The pie chaart illustrate the viewership of different programs-drama, film, news, cartoon, and sport among three different age groups.
Overall, sports viewership becomes less popular as people get older, whereas the reverse scenario is true for news. Notably, the remaining TV programmes exhibit a moderate level of viewership with insignificant differences among the age groups, except for those who are 16-20 years old.
There seems to be a correlation between sports and news, because these two TV programmes are popular in certain age groups. Sports is the most common TV programmes in the youngest age group, at 26%. As the ages become higher, it becomes less common, accounting for 14% and a mere 4% of the viewership in the 16-20 and 21-25 age groups, respectively. In contrast, although the proportion of the viewership of news is the smallest among those aged between 10 and 15, at 6%, it amounts to larger, respective shares of 18% and a staggering 33% in the other two age groups.
The difference in the other three TV programmes is less significant in the youngest and the oldest age cohorts. In the former, the proportions of cartoons, dramas, and films constitute 26%, 23%, and 19%, respectively; this disparity is even smaller among those aged 21-25: 20%, 22%, and 21%. However, these TV programmes exhibit substantial differences in their popularity in the 16-20 age group. The percentage of the viewership of cartoons is half as much as that of drama, which makes up 30%, while that of films account for 23%.
