World Television Day

World Television Day - November 21,2014
World Television Day started  on November 21, 1998. The United Nations  General Assembly decided there should be a day to commemorate one of the  most revolutionary inventions ever. This date is when the first World Television Forum was held, in 1996. The purpose of this day is to encourage countries to exchange TV programmes that focus on peace and culture. The UN hopes to encourage greater international understanding. The UN also believes that making high  quality television shows leads to a well-informed and better-educated public. It also hopes to promote freedom, equal rights and democracy. 

Television is one of the most influential forms of media in history. We grow  up with it. Babies learn language from it. It shapes our ideas and is a  window on the whole world. Television sets first started appearing in people’s homes in the 1930s. There was only one channel back then and it was  in black and white.  Today, we have multi-channel TVs that broadcast programmes live all over the world. We watch wars, floods, presidential inaugurations and sports finals as they happen.  Not everything about TV is good.  Many people blame it for obesity in children, a breakdown in family communication and an obsession with celebrity. No one knows what the future of television will be. Now computers have replaced them. 

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