I am danish – when I was that age, there was one (1) Channel, and my parents TV was black-and-white. The good thing was, that when talked about TV-shows at school, everybody was talking about the same thing. ;-D
29 years ago the complaint was that you had to pay for 57 channels when you only watched 5 of them. Now the complaint is that it’s too expensive to pay for every streaming service. Which is true, if you get to them all at once. But we have the choice to pick only what we want to subscribe to, and can cancel them at anytime, which is what people wanted in the first place! I don’t get it.
In New York City in the ‘50s, there was always something good on. the million dollar movie, the early show, the late show, The late late show, and The late late late show we’re almost always worth watching.
Jerry Lester did Broadway Open House for a little over a year in early 1950’s. Lots of yocks and comic routines. Most late night shows since then stemmed from that success, as did the careers of dozens of ftv comedy stars.
A good Bruce Springsteen Movie? Bruce Willis or Bruce Dern – maybe. There are a few others. But a good Bruce Springsteen movie? – at least not as an actor.
I grew up in Flint (yes, that Flint) in the ’60s. My dad used to work for a tv/radio sales/service shop, and put up a deep-fringe antenna on the roof with a motor to aim it. We were able to get the three Flint channels, multiple Detroit channels, and even a couple of Canadian channels.
Was more behind the set than in front (don’t forget to short -circuit under the insulating rubber cup before pulling the wire out of the picture tube), but did enjoy some of the Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan movies, and Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes.
This is one of those moments to step back, in that we went from something that we were getting for free, to something that we had some control over that we payed for, to something we had even more control over and has better quality to something we have even more control over and is arguably better quality that we have to pay for. All the while we can still get stuff for free – that arguably has improved as well. For some – Caufield’s complaint is something of a “first world problem”.
I had expected him to hit the really big numbers like vigintillion.
Definition of vigintillion
US : a number equal to 1 followed by 63 zeros— see TABLE OF NUMBERS
also, British : a number equal to 1 followed by 120 zeros— see TABLE OF NUMBERS
Examples of vigintillion in a Sentence
Recent Examples on the Web
Physics theories suggest that sometime between 10^34 (1 decillion) and 10^64 (1 vigintillion) years from now, the protons found in the nuclei of all atoms will decay.— NBC News, “How humans might outlive Earth, the sun…and even the universe,” 20 Dec. 2017
I have a basic cable package. One channel has a bunch of good shows (all reruns, but still good) that are on almost every day. The only problem is they run the garbage shows first and the good shows are all on after midnight.
Concretionist almost 4 years ago
And the answer is… $Money.
GreasyOldTam almost 4 years ago
Correction. only if you subscribe to TWO godzillion streaming services.
Wilde Bill almost 4 years ago
And 90% of everything on the streaming services is crud, so it’s still the same problem.
eromlig almost 4 years ago
When I was Caulfield’s age there was nothing to watch on 4 channels, and they all signed off before midnight.
Sisterdame almost 4 years ago
I am danish – when I was that age, there was one (1) Channel, and my parents TV was black-and-white. The good thing was, that when talked about TV-shows at school, everybody was talking about the same thing. ;-D
batmanwithprep almost 4 years ago
29 years ago the complaint was that you had to pay for 57 channels when you only watched 5 of them. Now the complaint is that it’s too expensive to pay for every streaming service. Which is true, if you get to them all at once. But we have the choice to pick only what we want to subscribe to, and can cancel them at anytime, which is what people wanted in the first place! I don’t get it.
The Old Wolf almost 4 years ago
In New York City in the ‘50s, there was always something good on. the million dollar movie, the early show, the late show, The late late show, and The late late late show we’re almost always worth watching.
sandpiper almost 4 years ago
Jerry Lester did Broadway Open House for a little over a year in early 1950’s. Lots of yocks and comic routines. Most late night shows since then stemmed from that success, as did the careers of dozens of ftv comedy stars.
