Google can give you lots of hits to read through. Here's one:
from
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2000/MichelleHong.shtml
"TVs and monitors may have up to 35 KV on the CRT but the current is low -- a couple of milliamps."
Basically, the electron gun has a heated element at the back end called the cathode. The cathode is coated with a material that boils off electrons when heated. The electron gun is put in the back end of the vacuum TV tube, and the cathode is held at a negative potential and the CRT screen is held at a high positive potential to attract the electrons. There are several metal plates of various shapes in the gun itself, and these are held at several intermediate voltages to form electron lenses that contain and shape the beam as it flies forward toward the CRT face. Two magnetic coils are placed at the neck of the CRT (where the tube for the electron gun expands out to mate with the CRT faceplate). These magnetic coils are driven with the horizontal and vertical deflection currents, to cause the electron beam to sweep in the raster pattern across the CRT face. When the electron beam hits the phospurs on the inside of the CRT face, that's what causes the light that we see as the picture.
TVs and computer monitors involve some pretty interesting and fun technologies. And the manufacturing techniques used to make the color shadow mask CRT faceplates is pretty amazing.
Here's a link to a discussion about TVs at HowStuffWorks.com for further reading:
http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/tv.htm