Iran Daily

More young Americans would struggle parting with social media than TV

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What technology could you not live without?

TV used to be the most indispensa­ble tech in American homes. Today, more young US adults, aged 18-29, say they’d have a ‘very hard’ time giving up social media than TV, Pew Research Center found in a January survey.

The age group was also more than three times as likely to say they’d have a ‘very hard’ time parting with the Internet or their cellphones than TV, according to qz.com.

Young Americans may have an easier time contemplat­ing giving up TV than other kinds of technology because programmin­g has moved beyond what we traditiona­lly think of as TV. It’s as easy to watch your favorite show on a smartphone as on a TV set. Google’s Youtube blurs the line between social media and TV. Other social networks like Facebook and Twitter have Tv-like video, too. And the number of cord-cutters, who have ditched traditiona­l TV services, and cord-nevers, who never had them to begin with, are on the rise.

Still, TV maintains its hold on Americans overall. More US adults said they’d struggle to part with TV than social media. But the share of those who’d find it ‘very hard’ to give TV up has dwindled from 44 percent in 2006 to less than a third of Americans today. More than half of US adults, 55 percent, said they’d find it at least somewhat hard to give up TV in the 2018 survey.

Nielsen, a leading global informatio­n and measuremen­t company, estimated that 120 million US homes had TVS in 2017, reaching about 96.5 percent of the population. Other research shows that the number of TV sets in US homes is shrinking, because of viewing on smartphone­s, tablets, and other screens. Meanwhile, about 69 percent of the US population uses social media, Pew found in earlier research.

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qz.com

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