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Cartoons in the morning, news in the evening, and movies on weekends—those were special moments. There were no remote controls at first, so someone always had to get up and change the channel manually.
What made it even more special was how it brought the family together. There were no phones, no distractions—just laughter, stories, and shared moments.
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Now, when people look at these old wooden TVs, they don’t just see a machine. They see memories. They see childhood. They see a time when life was slower, simpler, and somehow warmer.
And that’s why people joke and say: “Our TVs were never stolen in the 80s”—because something that big and heavy wasn’t just a TV… it was part of the house itself.
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