Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
![A complete backup of www.model-kartei.de](https://www.archivebay.com/archive5/images/a20fcd60-52ba-41dc-b342-71b94e9f6363.png)
A complete backup of www.model-kartei.de
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of dirtyhomeclips.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive5/images/5204b634-cc9d-4e2c-aed7-a4dc81877b67.png)
A complete backup of dirtyhomeclips.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of sonovinhasbr.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive5/images/97d43e8d-485c-4490-bc5a-ee9c32da753e.png)
A complete backup of sonovinhasbr.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of webcamsdolls.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive5/images/a67a01e8-6186-4f00-b777-a9c08dd70de2.png)
A complete backup of webcamsdolls.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of www.www.petticoated.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive5/images/704c4fb2-312d-4fd2-8dd7-34bf5e640411.png)
A complete backup of www.www.petticoated.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
![A complete backup of parkopedia.co.uk](https://www.archivebay.com/archive2/4f24da76-39b5-443c-b652-077116145875.png)
A complete backup of parkopedia.co.uk
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of paellamagic.com.au](https://www.archivebay.com/archive2/bf5b50c3-49ed-47c8-889f-e7603afa5e14.png)
A complete backup of paellamagic.com.au
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
![A complete backup of onlineappsdba.com](https://www.archivebay.com/archive2/0a8fb2e7-e852-48e2-9591-8eb53935adce.png)
A complete backup of onlineappsdba.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
Themselves.
WELCOME TO THE
START THE TOUR. Select Language. English Français Deutsch 中文. MZTV is a member of the ZoomerMedia Interactive network ZoomerMediaInteractive network
MZTV MUSEUM VIRTUAL TOUR 15 Tour Stops, 2 New Exhibits & A Ton of TV Tech. MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario,Canada M6K 1Y4
VISITING - MZTV
Location MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4 Phone: 416-599-7339 Email: mztv@MZTV.com By Car Driving directions GPS coordinates: 43.6373469, -79.4213957 or N43º 38' 14.449", W79º 25' 17.024" Parking in ZoomerMedia's street lotCONTACTS - MZTV
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4EXHIBITS - MZTV
On display in Montreal. An Exhibition of TV Sets From the Moses Znaimer Collection. From the post World War II era to the emergence of personal computers in the early 80s, one technological wonder was at the core of domestic bliss: the television set. THE FIRST STAR OF TELEVISION Felix The Cat – This Very Figure of Him. Felix rose to TV stardom in the late 1920s, when the American communications giant, RCA, chose him as a test subject for its television research.JOHN LOGIE BAIRD
John Logie Baird: The First Father of Television See John Logie Baird’s scanning discs, the first television patent ever granted, and his 1940 colour television system, in RCA, TRK-12 PHANTOM TELECEIVER 1939, USA. This TV set, the rarest on the planet, inspired a great deal of awe in its millions of viewers. Built with one of the Fair’s theme materials, Lucite, the inner workings of the receiver were thus exposed to remove any doubts that “magic” or trickery wasinvolved.
LAST CIGARETTE COMMERCIAL IN THE US December 31, 1970 The last cigarette commercial to air in the US, a commercial for Virginia Slims, is aired on The Tonight Show. The ad features actress/model Veronica Hamel from TV's Hill Street Blues.Congress bans
MZTV - MZTV MUSEUM OF TELEVISIONVISITINGHIGHLIGHTS The MZTV Museum and Archive seeks to protect, preserve and promote the Receiving Instruments of Television History. Whereas other North American Museums of Broadcasting feature Programs, ours is unique in its focus on the History of the Technology, as well as on the SetsThemselves.
