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Nothing really new about this, but a museum I mean to tour one day.
Moses Znaimer revolutionized TV and the way we watch it — makes sense that he collects the coolest TV sets on the planet
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I miss the old-style TVs. My grandparents bought a colour TV in the early 60s when WTOM started broadcasting as an NBC affiliate in Michigan’s UP, a few years before Canadian stations and CBS were broadcasting colour. That TV was VHF-only but it was a beautiful, elegant wooden piece of furniture.
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MJ Vancouver wrote:
I miss the old-style TVs. My grandparents bought a colour TV in the early 60s when WTOM started broadcasting as an NBC affiliate in Michigan’s UP, a few years before Canadian stations and CBS were broadcasting colour. That TV was VHF-only but it was a beautiful, elegant wooden piece of furniture.
The worst part of those old TVs had to be trying to adjust the colour. You could never quite get it right. I remember the "tint" control was especially irksome. It was either too red, too green or just not right on flesh tones somehow. As a result, no one ever looked normal when a show was in colour.
And being the neurotic I am, I could never quite leave it alone, even when I got it right. It seemed to me you could always do it just a little better if you played around with it. In the end, I sometimes spent more time adjusting the set than watching it!
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RadioActive wrote:
MJ Vancouver wrote:
I miss the old-style TVs. My grandparents bought a colour TV in the early 60s when WTOM started broadcasting as an NBC affiliate in Michigan’s UP, a few years before Canadian stations and CBS were broadcasting colour. That TV was VHF-only but it was a beautiful, elegant wooden piece of furniture.
The worst part of those old TVs had to be trying to adjust the colour. You could never quite get it right. I remember the "tint" control was especially irksome. It was either too red, too green or just not right on flesh tones somehow. As a result, no one ever looked normal when a show was in colour.
And being the neurotic I am, I could never quite leave it alone, even when I got it right. It seemed to me you could always do it just a little better if you played around with it. In the end, I sometimes spent more time adjusting the set than watching it!
I remember that. We had a modern TV in the late 80s but both of my grandparents had old TVs with knobs, and the tint was always just a bit off.
Both of them had outdoor antennas and pulled in very few stations, while we had full cable.