No. TV was not available until the 1930s - 30 years after the end of the Victorian era.
no they cant afford it
The television was invented with a stream of technological advances. The earliest technologies date back to the 1840s when still images were converted to an electrical signal for the first time. Other inventions such as the "Nipkow Disc" were instrumental in generating moving images electronically and this was patented in the 1880s. Both were in the Victorian era. Queen Victoria died in 1901 and so the Victorian period was replaced by the Edwardian period. It wasn't until 1925 that John Logie Baird publicly demonstrated electrical signals generating moving images. Other inventors rapidly followed Baird but it is safe to say that Victoria never had the chance to see television during her reign.
No, the Victorian era ended some decades before the invention of the television.
ummm when queen victoria chonged the law and said hat poor victorian children had a home !p.s. i cant live without a tv,sofa,blanket,and takeaway
how did science change in Victorian time change
Not quite. John Logie Baird, a Scotsman living in England demonstrated the world's first working television in 1925, 24 years after Queen Victoria dies, so it makes television an Georgian invention. Baird was born during the reign of Victoria so he would perhaps have called himself a Victorian but that is probably not a reason to refer to the first television as a Victorian invention.
The Answers are: 1. Selenium 2. Go to the Victorian Park and say "Who really invented television?" 3. Using arrays of transparent rods 4. Go to the Victorian crossroads and say the name of this play. Say "The Man with the Flower" 5. Radiovision 6. Go to King Arthur's Round table room and say what people thought of televised images at the time. Say "It is amazing!" 7. The Merchanical Television Era 8. Go to Stonehenge and say "I see a rainbow."
It sounds like Anastasia, but she was never run as a tv cartoon series.
Television was not invented until the 1920's. They read, visited friends, and in general were social with each other. No television or movies!
HGTV.com has some very good articles detailing Victorian interior design. You may also find some good information on their TV station (HGTV), or alternatively, the Discovery channel.
The Victorian Era was a time of conflicting morality.