WELCOME TO THE
START THE TOUR. Select Language. English Français Deutsch 中文. MZTV is a member of the ZoomerMedia Interactive network ZoomerMediaInteractive network
MZTV MUSEUM VIRTUAL TOUR 15 Tour Stops, 2 New Exhibits & A Ton of TV Tech. MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario,Canada M6K 1Y4
VISITING - MZTV
Location MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4 Phone: 416-599-7339 Email: mztv@MZTV.com By Car Driving directions GPS coordinates: 43.6373469, -79.4213957 or N43º 38' 14.449", W79º 25' 17.024" Parking in ZoomerMedia's street lotCONTACTS - MZTV
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4EXHIBITS - MZTV
On display in Montreal. An Exhibition of TV Sets From the Moses Znaimer Collection. From the post World War II era to the emergence of personal computers in the early 80s, one technological wonder was at the core of domestic bliss: the television set. THE FIRST STAR OF TELEVISION Felix The Cat – This Very Figure of Him. Felix rose to TV stardom in the late 1920s, when the American communications giant, RCA, chose him as a test subject for its television research.JOHN LOGIE BAIRD
John Logie Baird: The First Father of Television See John Logie Baird’s scanning discs, the first television patent ever granted, and his 1940 colour television system, in RCA, TRK-12 PHANTOM TELECEIVER 1939, USA. This TV set, the rarest on the planet, inspired a great deal of awe in its millions of viewers. Built with one of the Fair’s theme materials, Lucite, the inner workings of the receiver were thus exposed to remove any doubts that “magic” or trickery wasinvolved.
LAST CIGARETTE COMMERCIAL IN THE US December 31, 1970 The last cigarette commercial to air in the US, a commercial for Virginia Slims, is aired on The Tonight Show. The ad features actress/model Veronica Hamel from TV's Hill Street Blues.Congress bans
VISITING - MZTV
Location MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4 Phone: 416-599-7339 Email: mztv@MZTV.com By Car Driving directions GPS coordinates: 43.6373469, -79.4213957 or N43º 38' 14.449", W79º 25' 17.024" Parking in ZoomerMedia's street lotABOUT - MZTV
Mission Statement The MZTV Museum and Archive seeks to protect, preserve and promote the Receiving Instruments of Television History. Whereas other North AmericanMuseums of
HIGHLIGHTS - MZTV
RCA wasn’t the only manufacturer offering television to the public. In 1938 Allen B DuMont Laboratories, established by the inventor and entrepreneur of the same name, had already offered the first electronic TV sets for sale to the public with their 180 model.COMMENTS - MZTV
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4 NOW ON DISPLAY ARCHIVES On display in Montreal. An Exhibition of TV Sets From the Moses Znaimer Collection. From the post World War II era to the emergence of personal computers in the early 80s, one technological wonder was at the core of domestic bliss: the television set. THE 1939 WORLD'S FAIR ARCHIVES RCA offered four types of television receivers for sale in 1939: the TRK-12, the TRK-9, the TRK-5 and the TT-5. The set prices, ranging from $199.50 – $600 US, were considered high.TEST - MZTV
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4 RCA, TRK-12 PHANTOM TELECEIVER 1939, USA. This TV set, the rarest on the planet, inspired a great deal of awe in its millions of viewers. Built with one of the Fair’s theme materials, Lucite, the inner workings of the receiver were thus exposed to remove any doubts that “magic” or trickery wasinvolved.
