Ok, now I need to know, what's a TLC? :cross:
We have TV, but I find that since I don't have a dish or anything and we live in a rural area that I don't turn it on (except for a few Packers games, in which case I turn it off in the third quarter).
We rent about one movie a year, and turn on the TV in the living room for that. Now that my grandson comes over for a whole day at least once a week, I turn on one short movie for him per day. (It's a VCR player, if that tells you how old it is!).
We rent a house in Texas for 2 months per year, and they have cable and internet for us. We had friends (both 80 years old!) stay with us for a week last winter. They are well educated, well traveled, intelligent people. One is a retired physicist, and one is a retired teacher.
No lie, at 7 PM, the TV went on and stayed on until like 11:30. They enjoy their TV shows, and talk about them. I was very polite, but after a few days of this (loud fake laugh tracks, constant noise), I asked them to watch TV in their room after 10 PM.
They of course immediately complied, but really didn't "get" how I couldn't enjoy "Big Bang Theory" and the rest of the lineup. They really thought I would enjoy it. We talked about it, and it was a really nice discussion. I am used to quiet, but maybe with some music playing. Aside from actually sitting and watching something, say a particular documentary or a movie that is highly acclaimed, I just can't see sitting down in front of a fake noisemaker. But they don't "get" my internet time, either. They totally understood my addiction to books, but not at all the internet- beyond looking up something specific or doing email. They both have email accounts that they check daily, and look up things, but never spend any time reading news or of course not forums!
So it was a wonderful discussion of who we are as people.
I think there are people who got into the habit of watching TV every evening, maybe as kids, and that is what they do. I never had that habit, and was in the Army as a young adult without a TV in a foreign country. It just never was something I was accustomed to, although I had a TV when I got out of college and out of the Army.