Bunny Ears, copyright
Teece Aronin. |
When remotes first hit the scene, my aunt had a neighbor who would get up from her chair, cross the room to where the remote was kept on top of the TV, change the channel, then return the remote to the TV top and sit back down. In that case, the TV wasn't smart and neither was its owner.
I need at least one kid handy when I want to watch TV because I'm dumbfounded by all the equipment needed to watch one simple television show. In my defense, even my son referred to one of our recent TV tech add-ons as "that cable thing we just got."
Last night both kids were going to be away so my daughter, Syd got me all set up to watch HGTV. She was going out the door when I asked how to change channels. Syd said, "I'm sorry, Mom, but I think we'll have to wait until I have more time."
Then she left me all alone with nothing to keep the TV running but its smarts and mine.
The first thing I noticed is that the audio was out of sync with the video and that the video was ahead. My son tells me this is because we have a cheap internet service provider. Eventually the show I was watching shut down altogether and a message appeared on the screen saying: "Due to inactivity, playback was stopped to save bandwidth."
I sat bolt upright, with my bag of chips and yelled, "Whadda ya mean inactive?" Was I supposed to be talking to the TV? My father used to yell at ours when watching Hockey Night in Canada, but it didn't seem to improve his viewing experience and anyway, I would have thought those days were gone. If the TV was so smart, why did it need help from me?
After Syd got home, we wanted to switch to Hulu for Parks and Recreation, and it was another big process just to do that. I watched wistfully as her little fingers danced around all the stuff and like a miracle, Parks and Recreation came on.
"Syd, do you think you can teach me how to watch TV without help?"
"Oh, sure, Mom," she said. But she said it like I'd just asked if I could ever learn to build my own spaceship, and she didn't have the heart to tell me it was hopeless.
4 comments:
I wouldn't be able to figure this out either. When my husband and I go on vacation and stay at some hotel and the remote has all these buttons on it, we're stumped. Once, we couldn't even get a regular channel. Somehow I hit on something and we had one channel we could watch. Yeah. Smart meaning smart a**!
I hear you, Lorelei, and I agree!
This is how I felt about VCRs. Never had a DVR or that other thing, TIVO (?) that used to record. We have cable with a non smart TV and a Blue Ray DVD player that we only use for Pandora, Amazon or Netflix. I only learned to operate independently about one year ago. Javier was my remote god. He's also my GPS, cause I really haven't learned that yet either. I hear you, thanks for the good read.
Oh, my gosh, it's been almost two years, and I'm just seeing your comment! Sorry, Marc!
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