Phrasal Verbs • Level A2-B1

TV - The Magic Box

Phrasal Verbs Through Television History

Human Communication Theme

Master Phrasal Verbs Through Telephone History

1

Voices Across Distance

Learn phrasal verbs from Telephone history

Start Learning
2

TV - The Magic Box

Learn phrasal verbs from Television history

You are here
3

Computers – The Digital Leap

Learn phrasal verbs from Computers Hitory

Start Learning

Multimedia Learning Hub

🎥 Listen, watch and practise English with immersive videos, podcasts and shadowing

🎭 Phrasal Verbs Video Practice

English Story Video for Phrasal Verbs Practice
🌟 Explore All Themes
Discover story-based lessons, videos and interactive practice

🎙️ Story Podcast for Phrasal Verbs

Story Podcast for English Communication
🎯 Open the Phrasal Verbs Dictionary
Review advanced phrasal verbs with examples, meaning and practice
🏆

Your Progress

0
Correct
0
Incorrect
0%
Accuracy
0
Score
00:00
Study Time

🔊 Listen & Practice This Card — Before the Screen Practice shadowing: read while listening and repeat. Then write down a few expressions or sentences that stood out to you.
Speed:
0:00 / 0:00
Ready to play
historical scene of a middle-class American family in the late 1950s gathered in their living room around a vintage black-and-white television set
INTRO

Before the Screen

Have you ever thought about what life was like before television? People had to turn to radio, newspapers, and theater just to keep up with the world. Entertainment was something you went out to find — it didn't come to you.

Scientists had been working on the idea of transmitting moving images for decades. John Logie Baird came up with a mechanical system in 1925, and Philo Farnsworth built on that with a fully electronic version. Neither of them gave up on the dream, even when the technology seemed impossible.

By the late 1930s, the first broadcasts were going out to tiny audiences. The BBC set up the world's first public television service in 1936. Nobody really caught on to how big this would turn out to be. It was just the beginning — and what a beginning it was.

🔊 Listen & Practice This Card — Black & White Dreams Practice shadowing: read while listening and repeat. Then write down a few expressions or sentences that stood out to you.
Speed:
0:00 / 0:00
Ready to play
a vintage 1950s television set at the center of a room. From inside the screen, a single television personality elegant in close up, expressive, and larger-than-life seems almost to emerge into the centre of the imagem, symbolizing the power of television to dominate culture and imagination.
CARD 2

Black & White Dreams

In the 1950s, TV really took off. Families gathered around the set every evening and tuned in to their favorite programs together. It was a brand new way to bond over shared stories without leaving the house — and for the first time in history, millions of people were experiencing the exact same moment at the exact same time.

That shared experience gave rise to something nobody had quite planned: mass communication on an unprecedented scale. Television spread out the same images, the same language, and the same values across entire nations. People in small towns and big cities picked up the same expressions, dressed up like the same stars, and looked up to the same on-screen role models. A national culture was taking shape — and TV was driving it forward.

But this also meant that certain behaviors and ideas were being passed down through the screen as if they were natural or universal. Advertisers and networks caught on fast: if you could get into someone's living room every evening, you could shape what they thought of as normal. TV didn't just reflect society — it quietly took part in building it, one broadcast at a time.

🔊 Listen & Practice This Card — The World Goes Color Practice shadowing: read while listening and repeat. Then write down a few expressions or sentences that stood out to you.
Speed:
0:00 / 0:00
Ready to play
a vintage 1950s television set at the center of a room. From inside the screen, a single television personality elegant in close up, expressive face.
CARD 3

The World Goes Color

By the 1960s, networks were rolling out color broadcasts, and people rushed out to trade in their black-and-white sets. Sports, nature shows, variety programs — everything came alive in a way nobody had quite expected. It felt like seeing the world for the first time.

Color TV opened up completely new storytelling possibilities. Advertisers jumped on the opportunity, coming up with commercials that showed off vibrant products. Networks put out more ambitious programming because color brought out the kind of visual detail that black and white simply couldn't pull off.

Socially, TV was both bringing people together and pointing out deep divisions. Coverage of the Civil Rights Movement woke up millions of Americans who had tuned out the struggle. When viewers looked on as peaceful protesters were attacked on screen, public opinion began to shift toward change. The camera had become a conscience.

🔊 Listen & Practice This Card — The Remote Is Yours Practice shadowing: read while listening and repeat. Then write down a few expressions or sentences that stood out to you.
Speed:
0:00 / 0:00
Ready to play
The image should symbolize the transformation of television in the 2000s into something interactive, participatory, and experimental. Elegant, immersive, cinematic realism, sleek digital atmosphere, storytelling composition
CARD 4

The Remote Is Yours

Fast forward to the 2000s, and TV started catching up with the internet age. Reality shows popped up everywhere, and producers caught on to something powerful: people didn't just want to sit back and watch anymore — they wanted to weigh in on what happened.

Shows like American Idol and Big Brother brought in a format where audiences could actually vote out contestants and decide on the outcome. Viewers logged on, texted in, and called up to cast their votes. Suddenly, hanging out on the couch felt like taking part in something real.

Then Netflix came along and shook up everything again with Bandersnatch in 2018 — a film where you chose between story paths and led the narrative in different directions. It was a bold attempt to blend the video game experience with TV storytelling. Not every experiment worked out, but it showed that television was still pushing forward, still trying to figure out what it could become.

🔊 Listen & Practice This Card — Always On, Always Evolving Practice shadowing: read while listening and repeat. Then write down a few expressions or sentences that stood out to you.
Speed:
0:00 / 0:00
Ready to play
[
illustration showing the evolution of television across time.
CONCLUSION

Always On, Always Evolving

So, looking back, TV has gone through an incredible journey. From grainy black-and-white images to 4K streaming on your phone, it has never stopped reinventing itself. And every time a new technology showed up, television found a way to adapt to it and carry on.

What really stands out is how TV has always held up a mirror to society. It brought out our most shared moments — moon landings, World Cups, royal weddings — and gently pointed to the tensions we needed to work through together. It has been a window as much as a reflection.

Today, the line between TV and the internet is blurring. We scroll through content, skip over what doesn't hold us, and binge on entire seasons in a weekend. The audience has moved on from passive watching — and television is still doing its best to keep up with us. The story is far from over.

Match the TV History Phrasal Verbs
0/16

Click one item in Column A and its meaning in Column B. Complete all pairs.

Column A – Phrasal Verbs

Column B – Meanings

Alessandra Fernandes Nóbrega
Alessandra Fernandes Nóbrega
History teacher and educational content creator. M.A. in History of Education (UFPB). Creator of WeeklyCross, FlipVerbs and Flowglish — a connected ecosystem for learning English through context, not memorisation. Trained in educational entrepreneurship in Finland.

WeeklyCross teaches phrasal verbs through historical and cultural context. Each lesson connects to vocabulary practice on FlipVerbs and fluency levels on Flowglish — forming a complete learning ecosystem.

0%
Scroll to Top