>>7636344You're not wrong but I'd like to provide more info on this for younger people.
Back in the day, wrestling was more kayfabed and tried to present itself as real. TV shows presented a problem that live events didn't in as much as the show only lasted a specific time no matter what. During live events, it was possible to run longer or shorter and matches could go one hour regularly. Obviously this wasn't the case on TV.
So they needed to invent a plausible reason why the show always fit into its one hour timeslot and the answer they came up with was matches with time limits of 15 minutes or so. In the early days of wrestling TV, they often did wrestle to a time limit draw.
To get this concept over, companies like AWA and WCW created the Television title. The idea was that it was a belt for wrestlers who were specialists at wrestling for 15 minutes or less, just another stipulation type belt. WWF never had a TV title until the Invasion because they never cared about maintaining plausible reality in the same way that other companies did.
So the TV title is now an outdated concept whose name doesn't make sense but it started as something that did have a point to it past "random midcard title"