDP TV, 0.0% had a
OLED TV, 13.2% had a CRT TV, and .1%
had a RPTV.
9. In January 2011, 22.2% had a Samsung
TV, 14.5% had a LG Electronics, 11.4%
had a Sony, 7.4% had a Sharp TV, 6.6%
had a Panasonic TV, and 37.9% had
another brand of TV.
10. In1940, television commercials have
become one of the most
effective, persuasive, and popular ways
of selling products and services of all
kinds.
This is mainly focused on, but not limited
to, consumer goods.
11. In the 1940s to the 1950s, programs were
hosted by single advertisers.
In the 1950’s, they turned to many
advertisers.
12. Depending on the TV show and the time
of day it is airing serves the price for how
much the commercial will cost.
American Idol can cost about $750,000
for a 30-second block of commercial
time.
13. The same amount of time for the World
Cup and the Super Bowl can cost
several millions of dollars.
Lesser-viewed time slots, like early
mornings and weekday afternoons, are
often sold in bulk to producers of
infomercials.
This is much less expensive.
14. “Abbe Giovanna Caselli invents the
Pantelegraph and becomes the first
person to transmit a still image over
wires.”
15. 1967- Most TV broadcasts are in color.
1969- July 20, first TV transmission from
the moon and 600 million people watch.
1972- Half the TVs in homes are color
sets.
16. 1973- Giant screen projection TV is first
marketed.
1976- Sony introduces “betamax,” the
first home video cassette recorder.
1978- PBS becomes the first station to
switch to all satellite delivery of
programs.
17. 1993- Closed captioning required on all
TV’s.
1996- The FCC approves ATSC's HDTV
standard. That is billion TV’s world-wide.