How did 16:9 get chosen for HDTV

I perused all the older threads on this, but no one seems to answer my question.

Since so many movies are shot in 2.35:1 or 1.85:1, why did they choose
1.77:1 (aka 16:9)?

Personally, I’d rather have had a 2.35:1 screen and have small bars on the left
and right for other movies than still have smaller letterboxing when I watch
a 2.35:1 movie on my HDTV.

So, anyone know why this was picked?

Went Googling for “16:9 aspect ratio reason ATSC” and got many reasons.

I googled as you suggested and got nothing satisfactory.

Best answer was because that’s Japan’s HDTV aspect ratio. Soooo-
this begs asking, why did Japan choose this?

One site implied that it was a compromise between 4:3 and 2.35:1.

What the fuck for? In a few years time - nothing will be shot in 4:3, so why
care if old TVs shows will have the grey boxes on left/right.

They should have at least gone to 1.85:1 since that indeed seems to be the
ratio used by most films.

It seems to have been a compromise between movie makers and television engineers. There’s a brief summary of the history of this decision — at least as it played out in the United States — both here and here. In particular I found the following:

My googling (admittedly brief) did not turn up a reason why the particular exact ratio of 16:9 was chosen. It might be because it has a nice relationship with the legacy ratio of 4:3. Namely, cropping/letterboxing between the two formats results in a simple fraction of the screen (one-third or one-fourth) being omitted or padded with black.

This also sheds a little light: