Difference between revisions of "Television"
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[[image: tv.jpg|thumb|right|A 1950s era Television set]] | [[image: tv.jpg|thumb|right|A 1950s era Television set]] | ||
'''Television''' ( | '''Television''' (colloquially referred to as '''TV''' or '''Telly''') is a technology involving the transmission of moving images by electronic signal, either using wires or [[radio]]. The first electric television screen was developed by Kenjiro Takayanagi in 1926. Television emerged as a form of mass media in the late 1930s and exploded in significance in the developed world during the 1950s. Early televisions were only able to display monochromatic images. | ||
== Use in fiction == | |||
If a television (or a radio) is used in fiction, it normally serves the function of plot exposition playhouse. If there is a fictional television show that features in a work of fiction, it usually serves as white noise in the background that the characters are watching, such as the "Itchy and Scratchy Show" on ''The Simpsons''. | |||
== Televised Science Fiction == | == Televised Science Fiction == | ||
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*[[Gundam]] | *[[Gundam]] | ||
*[[Babylon 5]] | *[[Babylon 5]] | ||
*[[Stargate SG-1]] | *[[Stargate|Stargate SG-1]] | ||
*[[Firefly]] | *[[Firefly]] | ||
*[[Battlestar Galactica]] | |||
[[Category: Real Technology]] | [[Category: Real Technology]] |
Latest revision as of 15:12, 6 November 2012
Television (colloquially referred to as TV or Telly) is a technology involving the transmission of moving images by electronic signal, either using wires or radio. The first electric television screen was developed by Kenjiro Takayanagi in 1926. Television emerged as a form of mass media in the late 1930s and exploded in significance in the developed world during the 1950s. Early televisions were only able to display monochromatic images.
Use in fiction
If a television (or a radio) is used in fiction, it normally serves the function of plot exposition playhouse. If there is a fictional television show that features in a work of fiction, it usually serves as white noise in the background that the characters are watching, such as the "Itchy and Scratchy Show" on The Simpsons.