TELEVISION RECEIVER SALES RCA offered four types of television receivers for sale in 1939: the TRK-12, the TRK-9, the TRK-5 and the TT-5. The set prices, ranging from $199.50 – $600 US, were considered high. Advertising was initially aimed at the wealthy, depicting viewers who were dressed in suits and evening gowns while watching their TVs. THE HALL OF TELEVISION As visitors traveled farther into the RCA Pavilion they could enter the “Hall of Television” that contained thirteen of RCA’s finest TRK-12 receivers. These receivers displayed images almost constantly in order to allow each visitor to sample the new MZTV - MZTV MUSEUM OF TELEVISIONVISITINGHIGHLIGHTS The Museum's mandate is to exhibit the world's most comprehensive collection of North American Television Receivers for the formative fifty-year period from the 1920s to the 1970s. The MZTV Museum also aims to tell the story of the medium and to contribute to the understanding of the impact of television on the people who watch it.WELCOME TO THE
START THE TOUR. Select Language. English Français Deutsch 中文. MZTV is a member of the ZoomerMedia Interactive network ZoomerMediaInteractive network
MZTV MUSEUM VIRTUAL TOUR 15 Tour Stops, 2 New Exhibits & A Ton of TV Tech. MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario,Canada M6K 1Y4
CONTACTS - MZTV
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4TIMELINE ARCHIVES
1975. Sony introduces the Betamax VCR, the world’s first home-use videocassette recorder using 1/2-inch tape. Demonstrates the world’s first four-channel cassette tape recorder. The BM-144 allows the user to switch back and forth on single standard cassette from four different recordings. Priced at $1,295, it records for a maximum of 1hour.
THE 1939 WORLD'S FAIR ARCHIVES Posted on July 2, 2014May 15, 2020 by Carolyn Stewart. NBC was RCA’s broadcasting wing. It began regular US television broadcasting on April 30, 1939 with an historic event: a telecast of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt opening the Fair. The event was the first televised Presidential address in the United States. THE FIRST STAR OF TELEVISION Thus, Felix the Cat became Television’s First Star! Before his television debut, this cat enjoyed many lives in animated film. Created by Otto Messmer, the initial series played from 1920 to 1928. The fun-loving cat made a comeback in 1936, starring in three short films. Then, in 1960, a new series was produced for television thatfeatured
JOHN LOGIE BAIRD
John Logie Baird: The First Father of Television. See John Logie Baird’s scanning discs, the first television patent ever granted, and his 1940 colour television system, in this tribute to the inventor of mechanical television. Previous. RCA, TRK-12 PHANTOM TELECEIVER RCA, TRK-12 Phantom Teleceiver. 1939, USA. This TV set, the rarest on the planet, inspired a great deal of awe in its millions of viewers. Built with one of the Fair’s theme materials, Lucite, the inner workings of the receiver were thus exposed to remove any doubts that “magic” or trickery was involved. LAST CIGARETTE COMMERCIAL IN THE US Last Cigarette Commercial in the US. December 31, 1970. The last cigarette commercial to air in the US, a commercial for Virginia Slims, is aired on The Tonight Show. The ad features actress/model Veronica Hamel from TV’s Hill Street Blues. Congress bans cigarette advertising from radio and television broadcasts effective January 1,1971
MZTV - MZTV MUSEUM OF TELEVISIONVISITINGHIGHLIGHTS The Museum's mandate is to exhibit the world's most comprehensive collection of North American Television Receivers for the formative fifty-year period from the 1920s to the 1970s. The MZTV Museum also aims to tell the story of the medium and to contribute to the understanding of the impact of television on the people who watch it.WELCOME TO THE
START THE TOUR. Select Language. English Français Deutsch 中文. MZTV is a member of the ZoomerMedia Interactive network ZoomerMediaInteractive network
MZTV MUSEUM VIRTUAL TOUR 15 Tour Stops, 2 New Exhibits & A Ton of TV Tech. MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario,Canada M6K 1Y4
CONTACTS - MZTV
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4TIMELINE ARCHIVES
1975. Sony introduces the Betamax VCR, the world’s first home-use videocassette recorder using 1/2-inch tape. Demonstrates the world’s first four-channel cassette tape recorder. The BM-144 allows the user to switch back and forth on single standard cassette from four different recordings. Priced at $1,295, it records for a maximum of 1hour.
