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Yesterday as I was struggling with some broken software I figured out a work-around and got the job done. Later when describing my struggle to my wife I used a simile comparing it to slapping the side of a television set which wasn't working right. This sometimes re-seated some of the vacuum tubes (when it didn't knock them loose entirely) and you could go back to watching Perry Mason.
That in turn brought to mind another old television word which has surely disappeared along with the object it named, "rabbit ears".
But maybe I'm wrong. I just Googled and found them still to be widely available. I suppose I've been living in a major metropolitan area too long as I've had cable TV service for more than forty years now.
If any of you are under 40, or know someone under 40, ask if they know what "rabbit ears" are. I'm curious to know.
"Grass Widow" in the Era was a common euphemism for "divorcee." It was mostly used by older, rural types, but that's what it was generally understood to mean.
As for rabbit ears, most everybody I associate with around here is under 40, and all but the very youngest know the term, having encountered the defunct set of rabbit ears on top of my television set. "Rabbit Ear" television was still a common thing here until the digital hijacking of the broadcast spectrum ten years ago, and there are plenty of under-40 kids from the rurals who didn't grow up with cable and know what it was to twist a rabbit ear around to try and get Channel 10.
My dad did not part with a dollar casually, but at some point in the '70s, he had a TV antenna installed on our roof and it was no less amazing than the parting of the sea. The rabbit ears provided so-so reception that required constant adjusting (usually by me) and, occasionally, somebody holding them in a certain position for the entire show or game (always me) just to get modestly acceptable reception.
But with the roof-top antenna, all the major channels (back then, the three networks, two local stations and PBS) came in perfectly. Within ten or so years, most people (not us) in the NY-metro area would have cable and none of this would matter, but at the time, the difference between rabbit-ears reception and roof-top-antenna reception was almost magical.