A family of six sits crouched over a tiny 13-inch screen. Ed Sullivan — charming and poised — speaks directly to what felt to be all of America. Television programming was conceived to bring families together.
And at the time, that was exactly what we needed. It was revolutionary for millions of households across the country to feel like a single, cohesive unit, reacting in unison. From 1950 to 1960, the number of American households with a television set climbed from 9% to 90%. Today, however, the trend is reversing.
We live in a world of chaos, clutter and chatter. Our minds work differently now, and we require more and more to catch our attention. "Watching television” is a phrase in flux; especially for millennials who are tech-savvy, thrifty and demand instant gratification, the way they consume content is changing Read more...
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