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This article is about television in the United States, specifically its history, art, business and government regulation. Information about television technologies is covered in the main television article and elsewhere.

Television often plays an important role in introducing American children to new ideas and developing common worldviews, and has generally been through the mass media that most Americans develop a national and global awareness.

Many shows are broadcast over the entire U.S., delivered to the home via the air or by cable and thus have an influence on a very large set of the population, as 98 percent of all American households have at least one television and the majority of households have more than one.

1 History of television in the United States


Television was invented in the U.S. by Philo T. Farnsworth in 1927, but was not commercialized until the early 1940s, by RCA and CBS; half of all U.S. households had TV sets by 1955. The '50s saw the first flowering of the genres that would distinguish TV from movies and radio— talk shows like The Jack Paar Show and sitcoms like I Love Lucy. Cable television (now often "cable" in name only—satellite broadcasts are increasingly important) became a force in the early '80s and has been growing in significance since that time.

Unlike the UK, Canada and Australia, the United States has never had a government-run network or series of networks like the British Broadcasting Corporation, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation or Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The closest thing to government-funded domestic television was established long after commercial television networks had already come to dominate the airwaves: the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (which partially funds PBS TV and NPR radio) was established in 1967. C-SPANC-SPAN which originally stood for C able S atellite P ublic A ffairs N etwork, was the first United States cable television network dedicated to 24-hour coverage of government and public affairs. C-SPAN often shows live sessions of all the U. House of Rep, which covers the federal government, is collectively funded and managed by private cable companies, not the government itself.



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