PIRMĀ SEMESTRA NOSLĒGUMA TESTI
Have you ever wondered how it felt to see moving pictures on a screen for the very first time? Let’s travel back to 1926 and find out how John Logie Baird’s invention changed the world. Read the text carefully. Fill in each gap with one or two words exactly as they appear in the text.
 
The First Ever TV Broadcast
Imagine switching on your TV – and seeing moving pictures for the first time in your life. No sound. No colour. No hundreds of channels. Just one small screen showing a talking face. That moment changed the world forever.
The story of the first television broadcast began in London in 1926, when a Scottish inventor named John Logie Baird showed a new machine that could send pictures through the air. His goal was simple: to transmit moving images, just as radio reports sent sound. He worked day and night in a small workshop filled with wires, lights, and glass disks. During his first test, on 26 January 1926, a ventriloquist’s dummy named Stooky Bill appeared on the screen. The image was shaky and unclear, but it was enough to make history – the world’s first successful television picture.
A few years later, in 1929, the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) began regular live television programmes using Baird’s system. The shows were short – about 30 minutes – and the audience was tiny, only a few hundred people who owned early TV sets. Still, it marked the beginning of a new era in media. The programme included music, a short news report, and even a weather update. There were no commercials or breaks – the presenter had to speak all the time.
After the show, newspapers wrote excited headlines like “Pictures Through the Air!” The next edition of several newspapers called it “the birth of modern broadcasting.”
Early television wasn’t perfect. The screen was small, the sound was weak, and the image sometimes disappeared. But people were amazed. For the first time, they could see the world instead of just reading about it in newspapers.
Baird’s invention quickly spread across Europe and later to America. By the 1950s, families everywhere gathered around the television to watch the evening broadcast. What started as an experiment became an important part of everyday life. Today, television may seem ordinary, but in 1926, it was pure magic – a mix of science, imagination, and courage that changed the way people connect forever.
 
1. He spent long nights surrounded by wires, lights, and glass disks, working in a tiny where his invention slowly came to life.
 
2. After the first public show, published headlines to describe what people had just witnessed.
 
3. Over time, television turned from a small scientific test into something people couldn’t imagine living without – a part of their
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