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From 2013 to 2017, adults in the 65 and older demographic spent the most time watching television, about 4.3 hours, while 25-34-year-olds watched the least amount per day, just over 2 hours. Employed individuals, including full- and part-time, watched about 2.2 hours worth of television, while unemployed individuals watched about an hour and a ...
In children, the divide is much larger. On average in 2011, White children spent 8.5 hours a day with digital media, and Black and Latino children spent about 13 hours a day on screens. [11] Black and Latino children were also more likely to have TVs in their rooms, which contributed to their increased use of screen time. [11]
Nielsen has released its 2022 “State of Play” report on the TV and video streaming landscape, and TVLine has culled through the dense doc to highlight the most interesting-ish facts. First and ...
The same paper noted that there was a significant negative association between time spent watching television per day as a child and educational attainment by age 26: the more time a child spent watching television at ages 5 to 15, the less likely they were to have a university degree by age 26.
That translated into an increase of 0.3 share points, with YouTube ending the month with 8.1% of total time spent watching television, according to Nielsen measurements. More from Variety
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A study conducted in 2005 by the Kaiser Family Foundation determined that eight- to eighteen-year-olds spend on average six and a half hours a day with media in general. [5] American teenagers alone spend 11.2 hours watching television a week according to another market research study conducted by Teen Research Unlimited.
The report includes over 18,000 titles, representing 99% of Netflix viewing, and totaling nearly 100 billion hours watched.