This article examines the ways in which speech culture norms are violated within contemporary television information flows and explores how these violations influence public perception of language standards. As television remains one of the most powerful and widely consumed sources of information, its linguistic output significantly shapes the communicative behavior, speech habits, and normative expectations of viewers. The study focuses on identifying typical types of norm deviations such as improper pronunciation, lexical inaccuracies, stylistic inconsistency, syntactic fragmentation, and conversational markers inappropriate for formal broadcast settings. Using a qualitative discourse analysis of selected news programs and informational talk shows, the research reveals how repeated exposure to such deviations gradually normalizes them in the public consciousness. The findings indicate that audiences often internalize these linguistic patterns, which contributes to the erosion of established literary norms and reduces sensitivity to linguistic correctness. The study also highlights how the speed, emotional tone, and commercial orientation of modern television programming contribute to the spread of simplified or colloquial language forms.