Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for July 04, 2018

  1. Img 0910
    BE THIS GUY  over 6 years ago

    …and no remote.

     •  Reply
  2. Avatar
    alaskajohn1  over 6 years ago

    I only had 3 and 2 were UHF which were difficult to receive. (Kids ask you grandparents what UHF is, don’t just Google it.)

     •  Reply
  3. Oofs
    SomeOtherGocomicsGuy  over 6 years ago

    (insert clever comment here)

     •  Reply
  4. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  over 6 years ago

    oh, the horror

     •  Reply
  5. Mmae
    pearlsbs  over 6 years ago

    Four channels when I was growing up, but two of them were both NBC affiliates.

     •  Reply
  6. Rick o shay
    wiatr  over 6 years ago

    I can think of four unless there was some unusual weather. All were UHF and thanks to digital I can only get one of those now. Thanks, Clinton.

     •  Reply
  7. Photo
    Robin Harwood  over 6 years ago

    In Adelaide, we had NO television until I was thirteen. We had to learn how to read.And I once horrified my nieces by pointing out that we didn’t know what pizza was.

     •  Reply
  8. 20231014 093035
    ND Cool Z  over 6 years ago

    And all the channels were in BLACK AND WHITE!! (the kids scream in horror and could never go to bed that night)

     •  Reply
  9. Bluedog
    Bilan  over 6 years ago

    I didn’t know that I was in the lap of luxury back then. We had three VHF stations and three UHF stations.

     •  Reply
  10. Blunebottle
    blunebottle  over 6 years ago

    Only had 3. Couldn’t receive UHF.

    Then, one day, a small, unimportant-looking cement block building appeared on a vacant lot a few blocks from us, with a yagi antenna on top of a tall mast…..and cablevision was born in Western Canada!

     •  Reply
  11. Img
    Bob.  over 6 years ago

    Way back I had a TV set with a channel 1. Old Halicrafters.

     •  Reply
  12. Kca mind the snp
    Ryan Plut  over 6 years ago

    Kids to Goat: “What’s a channel?”

     •  Reply
  13. 2006 afl collingwood
    nosirrom  over 6 years ago

    Channel surfing was so much faster then. Well except for the time it took to get up off the sofa and cross the room.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    rwjames  over 6 years ago

    We had three - CBC, CTV, and CBC French.

     •  Reply
  15. 1628996 t1
    enigmamz  over 6 years ago

    Had 4:

    6 – PBS8 – NBC13 – CBS17 – ABC

    At first, cable only expanded up to 12, and 3 were just repeats of the major networks from Kansas City.

     •  Reply
  16. Alexander the great
    Alexander the Good Enough  over 6 years ago

    And children, THERE WAS NO INTERNET, no social media!!! But still no privacy because there were what was called “party lines” that weren’t any good for pickups.

     •  Reply
  17. Dr hellmutt 180x161
    Darque Hellmutt  over 6 years ago

    When GOAT was a KID? Pastis got that one by ALL of you?

     •  Reply
  18. George3
    noahproblem  over 6 years ago

    If Goat/Paris had mentioned how he had to listen to music those poor kids would probably be scarred for life.

     •  Reply
  19. Avatar 2475
    Troglodyte  over 6 years ago

    Out in my part of India, we had TV only towards end of the ’70s and one channel at that – in glorious monochrome. We got our first TV set at home somewhere around the same time, and half the nighbourhood would visit to watch when they showed movies on the weekends – talk about a sense of community! Colour TV broadcasts started only in late 1982, and cable TV in the early ’90s finally gave us a taste of how the world viewed TV.

    At present, there are hundreds of cable / DTH channels, but the situation is similar to what Bruce Springsteen felt in his song “57 Channels and nothin’ on”…

     •  Reply
  20. Img 2602
    daijoboo Premium Member over 6 years ago

    Telephones only did calls, and the phone didn’t go anywhere.

     •  Reply
  21. 3083024 0826053922 daveb
    Kaputnik  over 6 years ago

    When I was a kid in the 1960s, we didn’t have a TV.

    Admittedly that was because we were the weird family on the block, but other kids couldn’t imagine how we got by without those 8 channels, or 4, or whatever it would have been.

     •  Reply
  22. 100 3924
    jessie d.  over 6 years ago

    But those 8 channels were known as the Golden Age of television for the enduring quality of their shows.

     •  Reply
  23. Dillo
    mommadillo  over 6 years ago

    We had 4 because we lived near Detroit and could pick up CKLW out of Windsor, Ontario. My folks didn’t have a color TV until after I moved away from home.