Doug K almost 4 years ago
A good Bruce Springsteen Movie? Bruce Willis or Bruce Dern – maybe. There are a few others. But a good Bruce Springsteen movie? – at least not as an actor.
grocks almost 4 years ago
Ain’t it the truth, ain’t it the truth?
sappha58 almost 4 years ago
I grew up in Flint (yes, that Flint) in the ’60s. My dad used to work for a tv/radio sales/service shop, and put up a deep-fringe antenna on the roof with a motor to aim it. We were able to get the three Flint channels, multiple Detroit channels, and even a couple of Canadian channels.
hmofo813 Premium Member almost 4 years ago
“Godzillion?” The only place I’ve ever encountered that is in the writings of J.R. “Bob” Dobbs. Are this kid’s parents subgeniuses?
95 almost 4 years ago
Was more behind the set than in front (don’t forget to short -circuit under the insulating rubber cup before pulling the wire out of the picture tube), but did enjoy some of the Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan movies, and Basil Rathbone as Sherlock Holmes.
cissycox almost 4 years ago
I remember variety shows, music, dance, comedy skits. I always loved the skits where the actors would break character and laugh at their own jokes.
pumaman almost 4 years ago
Gazillion. Not godzillion.
swenbu Premium Member almost 4 years ago
So many good responses this morning! ….. nothing to add!
raybarb44 almost 4 years ago
Thank God that we still got books…..
Kawasaki Cat almost 4 years ago
Everything is more complicated and expensive today.
Lori Wall Premium Member almost 4 years ago
On a completely different subject, isn’t the word “gazillion?” I don’t think Godzilla has anything to do with it.
COL Crash almost 4 years ago
Easy Caulfield, profit and the desire for dominance is still driving the train.
codak almost 4 years ago
all the forced “updates” on the computer just seem to bog things down
MITZI almost 4 years ago
Fall 1950, St Joseph, Crusader Rabbit!!
asrialfeeple almost 4 years ago
Money, money, money!
Richard S Russell Premium Member almost 4 years ago
Bruce Springsteen gave a pretty good performance 3 days ago, and it was carried live on all the free networks.
Thinkingblade almost 4 years ago
This is one of those moments to step back, in that we went from something that we were getting for free, to something that we had some control over that we payed for, to something we had even more control over and has better quality to something we have even more control over and is arguably better quality that we have to pay for. All the while we can still get stuff for free – that arguably has improved as well. For some – Caufield’s complaint is something of a “first world problem”.
Bilan almost 4 years ago
Nobody noticed that Frazz admitted that he watches tv?
billdaviswords almost 4 years ago
29 years ago Weird Al wrote “Now why did I ever pay for this junk? I hooked up eighty channels and each one stunk.” 80 channels… Weird Al for the win.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] almost 4 years ago
I had expected him to hit the really big numbers like vigintillion.
Definition of vigintillion
US : a number equal to 1 followed by 63 zeros— see TABLE OF NUMBERS
also, British : a number equal to 1 followed by 120 zeros— see TABLE OF NUMBERS
Examples of vigintillion in a Sentence
Recent Examples on the Web
Physics theories suggest that sometime between 10^34 (1 decillion) and 10^64 (1 vigintillion) years from now, the protons found in the nuclei of all atoms will decay.— NBC News, “How humans might outlive Earth, the sun…and even the universe,” 20 Dec. 2017
https://www.bing.com/search?q=vigintillion&cvid=b762135e937a44bb9eab662a34e5f686&FORM=ANAB01&PC=DCTS
lunatic03867 almost 4 years ago
I have a basic cable package. One channel has a bunch of good shows (all reruns, but still good) that are on almost every day. The only problem is they run the garbage shows first and the good shows are all on after midnight.
eugenesiren Premium Member almost 4 years ago
My father doesn’t believe me when I tell that within five years, the Super Bowl will only be available via pay-per-view.