Sep 18

Why it's good to watch TV as a family

The myth of the TV battle

If you ask most parents what the biggest household battle is, many will say screens. Endless negotiations about how long children spend on tablets, phones, or televisions can wear families down. Parents brace themselves for the nightly cries of “two more minutes!” and the inevitable back-and-forth. Yet as the nights draw in, TV almost becomes a must !

In our house, though, the situation looks a little different. We don’t have fights with our children over screen time. Instead, the disagreements are between the adults. My husband and I debate how much TV they are allowed, but we agree on what and where they watch it. One principle shapes our approach: the quality of what children watch matters far more than the number of minutes.

TV wasn’t always the villain

It helps to zoom out.

On 2 November 1936, television first flickered into UK homes. Families gathered around one box in the corner, excitement running high as they watched the very first programmes. There were no personal devices, no on-demand libraries. TV was rare, special, and collective.

For decades, the television acted as the new fireplace. It was a focal point where families huddled together, sharing experiences and conversations. A show wasn’t just entertainment, it was an event.

That sense of shared excitement has been disrupted. Personal screens - and now streaming - mean programmes can be watched anytime, anywhere, often in isolation. While this freedom of choice has benefits, something important was lost: the connection and togetherness that TV once created.

The two roles of TV in our house

In our home, television takes on two very different roles: 


The digital nanny:
There are times when TV simply helps us cope. When work deadlines stretch late or when the children are so tired that no other activity is possible, a familiar, light programme offers comfort and calm. It’s not glamorous, but it’s practical. For children with neurodiversity, it can also be a tool to aid regulation and recuperation.

 Event TV:
This is the opposite of background distraction. Event shows are the ones that pull the whole family together children, parents, and grandparents onto the same sofa. Think of Strictly Come Dancing on a Saturday night. A weekly, eagerly awaited mini-celebration: fire lit, popcorn in bowls, bedtime routines paused.

The difference between these two roles is striking. The first provides necessary breathing space for adults and downtime for children. The second builds memories, rituals, and most importantly, family connection.

Both have their place.

The hidden benefits of waiting

In a world of constant instant access, the concept of waiting has almost disappeared. Most streaming services release entire series at once, creating “binge-TV” and allowing for instant gratification.
Television can slow things down. The classic “marshmallow test” has been revisited in recent studies showing that practising waiting builds self-regulation skills in children. That makes family “event TV” released weekly a gentle, low-stakes way to practise patience.
A show that airs weekly builds anticipation. Children learn to wait, to wonder what happens next, and to talk about their predictions in the meantime. Psychologists often call this “delayed gratification.” Evidence suggests that children who practise waiting develop stronger self-regulation and resilience later in life.
It may appear to be a small and silly example, but for those old enough - do you remember the excitement of going down to Blockbusters to see if the film you wanted last week had been returned so you could rent it? The waiting was half the fun.
So when families come together for programmes like Strictly, it isn’t just fun, it’s also quietly teaching valuable life skills. Patience, social connection, and shared joy are built into the experience.

Why connection matters

The past decade has seen a steady rise in concerns about children’s screen time. A 2024 Ofcom study found that UK children aged 5–15 now spend an average of six hours a day on screens: only two of which are watching TV. That number can feel alarming, but it doesn’t tell the whole story.  

Not all screen time is created equal.
A nature documentary watched as a family sparks different conversations than a cartoon running in the background while dinner is made, or mindless scrolling on TikTok.

The key is intention.
Choosing what children watch, and how they watch it, shifts television from a passive activity into an opportunity for connection.  

Research from the University of Oxford (2022) suggests that shared media experiences, like watching a programme together, can act as a protective factor for children’s wellbeing, boosting mood and connection.

Reclaiming family TV time

So, should children watch TV?

The answer is yes, with thoughtfulness. Here are some guiding principles:
  • Prioritise content over minutes: Focus less on cutting down screen time and more on choosing programmes that feel enriching, uplifting, or simply joyful.
  • Create rituals: Treat event shows as part of family tradition. A Saturday night programme can become as special as a Sunday roast.
  • Lean into anticipation: Embrace shows that release weekly. The wait itself has value.
  • Make TV social: Watch programmes together, rather than in isolation in bedrooms. You need to know what they are watching.

Left unchecked, things can get a little scary, the Children’s Commissioner for England found that 79% of young people had been exposed to violent pornography by the age of 18. That isn’t happening in the sitting room with the grandparents present.

TV shouldn’t replace parenting.

Final thought

Television has been painted as the villain in many parenting debates.

But when used with care, it can be something else entirely: a tool for connection, a way to slow down, and a bridge across generations.

So next time you’re tempted to see TV only as a problem, try reframing it. Pull the family together, choose something uplifting, and rediscover the warmth of gathering round the screen. You might just find that television, far from pulling families apart, can bring yours closer than ever.

For more practical tools, the twigged Toolkit for ADHD includes evidence-based strategies for managing anxiety alongside ADHD traits, designed for home and school life. Try the Free Taster now!
gee eltringham

The founder

I started twigged out of both personal urgency and professional insight.
As The Toolkit Therapist and parent to a neurodivergent child, I experienced first hand the overwhelm and isolation families often face after a diagnosis.
Frustrated by the lack of practical, empathetic support, I set out to create what I couldn’t find: simple, evidence-based tools that make everyday life easier.
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