Wed, 29 Feb 2012 15:54:17 GMT — They were long thought to be a thing of the past, but rooftop antennas are making a comeback thanks to high cable and satellite prices and online programming options.
It was 1947 when Don Hutcheson installed his first television antenna, in Whittier, California. Back then, you could get exactly one channel. Today, more than 150 channels broadcast in Southern ...
ELIZABETH ROY opted out of her cable package years ago. But the 40-year-old can still watch the 2021 Emmy Awards on her local CBS affiliate—free of charge—with an assist from a $19 antenna she bought ...
Friday's the deadline for thousands of low-tech Sonoma County TV viewers -- those who snag video signals with rooftop antennas or set-top ''rabbit ears'' -- to join the digital revolution. Those who ...
Watching television without cable or satellite service is about to become more difficult for many North Olympic Peninsula viewers. For some television fans, those old rabbit ears on top of the trusty ...
CLEVELAND — Buying an antenna for a high-definition television seems as out of place as using a rotary phone to make a call. But some consumers are spending thousands of dollars on LCD or plasma TVs ...
April 30, 2008; ST. LOUIS – Over 75% of the estimated 33 million American households that get television through an antenna use indoor antennas, such as rabbit ears, according to market research firm ...
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