THE 1939 WORLD'S FAIR ARCHIVES Posted on July 2, 2014May 15, 2020 by Carolyn Stewart. NBC was RCA’s broadcasting wing. It began regular US television broadcasting on April 30, 1939 with an historic event: a telecast of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt opening the Fair. The event was the first televised Presidential address in the United States. THE FIRST STAR OF TELEVISION Thus, Felix the Cat became Television’s First Star! Before his television debut, this cat enjoyed many lives in animated film. Created by Otto Messmer, the initial series played from 1920 to 1928. The fun-loving cat made a comeback in 1936, starring in three short films. Then, in 1960, a new series was produced for television thatfeatured
JOHN LOGIE BAIRD
John Logie Baird: The First Father of Television. See John Logie Baird’s scanning discs, the first television patent ever granted, and his 1940 colour television system, in this tribute to the inventor of mechanical television. Previous. RCA, TRK-12 PHANTOM TELECEIVER RCA, TRK-12 Phantom Teleceiver. 1939, USA. This TV set, the rarest on the planet, inspired a great deal of awe in its millions of viewers. Built with one of the Fair’s theme materials, Lucite, the inner workings of the receiver were thus exposed to remove any doubts that “magic” or trickery was involved. LAST CIGARETTE COMMERCIAL IN THE US Last Cigarette Commercial in the US. December 31, 1970. The last cigarette commercial to air in the US, a commercial for Virginia Slims, is aired on The Tonight Show. The ad features actress/model Veronica Hamel from TV’s Hill Street Blues. Congress bans cigarette advertising from radio and television broadcasts effective January 1,1971
ABOUT - MZTV
The MZTV Museum and Archive seeks to protect, preserve and promote the Receiving Instruments of Television History. Whereas other North American Museums of Broadcasting feature Programs, ours is unique in its focus on the History of the Technology, as well as on the Sets Themselves. Together with related original papers, discs, books,magazines
HIGHLIGHTS - MZTV
RCA wasn’t the only manufacturer offering television to the public. In 1938 Allen B DuMont Laboratories, established by the inventor and entrepreneur of the same name, had already offered the first electronic TV sets for sale to the public with their 180 model.EXHIBITS - MZTV
BACK. John Logie Baird. On display in Toronto. In 1925, using a mechanical television system, John Logie Baird was the first person to ever receive a recognisable moving TV image. This exhibit pays tribute to this historic milestone, as well as JLB’s may other significant NOW ON DISPLAY ARCHIVES On display in Montreal. An Exhibition of TV Sets From the Moses Znaimer Collection. From the post World War II era to the emergence of personal computers in the early 80s, one technological wonder was at the core of domestic bliss: the television set. THE PIONEERS OF TELEVISION ARCHIVES One of the great inventors of the 20th century, John Logie Baird obtained the first recognizable television image on October 1, 1925, well over a year before the American telephone giant AT&T was able to produce a similar transmission. Baird’s company organized the first television broadcasting system in the UK, which began operations in1929.
RCA, TRK-12 PHANTOM TELECEIVER RCA, TRK-12 Phantom Teleceiver. 1939, USA. This TV set, the rarest on the planet, inspired a great deal of awe in its millions of viewers. Built with one of the Fair’s theme materials, Lucite, the inner workings of the receiver were thus exposed to remove any doubts that “magic” or trickery was involved. THE HALL OF TELEVISION The Hall of Television. As visitors traveled farther into the RCA Pavilion they could enter the “Hall of Television” that contained thirteen of RCA’s finest TRK-12 receivers. These receivers displayed images almost constantly in order to allow each visitor to sample the new medium. Also in this room was an experimental projection TELEVISION RECEIVER SALES Television Receiver Sales. RCA offered four types of television receivers for sale in 1939: the TRK-12, the TRK-9, the TRK-5 and the TT-5. The set prices, ranging from $199.50 – $600 US, were considered high. Advertising was initially aimed at the wealthy, depicting viewers who were dressed in suits and evening gowns whilewatching their TVs.
