by James Wallace Harris, 12/31/22
I've lived long enough to experience a number of technological revolutions in television. I was born in 1951, and some of my earliest memories are of watching TV in 1955. TV screens were much smaller then, and the image was in black and white. Well, the whites weren't white, and the blacks weren't black, and the image quality was halfway between a black-and-white half-tone photo in the newspaper and a Tri-X black-and-white photograph. What we saw on the screen was small, and fuzzy, giving the impression we had bad eyesight.
Although we couldn't afford it, my father got us a color TV in 1965. Wow. That was the first big tech breakthrough in television that I remember. And not all shows were broadcast in color. I remember how the TV Guide noted which shows were in [COLOR]. As it became more common, they shortened it to [C].
Growing up with black-and-white TV is the main reason why I love old black-and-white movies. And for two reasons. First, I learned to love watching stories visually told in black and white, and second, early TV ran old movies from the 1930s and 1940s that were mostly black and white.
The next big tech innovation was cable TV. No more messing with the antenna anymore. Cable TV took us far beyond ABC, CBS, and NBC. But the biggest tech change was in the later part of the 1970s when we got a VCR. That opened up time shifting and freed us from the TV schedule. But more importantly, it allowed us to buy or rent movies and TV shows. We had more freedom than ever for choosing what we wanted to watch and when.
We didn't know how bad the image quality of VHS was until we could buy DVDs. A couple decades later we got large flatscreen TVs that could do 720p and 1080i and realized we needed Blu-ray discs. Then came streaming TV services that freed us from the disc. I've gone months or even years without using a DVD. Susan has a big collection of Christmas movies she watches each December, but this year I noticed she streamed most of those movies.
We could almost give away our DVD/BD library. But not quite. Every once in a while I'll want to watch something that no streaming service offers, and no site rents. Sometimes these forgotten shows are available on YouTube, but usually not. That's when I have to return to the disc.
I wanted to show Susan Northern Exposure to see if she wanted it to be our next series to watch together every night. It's nowhere to stream or rent online. Luckily, I have seasons 1-4 on DVD. But they are on flippy discs which I hate, and seasons 3 and 4 didn't use the original music. The music was an enchanting feature of the series, but the producers didn't foresee they'd have to pay expensive royalties if they resold their show on disc. [See explanation.]
If Northern Exposure was on a streaming service I didn't already subscribe to, I would subscribe to that service just to watch it. Or I'd buy a digital copy on Amazon. After that, I'd want to buy it on Blu-ray. Unfortunately, the only complete series for sale on Region 1 discs still doesn't have the original music. There are Blu-ray and DVD sets from Great Britain but they are expensive and Region 2 discs.
Fans of the show on Amazon are spending $170 for the Blu-ray sets and another $170 for a Region-free Blu-ray player. I'm not going to spend $340. So, I got out my old DVDs but discovered that my Sony Blu-ray player was dead. I haven't used it in a very long while. Streaming really has changed us. Luckily, I have a cheap $29 Region-free DVD player I had to buy it to watch Love in a Cold Climate because I could only find that old series used on Region 2 discs. Downgrading to DVD is how we watched the pilot of Northern Exposure last night.
The image quality was a step down - 480i. And the DVD player was poorly designed with a terrible remote. And that release on flippy discs forced us to watch previews for several TV shows from back in the 1990s each time we start the player.
Quite a downgrade in TV watching. Still, the 4:3 image on my 65" screen was far better than what we saw in the summer of 1990 on a 25" screen. I could say it was a retro-nostalgic experience, but I'm too addicted to the current state of television technology to be satisfied. I'm awful tempted to spend the $103 and get the British Region 2 DVD set. That's a lot more money than the American Region 1 $39 DVD set of the complete series, but it has the original music that I've ached to hear again. I really want the Blu-ray version, but it's just too damn expensive.
For now, we'll try the old DVDs to see if we get hooked again on a show we both loved thirty years ago.
JWH
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