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Interesting Things to Know

Do You Remember Your First Color TV?

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There was a time when television was only in shades of gray.

Then, little by little, living rooms began to change.

In the mid-1950s, NBC began broadcasting some programs in color and introduced a new symbol to showcase it: a peacock spreading its bright feathers across the screen. The network also used the announcement, “The following program is brought to you in living color on NBC.”

For most American families, color television did not arrive right away. Color sets were expensive, and many households kept their black-and-white TVs for years. By the late 1960s, more families were finally making the switch.

For children, it felt like magic.

Saturday morning cartoons suddenly looked brighter. Game shows sparkled. Parades, westerns, variety shows, and holiday specials seemed brand new. Even commercials looked more exciting.

Seeing a color television for the first time was often a small family event. Maybe it happened at a neighbor’s house, where everyone gathered around the set. Maybe it was in a department store window, with people stopping to stare. Maybe it was in a relative’s living room, where the picture seemed almost too bright to be real.

Today, we carry full-color screens in our pockets and hardly think about it. But for a generation that grew up with rabbit ears, test patterns, and black-and-white pictures, that first glimpse of color was unforgettable.

Television did not just look different.

For a moment, the whole world did.

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