     •  Reply
  24. Capture  2017 12 17 08 45 35 2
    Nyckname  over 6 years ago

    As they all look up from their devices and ask, “What’s a ‘channel’?”

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    mudak326  over 6 years ago

    Not only that, our phones were connected to a wall, had only one ringtone, and couldn’t be used for taking pictures, much less sharing them..

     •  Reply
  26. Missing large
    sarah413 Premium Member over 6 years ago

    Rotary phones. I still have one, but don’t keep it plugged in.

    Why, when I read pig saying that they only had 8 channels, do I hear Springsteen’s “57 Channels (and Nothin’ On)?”

     •  Reply
  27. Missing large
    naplllp  over 6 years ago

    We had 3 channels-Syracuse (NBC), Binghamton (CBS), and Buffalo (ABC) (The latter when the weather was right). Our antenna was on the hill behind the house, with cables going through the trees. It came down in 1971, and we didn’t get TV back on the farm until 1985.

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    feverjr Premium Member over 6 years ago

    “… and Philo Farnsworth in 1921, when he was 14, worked out the principals of picture transmission that we call television. So what are you kids doing with your free time?”

     •  Reply
  29. Duck1275
    Brass Orchid Premium Member over 6 years ago

    There wasn’t a single transistor in our whole town.

     •  Reply
  30. 1959 chevy elcamino
    F-Flash  over 6 years ago

    TV wasn’t really worth watching until Batman came on in the late 60’s, and don’t forget the Monkees.

     •  Reply
  31. 288880045 10221076520606585 8531060568730745726 n
    dlkrueger33  over 6 years ago

    I grew up in the late 50s and early 60s….I guess I lived in the lap of luxury because I remember SEVEN channels. And Channel 11, WPIX, had the Yankee games broadcast. Of course, the networks all signed off at midnight (test pattern all night) and around 6 or 7am came back on with the flag waving and music playing the Star Spangled Banner. As a kid on a Saturday, you were definitely up to watch the cartoons begin for the day! All black and white and on a tiny screen (which we thought was big).

     •  Reply
  32. Picture
    Ontman  over 6 years ago

    Back then BC was before cable.

     •  Reply
  33. 20071112 einstein
    hariseldon59  over 6 years ago

    Remember when TVs had vertical and horizontal hold knobs to fix the picture when it rolled or broke up into lines? I don’t miss that.

     •  Reply
  34. Klingon crest a
    Scott S  over 6 years ago

    We had 4, the CBS, ABC, NBC, & PBS affiliates. One of my friends had an outside antenna & they could pick up Rockford & Milwaukee stations too.

     •  Reply
  35. Egret chick
    Fontessa  over 6 years ago

    Two channels: NBC and CBS. We had a black phone on the wall in our hall, and you had to tell the operator what number you wanted to call :)

     •  Reply
  36. Ignatz
    Ignatz Premium Member over 6 years ago

    Which ones? We only had 7 in New York. (2, 4, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13.) Of course, you could diddle around with the UHF, hoping to get a signal of something, so there’s that.

     •  Reply
  37. Img 20190428 152052 hdr kindlephoto 2072758
    SusieB  over 6 years ago

    Speaking of no remote, when I was a kid I WAS the remote. My dad would make me walk ALL THE WAY across the room to change the channel dispute the fact he was sitting closest to the TV! Child abuse!! LOL! We lived in Upstate NY and had a huge antenna on a hill. It was a rotary one so we could either tune in the channels from Albany or NYC, which ever were better that day.

     •  Reply
  38. Duke
    Rev Phnk Ey  over 6 years ago

    Only a couple of channels, but joy of joys, there was “Beanie and Cecil”. Best ever.

     •  Reply
  39. Head
    unclepablo  over 6 years ago

    … and then there was the plastic knob that always eventually broke so you had a TV with a pair of vice grip pliers attached to it.

     •  Reply
  40. Missing large
    serial232  over 6 years ago

    Hey! Everyone! Listen up! There is a world out there that you all are missing. If you ever decide to cut the cable cord, (or dish cord), and purchase a digital antenna, you will find that VHF and UHF still exists. You will also find that those old channels that you speak of are still there and they have sub-channels, giving you tons of free movies, weather, you name it. The sub-channels are found by putting in 5.1, or 5.2, etc. By the way, we always had ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS, and an independent channel or two on UHF. (By the way UHF stands for Ultra High Frequency, while VHF stands for Very High Frequency. Just thought I’d throw that out there. Seriously though, get an antenna, a good one, and try out free tv.

     •  Reply
  41. Hellcat
    knight1192a  over 6 years ago

    Ah the Tell Tale Television by everyone over a certain age. And that age changes every generation.

