Another fabulous thing about entirely too much property to maintain or fix is its more than convenient excuse for not doing other items deemed less important strictly to annoy my brother-in-law. Dave is a new fangled techno gadget guru of the first order. We’re not.
Our TV up until the first week of May in 2008 was a 1994 27 inch RCA deep tube television. Once it was a victim of a class action lawsuit years after repair and longer since losing the receipt, which meant income for lawyers but utter uselessness for consumers.
At least I didn’t have to state the TV was ‘color’—that’s some progress.
The RCA started incremental possession by a poltergeist sometime in late 2006. The picture would sometimes slide randomly a few inches down the screen, and then right itself after a while. Then more often, it began to look like those widescreen movie formats: a black bar on top and bottom when it felt the urge.
When Ashley and family appeared for Christmas with Construction in 2007, the RCA suddenly wished a voice in choosing the restaurant location, and raised its volume to the max and refused to turn off through the power button. We wrestled it out of its lair to unplug it, and that was the last and only time that trick appeared.
After New Year’s, it began to lose its horizontal hold hourly, so sometime around February, we began seriously looking into a new TV. The search attained more urgency as spring progressed—I had volunteered to host the hunt club's annual Kentucky Derby Party on the first Saturday in May (and you thought this posting wasn’t horse related). We had decided on the newest, baddest 7000 series LED Samsung with a super thin screen, but the prices were falling rapidly each month. And the 32” that would have fit neatly in the TV cabinet wasn’t out yet. So we waited.
Meanwhile the RCA picture was now holding in normal condition maybe 20 minutes or so at a time. We calculated our odds that it would be normal during the two minutes it takes to run the Derby if one happens to be a Thoroughbred. The picture was now sliding 12 inches down the screen, then the bottom of the picture would slide up to reveal a new picture about a third of the height of the screen. In an innovative twist, the sides would start to tilt in from the top, forming a perfect trapezoid.
Seven days before the party we ordered a new 32” from a website. The confirmation email didn’t show up, so we called the next day only to find that there was not a 32” TV out yet—a mistake on their part. Canceling the order, five days before the party I was calling to see who could get a TV here in time. Rent? (unbelievably expensive) Buy? Finally, I called Audio Visual Artistry—which is the Memphis version of what my brother does for a living—they said they could have it in by Thursday. We sucked it up and bought the 40” LED TV (which was going to look a little off as it was bigger than the cabinet), but was also the smallest size available. It arrived Wednesday afternoon, and we had plenty of time to get it up. Crisis of 2008 averted and the race was absolutely stunning to watch on the new screen. Dave was at last happy with our technology. We proudly pointed out that we hooked the 1994 VCR up to the digital signal converter box so we could record TV. He groaned while mentioning DVR technology, but not as loudly as usual, as just a month earlier we hooked the smoking new Blu-ray player to the dying RCA (the very old DVD player finally expired). Oh the horror!
Last night’s episode of Technological Obsolescence involved Old Man’s birthday present of a new DVD player that had Netflix streaming capability. As Dave happily hooked it up and then ran headlong into the gamestopper of the Samsung server being down for a few hours, we rearranged the equipment it was replacing.
The 2008 480i Blu-ray player levitated upstairs into the guestroom and attached its umbilical cord to a 13” analog SONY Trinitron deep tube TV from maybe 2000ish that is also has a signal converter box. We were pleased they were the same brand and now we and our guests could watch movies. Dave was NOT excited, and mumbled something (at least mentally) about it being a waste of picture quality. I told him at least it wasn’t a Commodore 128 monitor from the 80’s (before I was married, this and the same VCR mentioned above formed my TV—excellent picture actually). More importantly, Old Man and I know from experience that the Blu-ray player enhances the TV picture a lot—we used it on the RCA when we acquired it. Definitely a technological advance! Poor Dave.
The streaming internet movies are really neat too. Wouldn't have been possible without the FCC complaint I lodged just this January of 2010, but that is another story.

