When I was four, my parents had a TV.
A wonderful, marvelous creation that stood on its own four legs in one corner of the living room.
And, if one waited, showed the most magical, amazing programs. Like Friendly Giant.
If one waited.
After breakfast, I would hurry to the living room—and the TV therein—and look to see if something had appeared.
Usually, nothing had.
Let’s face it. I lived on a ranch. Breakfast was E.A.R.L.Y.
And the TV stations didn’t wake up until long after morning chores were done.
Wussies.
I would stare at the dark screen for a while, quietly willing something to happen.
Then begin playing.
During those early hours, play often consisted of something that kept me close to said TV.
Or following Mom around, asking when Friendly Giant would be on.
Once in a while, the genius woman would say, “Soon,” park her repetitive and annoying daughter in front of the set, and turn it on.
The Indian Head test pattern would show its familiar face. So to speak.
And keep me entertained for some time.
Did you know that, if you stare at it long enough, it . . . changes?
That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Eventually, ‘O, Canada’ would start and, immediately after that, I would see tiny little figures and ‘that big boot’.
Eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!
My day had officially begun.
Moving forward a generation . . .
No longer did one ever stare at a blank screen or a test pattern.
For my eldest son, it was a matter of watching some lessor show whilst waiting for Sesame Street to come on.
Because the programs just kept on coming.
Another generation forward . . .
My granddaughter (Hereinafter known as Little Girl—or LG for short—was sitting in her parents’ bedroom.
Looking up at the big screen TV on the wall.
The conversation went something like this:
LG: “Mo-om! I’m done watching that. I want to watch this, now!”
Daughter: “Well, here’s the remote. Choose which one you want.”
LG: “It’s taking too long.”
Me: “Sigh.”
I remember all that Diane, except "The Indian Head test pattern" Did we have one of those in Kansas?
ReplyDeleteI remember those days of three channels on a black and white set. Our kids have no idea...
ReplyDeleteI remember having pneumonia and being in a cot in the living room placed (of course) so I would have the best view of the TV and watching that Indian and waiting waiting waiting.....Oh yes..Friendly Giant, Captain Kangaroo, Popeye and Micky Mouse cartoons....life at last.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure as much patience is being learned these days as we had to learn. And we probably didn't have as much as our parents and grandparents! It is a vanishing commodity :)
ReplyDeleteIt was MUCH later when we got our first TV. I suspect it is because of that lateness, watching the beast is a habit I never developed.
ReplyDeleteAnd to think that we had ONE channel...
ReplyDeleteYes, i remember getting up when the test pattern was still on the TV. On rare occasion, we got to stay up and watch a late movie, and see the pattern return.
ReplyDeleteWe were very blessed, though, we had an entire 5 stations from which to choose when i was young, the big 3, plus a public TV station, and our city even had the only independent station "in the tri-state area" as they were always pointing out.
My childhood didn't feature much television watching, my small town was too far from the big city to get decent reception until we eventually got one of the huge higher-than-the-roof towers in the back yard and the TV antenna was on top of that. Then TV was worth watching, but still I wasn't interested all that much. my brother and I used the tower as a climbing frame to get onto the roof of the house.
ReplyDelete