WHY THIS COLLECTION? Many answers have been given to the question "Why do people collect?" Too many for comfort suggest neuroses of various kinds. Collectors do it because they feel FORGOTTEN GENIUS : THE BOY WHO INVENTED ELECTRONIC TV … Honouring the groundbreaking work of inventor Philo T. Farnsworth. “Forgotten Genius: The Boy Who Invented Electronic TV” – honouring the groundbreaking work of inventor Philo T. Farnsworth.×
* HOME
* ABOUT
* HIGHLIGHTS
* EXHIBITS
* VISIT US
* TV TIMELINE
* TESTIMONIALS
* VIRTUAL TOUR
*
*
*
*
* Events
* Museum Posts
* Admissions & Hours* Connect with Us
MUSEUM VIRTUAL TOUR
Introducing the MZTV Museum's virtual tour SEE MOREJOHN LOGIE BAIRD
The First Father of Television SEE MORE FORGOTTEN GENIUS : THE BOY WHO INVENTED ELECTRONIC TV honouring the groundbreaking work of inventor Philo T. Farnsworth. SEEMORE
THE FIRST STAR OF TELEVISION Felix The Cat – This Very Figure of Him SEE MORE MARILYN MONROE AND THE UNBLINKING EYE The Movies Made Her a Star. Television Made Her a Legend. SEE MOREPrevious Next
ON NOW
The MZTV Museum of Television is closed to the public until further notice. While our doors may be closed, our museum activities continue online! If you're looking to fill your day with something new, take a virtual tour of the museum now (https://mztv.oncell.com/en/tour-the-mztv-museum-150749.html). We invite you to explore the wide range of content available here on the website, and you can also learn all about the museum by downloadingthe MZTV app.
SEE MORE SEE LESS
"Follow your dreams because nothing is impossible." _--Philo T.Farnsworth_EXPLORE
ABOUT
MISSION STATEMENT MOSES ZNAIMER WHY THIS COLLECTION? The MZTV Museum and Archive seeks to protect, preserve and promote the Receiving Instruments of Television History. Whereas other North American Museums of Broadcasting feature Programs, ours is unique in its focus on the History of the Technology, as well as on the SetsThemselves.
Together with related original papers, discs, books, magazines, toys and other ephemera the collection offers some 10,000 objects to scholars and students as well as the general assets. The Museum's mandate is to exhibit the world's most comprehensive collection of North American Television Receivers for the formative fifty-year period from the 1920s to the 1970s. The MZTV Museum also aims to tell the story of the medium and to contribute to the understanding of the impact of television on the people who watch it. Moses is best known for his outstanding achievements in television, his contributions to the Canadian music industry, and now, for his newest and ongoing role as a Champion for Canada’s 15.3 million people, aged 45plus. In the 1970s, long before Facebook, Twitter or YouTube, Moses anticipated the popularity of user-generated content. His groundbreaking television concepts, notably Speaker’s Corner, Videography, and the Studioless Streetfront Television Operating System were at the core of over 20 independent stations and channels he co-founded, including CityTV, SPACE, Bravo! and CablePulse24; not to mention MuchMusic and MusiquePlus, which served to define a generation of Canadian youth in both official languages. Among Moses’ honours commemorating his visionary contribution to Toronto’s urban landscape, the City of Toronto designated a famous downtown stretch of the legendary Queen Street MOSES ZNAIMER WAY. Today, Moses is the President of CARP – A New Vision of Aging for Canada. With approximately 300,000 members, CARP is Canada’s largest national non-profit, nonpartisan advocacy association committed to enhancing the quality of life for Canadians as we age. Moses is also the Founder of ZoomerMedia Limited (TSXV: ZUM), Canada’s only diversified media company uniquely devoted to creating content, services, and experiences for the 45plus. ZoomerMedia operates media across all platforms: National and Regional Television, (VisionTV, ONE, Joytv, HopeTV); Regional Radio with National distribution, (The New Classical 96.3FM, 103.1FM, 102.9FM, The New AM740); Digital Properties, (EverythingZoomer.com, CARP. ca); Trade Shows, (ZoomerShow); Conferences, (the prestigious ideacity and ZoomerLife); and the flagship Zoomer magazine, Canada’s largest paid circulation magazine for mature men and women, in which Moses pens his “Zoomer Philosophy”. ZoomerMedia and CARP are located in The ZoomerPlex, a 2.6 acre block