52 billion
there are more tv sets in the US than there are people in the United Kingdom
Regular television broadcasting in the US began in 1940, but not that many households had TV sets. TVs became widespread in the US from the late 1940s on. At the time of the Holocaust not many homes had TV.
No TV sets are made in the US now.
Around 58,000 homes had TV's in them in 1947. This number was rapidly increasing as TV caught on and the price became more affordable.
Nope. Not since the eighties.
UK PS2s use PAL format, US TVs use NTSC, which both have different frame rates. If you try to use the UK PS2 on a US TV, the image will flicker and jump around due to this disparity. While many UK TVs can switch to an NTSC mode, the opposite is rare in the US. But you can get a converter box which both devices plug into, you'd have to buy it online.
Yes, even during the Us Open many players take bathroom breaks! When you watch the matches on television that is usually when they switch to commercial.
This answer is easy to figure out. It is China. Every one knows.Everyone thinks China has the most of everything because it has 1.3 billion people. But actually the US has the most tv sets, with about 2 tv sets for every person so about. 311millionx2= 622 million tv sets. China actually doesnt really have that much, only about 300million Chinese have access to a TV or computer.
I believe they would but Australia uses different electric plug.
i am only 15 but i am passing a pre-ap history class. I'm not quite sure on this but i would have to say very few people did because it was in the time of the Great Depression. Most people had to sell their houses and electronics for Money and for food.
A definite answer is difficult to determine, but taking into account that at the time it was fairly uncommon for a household to possess more than one television set and the respective sales it is safe to assume that at least 9% of the population had a set, roughly 16 million at the time.
Everything we do is part of our culture. It defines us and sets who and what we are. Culture are the things we do, the things we read, and the TV or movies we watch.