The big box in the corner.
That’s what our first television was called.
It's the early 1960s, and I have a memory of a rather big box that stood in the corner of our rented home.
It had a very small screen.
In fact, the screen was so small that at times a pair of binoculars would have been useful. The room was small, but it seemed to be so far away.
But there was an answer to that — we just moved the sofa and chairs closer to the television.
It was mostly a box, but it had to be.
One day the television stopped working. When that happened, the main way of getting it to work again seemed to be to hit the top of the box. Dad tried that, but it did nothing to solve the issue. The picture remained blank.
He then called in the local repairman, who in due course arrived with his handyman bag of tools.
His first job was to take the back off the big box with a screwdriver. It only took a few minutes for him to decide that one of the valves needed to be replaced. While he was doing that, I had a quick look at what was in the back. Considering the actual screen was so small, I was surprised to see all the valves, transistors and a massive tube.
It surprised me that putting all that stuff together only produced such a small picture.
Looking into the back did show me one thing, though. I had been told by my granddad that all the people who appeared on television actually lived in the back of the television set. Of course, being very young and not knowing anything about how that was possible, I just accepted his expertise on the matter. It never occurred to me that while the box may have been big, it wasn’t that big. They must have been very small people.
The handyman, having changed the valve, then turned the television on. There then followed a wait of several minutes for the set to “warm up” and a picture to appear.
It was like magic.