in Toronto’s burgeoning creative hub called Liberty Village. There, Moses Executive Produces theZoomer, Canada’s current affairs and lifestyle television show for Boomers with Zip!, and his new health and wellness series including Ask Dr. Zach with Dr. Zachary Levine, Healing Yoga, Message From Spirit with Colette Baron-Reid, and Divine Intervention with Rabbi Shmuley Boteach. The ZoomerPlex is also home to Moses’ MZTV Museum of Television & Archive housing the world’s largest collection of rare vintage television sets and associated popular culture in the world, some 10,000 objects in all. Many answers have been given to the question "Why do people collect?" Too many for comfort suggest neuroses of various kinds. Collectors do it because they feel alienated from the real world and must create one of their own. They do it to be godlike and controlling. They do it out of pride or jealousy, or to keep objects away from others. Ever the optimist, I prefer a more positive interpretation. Society turns into a culture when it shows an interest in preserving its past. In the personality of an individual collector, such an impulse to gather, preserve, understand and pass along can be highly developed. In my own case it also had something to do with a “love at first sight” response to the beauty of a Philco Predicta. I was in Peter Goldmark’s office at the time. Goldmark, who had invented the 331/3 long playing record, was head of CBS labs. I was there to marvel at a new technology, the EVR 8mm half-frame film cartridge system, which promised to do for consumer home video what the LP had done for audio. I found, however, that I couldn’t keep my eyes off an “old” television set that stood in the corner like a sentinel, like a commanding piece of sculpture. Alas, the EVR arrived at the same time as re-recordable video tape and CBS had to take one of the largest write-downs in its history. But I came away that day having seen the most beautiful television ever made; a symbol of my conviction that TV could be art, and would be my art. Once caught in this way, I set out to acquire one, and then a few other, older pieces; but experienced surprising difficulty in finding them. It struck me why: because the very ubiquity of television had led to a kind of neglect. Because TV was widely seen as banal, its hallowed instruments had been devalued and lost. So it happened that I set about securing the most important of these totems – milestones in technology or design – these living pieces of furniture. In this, I “stand on the shoulders” of Arnold Chase and Jack Davis, among others, whose pioneering work immeasurably enriched the nascent collection I had cobbled together of the years, giving it form anddistinction.
HIGHLIGHTS
TIMELINE
THE HISTORY OF TELEVISIONTimeline JS
"PAY TV"
202 RADIOVISOR
LENS DISC ASSEMBLY
RT-400
VISIONETTE
701
RR-359-C
838
WRT-701
TRP-90
FIELD UNIT
RA102 CLIFTON
VP100
AC-70001
28T925R
CBS COLOUR
614
RADIOLA
12CC2
TG600/A15
DECOLA "BOWFRONT" 121 PROJECTION TV360
17PT904 "PERSONAL PORTABLE"PB-611-A
PREDICTA 4242 HOLIDAY PREDICTA 3408 “DEBUTANTE”TABLE TOP COLOUR
PREDICTA 4730 CONTINENTALPORTORAMA TYPE 11
TV4-203 UW (TUMMY TV)GTV
MARTIN LUTHER KING ASSASSINATED MAN LANDS ON THE MOONWAR MEASURES ACT
ALL IN THE FAMILY
1972 SUMMIT SERIES
WATERGATE SCANDAL
NIXON RESIGNS
SATELLITE TO CABLE
PROJECTOR & VIDEO BEAM 750CT-101
TR-425C TRANSISTOR TVCT-3311
TR02-01 TV WATCH
EPSON
FD-2A WATCHMAN
TV-21 POCKET TV
KVX-370 INDEXTRON
GV-200B VIDEO WALKMAN VISIONETTE TELEVISOR - RECEIVERLCD PROJECTION
EV-510 POCKET TV
TV-1400 POCKET COLOUR TVMIMO 28”
1740
1750
1760
1770
1780
1790
1800
1810
1820
1830
1840
1850
1860
1870
1880
1890
1900
1910
1920
1930
1940
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
2020
2030
2040
2050
2060
2070
2080
2090
2100
2110
2120
2130
2140
2150
2160
2170
2180
2190
1909
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1941
1942
1943
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2021
1928
"PAY TV"
This is the only known example of a late 1920s pay-per-view television. It was possible to find such sets in hotels and bars in the late 20's early 30's . By inserting a coin, you could see a small 3 or 4 inch image through the viewing window. A magnifying lens was pretty standard in mechanical Televisions. We don’t know the exact magnification of this lens, but it probably increased the image sizeby 50% to 100%.