     •  Reply
  42. Missing large
    azktryg  over 6 years ago

    My wife horrifies the grandkids, telling them about growing up in Rio without TV. For myself, I always remember having the old Dumont (see comment above), but they can’t believe my older brother also had no TV, here in the USA, until after I was born. They are also incredulous when I told them about my hand-held device that would “download” music free, without any gig limits. We called it a transistor radio. They would be hysterical if I told them I looked up “incredulous” in a dictionary, rather than Googling it.

     •  Reply
  43. Missing large
    STACEY MARSHALL Premium Member over 6 years ago

    EIGHT CHANNELS! BOY, WERE YOU LUCKY! When I was a kid, we only got the one local channel. We could sometimes get a second channel in a city at a further distance, if one person would go out and rotate the pole that the antenna was on, while another person inside yelled out when they got the antenna turned in the right direction.

     •  Reply
  44. Californiaraisinicon1
    bluegirl285  over 6 years ago

    Oh, the horror! Oh the humanity!

     •  Reply
  45. Wiz wirp boing
    johndifool  over 6 years ago

    And, 25 years from now, those kids will regale their kids with the horror of today’s cable TV, where there are 1,001 channels, but there’s nothing on.

     •  Reply
  46. E4021848 439d 42fe 9403 924766811128
    NoneOfTheAbove  over 6 years ago

    Happy fourth, but’s only to the people who won’t just focus on a national holiday. We need to remember. I, for one, might be the only one that actually cares. Is it because everyone’s a Democrat. I thought we were united.

     •  Reply
  47. 1017207 10200214106421862 492754112 n
    Cameron1988 Premium Member over 6 years ago

    Sheesh, how old is goat?

     •  Reply
  48. 20180812 203935
    dlaemmerhirt999  over 6 years ago

    “Muh-mister Goat . . . thuh-that’s not true. Right?”

     •  Reply
  49. Img 1610
    WCraft Premium Member over 6 years ago

    Pastis: Thank you – NOT! I had suppressed the horrific memory of that time period and you brought it back to the surface!

     •  Reply
  50. Facepalm bear 2
    Lablubber   over 6 years ago

    No Netflix, Hulu or YouTube either. Kids are scarred for life.

     •  Reply
  51. 5f3a242a feac 42cc b507 b6590d3039f7
    Plods with ...™  over 6 years ago

    2 – Montpelier and Mt Washington

     •  Reply
  52. Missing large
    Display  over 6 years ago

    “And when the 3 stations shut down for the night you turned the TV off. I can still see the image go down into a little white dot in the center of the screen and fade away…”

     •  Reply
  53. 20071112 einstein
    hariseldon59  over 6 years ago

    No video games back then either. We played board games, where we had to roll dice and move game pieces by hand. I’m not sure if kids still do that today.

     •  Reply
  54. Cane immagine animata 0071
    Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus Premium Member over 6 years ago

    Only one TV channel here in Italy when I was a kid and 3 radio stations . I was born in 1957

     •  Reply
  55. Get smart shoe phone
    gopher gofer  over 6 years ago

    it’s wonderful how a simple cartoon strip provides the stimulus for all the fogies to wallow in their memory swamp…

     •  Reply
  56. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 6 years ago

    Piffle! Young’uns! I’m so old, I can remember when we had no TV at all!

     •  Reply
  57. Edb4beaa 19ab 437d a460 cf4fba2a5e74
    syzygy47  over 6 years ago

    Three channels when I grew up. And I was the ‘remote’. And the antenna tuner.

     •  Reply
  58. Missing large
    BOSFLASH  over 5 years ago

    I had only 3 and no UHF; sign off at 11:PM

     •  Reply
  59. Download
    Cmcneillhuff5243  over 4 years ago

    what is UHF?

     •  Reply
  60. Screenshot 2021 01 06 at 1.40.17 pm
    Two Crocodiles in the bar   almost 4 years ago

    THE HORROR

     •  Reply
  61. Large 5135c8dd a681 40c2 8c60 eede9953c411
    Josequeen   over 3 years ago

    AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! THE HORRORRRRR

     •  Reply
  62. Dog
    robert423elliott  about 2 years ago

    We had lots of channels…..oh, wait, that was the radio. In the late 40’s and early 50’s we didn’t have a TV. When we finally got one, we had 2 channels in black and white! It all had to do with when you were born. For me, 1947!

     •  Reply
  63. Missing large
    alantain  about 1 year ago

    When I was a kid, Google didn’t exist and computers had the computing power of a calculator.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Pearls Before Swine