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  1. High culture dominated commercial network television programming in the 1950s with the first television appearances of Leonard Bernstein (on Omnibus) and Arturo Toscanini, the first telecasts from Carnegie Hall, the first live U.S. telecasts of plays by Shakespeare, the first telecasts of Tchaikovsky's ballets The Sleeping Beauty and The ...

    • 2000S–Present

      French scholar Alexis Pichard has argued that television...

    • 1950s

      Television, which first reached the marketplace in the...

  2. Below is a list of television -related events during 1950. Events. February – European Broadcasting Union (EBU) inaugurated. February 15. KENS began transmissions as KEYL. It was the second television station to sign on in the San Antonio market. WSTM-TV began transmissions as WSYR-TV.

    Date
    Name
    Notability
    January 3
    Actress ( Dallas )
    January 7
    Actress ( Buck Rogers in the 25th ...
    January 16
    Actress, dancer, choreographer ( Fame )
    January 23
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  4. American viewers old enough to remember TV in the ’50s may fondly recall the shows of Sid Caesar, Jackie Gleason, Milton Berle, and Lucille Ball, but such high-quality programs were the exception; most of television during its formative years could be aptly described, as it was by one Broadway playwright, as “amateurs playing at home movies.”

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  5. Television series which originated in the United States in the decade 1950s. i.e. in the years 1950 to 1959. Television shows that originated in other countries and only later aired in the United States should be removed from this category and its sub-categories. 1900s. 1910s. 1920s. 1930s. 1940s. 1950s. 1960s. 1970s. 1980s. 1990s. 2000s. 15th.

  6. In 1950 only 9 percent of American households had televisions; by 1959 that figure had increased to 85.9 percent. The nature of programming would reflect the perceived tastes of this ever-growing and diversifying audience. Gunsmoke.

  7. Land of Television. As the price of television sets dropped, the number of viewers grew. 1952 saw the arrival of the Viking Console, a Canadian set, which was popular all over North America. Perhaps no phenomenon shaped American life in the 1950s more than television.

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