Someone was probably working on it somewhere and it became available in the either the very late 1940's or early fifties. It was incredibally expensive and color qulity was poor. People had a greenish tint or a reddish tint but you could never get it just right. Keep in mind that in the 1950's a lot of US households didn't even have a black and white TV. I bought my first color set in 1967. It was a Bradford 13" portable that weighed about 200 pounds. The color quality was still poor and faded in and out all the time. The Bradford was the cheapest set I could find and it cost me $252.00. Today you can buy a much better 13" color portable for about $65.00.
Peter Goldmark did not invent color television. The first practical demonstration of color television was in 1928 by John Logie Baird. The color system he developed was not a commercial success. Goldmark worked on a version of color television in the 1940s with CBS. This version wasn't a commercial success either but it was twelve years after Baird's first model.
....ALOT....
There were sports events shown on TV during the 1940s. This did not become popular until the 1960s and beyond.
1940s
They had the radio and a TV at the same time
800-900
Radar Television
Portia Faces Life.
someone told me it from the 1940s
During 1940's there use to be radios for watching, and alson in the 1950's. In the 1940's people used radios without screens, not cable TV. In the 1940's the radios had speakers, and no screen. In the 1960's people had black and white TV, not color TV. In the 1990's people finally had color TV, but it's not HD.
Radio, Telegraph, TV (rare), Telephone, Radar, & crude computers.
No, the television was developed and introduced to the commercial market in the 1940s and 1950s, about halfway into the twentieth century.