Poor baby. Are the wokesters kneeling on your neck for nine minutes until you die?Damn…this is some shady greasy shit. Confuses the issue as to who’s wearing the white hats & who’s wearing the back hats. Is that still an acceptable a comment in the woke context of now?
Nope, just wondering if it’s still politically correct to use the term black hat or white hat at this point to try and describe who is the good guy and who is the bad guy Like in an episode of Roy Rogers (it was definitely a clue when I was a kid). The lines are blurring & maybe all are wearing gray hats at this point? Makes it hard to figure out which ones belong behind bars and which ones should have badges.Poor baby. Are the wokesters kneeling on your neck for nine minutes until you die?
Good thing your genes escaped the genocides .Did you miss the good or bad one ?I don't bother much with the "good" genocides vs. the "bad" genocides. And TV reception in northeastern Oklahoma was shit in the 1960s. So, sorry.
Probably. Because it was CBC, a government-funded outfit, I imagine ubiquitous reception was a priority. Our purely-private system, kinda like cell phones, focussed on the areas they'd get the most pops with the least expense.Canada must’ve been rocking it back in the day then. We only had three channels and two were CBC (and one of those two was French), but we could watch TV as long as the rabbit ears were adjusted correctly, until about midnight anyway when all the TV stations went off the air. Different time.
Before Cable existed in this part of the world, CBC was a lot of recycled B&W from several decades previous of Roy Rogers and Tarzan movies and Abbott & Costello and the Three Stooges and so on and so forth, along with dubed from French Jacques Cousteau, etc…I really only remember TV from Saturday mornings but…The Wizard of Oz would play about 1/2 dozen times/year. Living in a city we could see the images, but not far from them TV reception was a blizzard of static for the most part.Probably. Because it was CBC, a government-funded outfit, I imagine ubiquitous reception was a priority. Our purely-private system, kinda like cell phones, focussed on the areas they'd get the most pops with the least expense.
We called it PBS, the Public Broadcasting System. Difference is it never broke one digit in viewership percentage, because the major networks were already well established when PBS came along in 1969.Before Cable existed in this part of the world, CBC was a lot of recycled B&W from several decades previous of Roy Rogers and Tarzan movies and Abbott & Costello and the Three Stooges and so on and so forth, along with dubed from French Jacques Cousteau, etc…I really only remember TV from Saturday mornings but…The Wizard of Oz would play about 1/2 dozen times/year. Living in a city we could see the images, but not far from them TV reception was a blizzard of static for the most part.