As mentioned
earlier, there were only the three networks and their stations in the area when I was a kid. That did not remain the case. Eventually a fourth station appeared, channel 20, carrying PBS programming.
This was at a time when changing the channel meant getting up and turning the channel tuner, which turned with a bit of a clunk...
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The weird thing about ch. 10 (which was the only channel in Terre Haute for a long time, and consequently all we could watch when we visited my uncle Donald) was that it carried both CBS and ABC shows. Later, when Terre Haute got ch. 2, it had NBC and ABC. They didn't get an independent ABC station for years after.
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Before infra-red remotes became common, my father's solution to remote control was to have the VCR and stereo (the mono audio from the VCR split and patched into a input) next to him and use them to control everything except TV power. It makes sense, you'd have to get up to change tapes (or DVDs now) if it was by the TV.
I'd rather have the real controls than the on-screen-display stuff, but I do understand that with the almost everything on a chip and all the added circuit complexity that can come with that yet maintain reliability, that most controls are now "set and forget." And some (vertical hold, horizontal hold) aren't really needed. Those were there as the simpler circuits drifted some and needed occasional tweaking.
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