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2026 marks an extraordinary milestone: 100 years since the invention of television, the glowing box that quietly reshaped modern civilisation while we were busy eating microwave dinners and arguing over the remote control.
In this episode of Mark and Pete, we explore how television didn’t merely entertain us, but fundamentally changed how we think, how we relate, how we worship, and how we understand truth itself. From the first experimental broadcasts in the 1920s to the rise of mass media empires, TV turned politics into theatre, news into narrative, and public life into performance.
But the real transformation wasn’t technical. It was psychological. Television trained whole generations to sit, watch, absorb, and react emotionally — without reflection, conversation, or accountability. It altered childhood, shortened attention spans, and created a culture where image often matters more than argument, and personality more than principle.
Mark and Pete discuss the surprising social consequences of television: the decline of shared national culture, the rise of celebrity authority, the erosion of silence, and the way entertainment values crept into every institution — including the Church.
With biblical insight and a wry British realism, they ask an uncomfortable question: did television simply show us the world, or did it teach us how to see the world? And have we become so accustomed to being spectators that we’ve forgotten how to live as participants?
A thoughtful, humorous, and slightly unsettling look at the century-long experiment that changed everything — and may still be changing us more than we realise.
By Mark and Pete5
55 ratings
2026 marks an extraordinary milestone: 100 years since the invention of television, the glowing box that quietly reshaped modern civilisation while we were busy eating microwave dinners and arguing over the remote control.
In this episode of Mark and Pete, we explore how television didn’t merely entertain us, but fundamentally changed how we think, how we relate, how we worship, and how we understand truth itself. From the first experimental broadcasts in the 1920s to the rise of mass media empires, TV turned politics into theatre, news into narrative, and public life into performance.
But the real transformation wasn’t technical. It was psychological. Television trained whole generations to sit, watch, absorb, and react emotionally — without reflection, conversation, or accountability. It altered childhood, shortened attention spans, and created a culture where image often matters more than argument, and personality more than principle.
Mark and Pete discuss the surprising social consequences of television: the decline of shared national culture, the rise of celebrity authority, the erosion of silence, and the way entertainment values crept into every institution — including the Church.
With biblical insight and a wry British realism, they ask an uncomfortable question: did television simply show us the world, or did it teach us how to see the world? And have we become so accustomed to being spectators that we’ve forgotten how to live as participants?
A thoughtful, humorous, and slightly unsettling look at the century-long experiment that changed everything — and may still be changing us more than we realise.

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