If I were to sit down and think about it, I would guess that I've watched five or six hours of television every single day since 1970.
Now, that might seem like an outlandish number to many people. After all, didn't I go to school and later work? Yes I did. But I can honestly say that when I got home from school I watched TV until 11 at night, every single night, and a lot more during the summer (and I even found time to go outside to play baseball!). Today I have the TV on from approximately 8 AM until well after midnight. That's a lot of TV watching over the years.
I thought of that when I read this article that says Americans are watching more television than ever.
The stats come from Nielsen Media, which says that even though Americans are using the computer more and more to watch video (and it's now a mainstream thing to do and not just the arena of geeks), they're still watching TV in larger numbers than ever before. In fact, the average American watched 127 hours of television this past May, which is up 6 hours from last year. I would guess that the people who write for TV Squad watch double that amount, but I guess since we write about TV for a living that means we're not "average."
How much TV do you watch a day? Does that number dip during the summer, and if so, how many hours difference is it?















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
7-08-2008 @ 4:23PM
StillBash said...
I don't have a TV anymore.
I have DVDs, HD-DVDs, a 24" Monitor.
And Bittorrent.
Reply
7-08-2008 @ 4:44PM
I miss my stars! said...
I watch more TV in the summer because I don't have the school schedule for the kids. We generally don't watch that much in the early evening between Sept and June due to homework, et al.
I save up good stuff in the "strategic reserve" to last the long dry summer of crap. But, I have discovered a couple of jewels - Wipeout and ISaJGS in particular.
Reply
7-08-2008 @ 11:34PM
MERVE-THE-PERVE said...
I don't trust a word that comes from Nielsen. Of course they are gonna say that people are watching more tv than ever. They want the big networks to keep paying them for all those faulty ratings. I don't ever expect Nielsen to admit the truth to the nets - 'Less people are watching tv and more of them are watching it online and we have no way of tracking that for you so you might as well stop paying us all that money now.' Nielsen will twist the figures any way they need to to keep the networks paying them.
Reply
7-09-2008 @ 8:15AM
Galley said...
I haven't watched TV since January. I keep up with my favorite shows my watching them online, and downloading HD podcasts.
Reply