The Impact Of Television On The American Family

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Television has played a major role in the death of the American nuclear family. According to Dictionary.com, a nuclear family is defined as a primary social unit consisting of parents and their offspring. Television has become commonplace in American culture, and most watch oblivious to the effect it has on them and their families. “2009’s Nielsen’s Television Audience Report shows that 54% of homes in the U.S. had three or more television sets, 28% had two television sets and only 18% had one television set” (“More”). Over the past seven decades’ television has had a progressive impact on the American family unit by showing family can be diverse in race, gender, and parenting styles. To begin with, families in the 1950’s were much different …show more content…

Single parent households had not yet become an accepted family structure until The Andy Griffith Show appeared on television. The show was centered around a father whose wife had passed away and his son. Not only did the show introduce America to the idea of the single father, but it changed the family dynamic by introducing an aunt and a good friend who supported both Andy and his son like family, showing a family could indeed consist of something other than what was known as traditional. The Brady Bunch further demonstrated that American culture was changing by showing a widowed man and women getting married for the second time. They each brought three children into the new marriage and added to the mix a live in housekeeper that was like a member of the family herself; again showing a non- traditional family can be a successful family unit. Blended families became more widely accepted after the show became a hit. According to a national Pew Center report, 25 percent of adults are now on to their second marriage or beyond …show more content…

I never realized the impact television has had on my family until recently. My parents divorced eleven years ago, resulting in my sisters and I being raised in a single parent household. My mom decided to go back to school and get her degree; soon after she met the man she would marry and become our stepdad. Our family transformed from a nuclear family, to a single parent family to a mixed family. My mom had made a career for herself instead of being the stay at home mom like we saw in the traditional nuclear families. I was truly shocked to see how closely television shows resembles my own family. It is safe to say that television has progressed the culture of American families everywhere, even our

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