Monday, August 07, 2006

Winky Dink

Take it apart

This could have been my sister and me on any given Saturday in the way back.   Our first  television was a Philco, nearly identical to the one shown.  Here, we're watching Winky Dink and You, the first interactive T.V. show.  The gimmick was you had to send in for the  "Official Winky Dink Kit" that cost 50¢.  What you got was an acetate sheet that would cling to the  television screen, and some magic crayons that allowed you to connect dots to provide Winky Dink with stuff like a rope to slide down.  But -- we did not have an "Official Winky Dink Kit," because mom said it was a foolish extravagance.  What we did was use wax paper.  I mean, we tried to use wax paper, but it wasn't transparent enough to see the instructions that the Winky Dink marketers cleverly made light enough to foil us cheaters. 

BTW, the very first thing I watched on our new television was General MacArthur's ticker tape parade in New York after being fired by Truman. 

The second thing I did with our new T.V. set was take the record player apart to find out how the changer worked.  I was about 6 years old.  Mom nearly went catatonic when she walked in and found parts all over.  Fortunately, I was able to put it back together, thus saving myself  a spanking when pop came home.  I think this guy is just like me.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

Believe it, I've done nearly the same on two different cell phones. Each time I lost my phone in the swimming pool (Nokia for 15hrs!) I'd take them apart and place in warm sunlight to dry out. Not egg frying heat, but dry. Also recovered a submerged Samsung. They always came back to life just fine.

Of course at 6 yrs old, I was learning to hand sew doll clothes, not rebuild the family turntable! Juice

Linda Sue O'Grady said...

I didn't get no Winky Dink Kit neither Rodg, and I'm still holding that resentment.

Winky Dink and you,
Winky Dink and me,
always have a lot of fun
together.

I didn't get to have no fun.

Rodger the Real King of France said...

Did you try wax paper? We even tried crayons right on the screen, and had a devil of a time getting it off the plastic cover.

Anonymous said...

Winky Dink...
I used Saran Wrap.
My rich buddy had the real kit, and it worked a heckuva lot better.

Rodger the Real King of France said...

I was just now stunned (I looked it up) to find out that Saran Wrap was introduced for home use in 1953, the same year Winky Dink began. We didn't get Saran wrap in our house for ... hell, a long time. Fk'n rich kids.

Linda Sue O'Grady said...

No wax paper Rodg.

crayons didn't work either.

Linda Sue O'Grady said...

er, crayons didn't work for me either.

Anonymous said...

Crayon on the screen worked just fine for me, but Saran Wrap kept Mom considerably happier...

That must have been the third or maybe fourth TV we had, though. Our first one had like a 7" screen. We got it from some people up the block who were up-sizing to a mammoth 12"! And a family across the street had a really weird TV: you watched a reflection of the picture on the tube that faced straight upward in a huge console.

My earliest TV watching, though, was stuff like Rootie Kazootie and the original Soupy Sales in Detroit. The world nigh on ended when shows like The Wonderful World of Disney and Superman hit the screen.

Anonymous said...

Taking things apart!When I was five I took the gas meter apart after my dad showed me how a screwdriver worked.Mom came outside to see and hear the meter hissing, well after the gas people ,Fire department had left it went down hill from there .

Anonymous said...

that is a great story...

thanks...

i still take things apart, and some, don't make it back together...

just put new headers on an old, old, old pickup...

after this, i had for the first time, the desire to never take anything apart again.

Virgil Rogers said...

I can beat that story...

In, On, Or about 1962 my dad...the "electronic engineer"... had both a tube based console 19" TV and a large wooden cabinet "console hi/fi radio stereo phonograph" in the living room of our little rented house.

Tube "A" went out in the TV set, so dad borrowed the same tube from the afore mentioned "console hi/fi radio stereo phonograph" and as a precaution, unplugged it from the wall outlet.

Little son and future genius & mechanical engineer (that would be me) proceeded to plug in and turn on said "console hi/fi radio stereo phonograph" while no one was looking, and left it on to cook for untold days--thereby filling the house with smoke a few nights later as the high voltage stage of the power transformer melted down into a puddle of wax and tar.

We all survived, but I never will forget my Mom screaming "get the kids out..."

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