Table of Contents
What do wealthy people watch on TV?
Check out the top 10 most watched TV shows that rich people watch:
- The Bachelor. CBS.
- The Good Wife. ABC.
- The Bachelorette. CBS.
- 60 Minutes. ABC.
- Modern Family. NBC.
- Community. NBC.
- Parks and Recreation. NBC.
- Parenthood. ABC.
What do millionaires do in the morning?
After studying hundreds of people both rich and poor, author Tom Corley reveals the one thing most self-made millionaires do when they first wake up. They invest in themselves by reading, brainstorming, and meditating before they start their day.
Are you poor if you have a flat screen TV?
That compares to 68\% of those earning $120,000 or more. About one-third of the lowest income households had either LCD or plasma TVs….Income does seem to matter when buying a PC. More than half the nation’s poor do not own a computer.
Latest Report | Next Update |
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GDP | Aug 29 |
Manufacturing (ISM) | Sept 4 |
Do teenagers spend too much time in front of TVs?
WEDNESDAY, March 12 (HealthDay News) — A new survey reports that teenagers spend far too many hours a week in front of TVs and computers, and those in poor neighborhoods have even more “screen time.”
What happens when you watch TV too much?
TV Viewing and Adult Obesity There’s convincing evidence in adults, too, that the more television people watch, the more likely they are to gain weight or become overweight or obese. (20) And there’s emerging evidence that too much TV watching also increases the risk of weight-related chronic diseases.
Is there a link between TV viewing and poverty?
Study: Poverty and High Rates of TV Viewing Are Linked. A study conducted by the General Social Surveys of NORAC at the University of Chicago found that 34.1 percent of American families making less than $9,000 per year averaged watching more than five hours of television per day.
What makes people watch more TV?
“Through good and bad economic times, our diary studies, have consistently found that work is the major activity correlate of higher TV viewing hours,” Robinson says. “As people have progressively more time on their hands, viewing hours increase.”