SIZE
31.5 x 22 x 15
1929
202 RADIOVISOR
This unit was engineered, built and manufactured by the Jenkins Television Corporation, a company founded in 1928 by the American television pioneer, Charles Francis Jenkins. As early as 1894, he presented an article in the periodical, Electrical Engineer, on a method of electrically transmitting pictures, of which he was one of the earliest to succeed in doing. He also claimed to have executed thefirst
SIZE
21 x 15 x 21
1930
LENS DISC ASSEMBLY
Scanning disc kit
SIZE
11 x 11 x 12.5
1931
RT-400
Cabinet only
SIZE
23.5 x 16.5 x 19
Loading
1932
VISIONETTE
Chicago’s Western Television Corporation played a significant role in the evolution of television in North America. Canada’s first television station operated by the Montreal newspaper, La Presse, was supplied with Western Television equipment. The public witnessed Western Television’s technology through this model demonstrated at Eaton’s department stores in the early 1930’s. The Western Television Corporation drewSIZE
23.5 x 21 x 11
Loading
1936
701
One of the first television models on sale to the general public from the start of the television service in November 1936. Extremely rare.SIZE
46 x 37 x 21.5
Loading
1937
RR-359-C
RCA exhibited three of these consoles in a television demonstration at the 1939 Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto. This was the first opportunity for the Canadian public to watch electronic television. Only one hundred of these experimental sets were made.SIZE
41.5 x 26 x 22.5 closedLoading
1938
838
Rare pre-war console television & radio combination.SIZE
36” x 39” x 19”Loading
1939
WRT-701
SIZE
44.5 x 29 x 18.5
Loading
1940
TRP-90
There are two parts to this set-a picture tube cabinet and a field-test receiver. These receivers were used by RCA technicians to test signal strengths in remote areas. 2 piecesSIZE
11.5 x 15.5 x 31
Loading
1942
FIELD UNIT
These receivers were used by technicians to test signal strengths inremote areas.
SIZE
12 x 24 x 20
Loading
1945
RA102 CLIFTON
Earliest post-war TV. Rare example. Possibly only commercial TV madein 1945.
SIZE
40 x 24 x 23
Loading
1946
VP100
Home construction tabletop television.SIZE
22 x 19 x 21.5
Loading
1947
AC-70001
This set was put on the market 2 weeks before Dumont’s but no creditis given for it.
SIZE
71.5 x 43 x 19.5
Loading
1948
28T925R
Tabletop porthole television.SIZE
18 x 22.5 x 20.5
Loading
1949
CBS COLOUR
World’s first commercial colour television. Number 16 of 20SIZE
40 x 36 x 26
Loading
1950
614
Emerson was another radio manufacturer producing televisions after World War II. This stylish early table-top set is made of bakelite, and designed in the post-Deco “streamlinemoderne” style popular in the late 1940s and early 1950s.SIZE
13 x 20 x 18.5
Loading
1951
RADIOLA
Tabletop television
SIZE
18 x 13.5 x 22
Loading
1952
12CC2
This set is an example of the first colour television system approved by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 1950. It is one of two known surviving sets of this type. Designed by CBS engineer Peter Goldmark, the CBS-Columbia 12CC2 used a mechanical method of producing colour pictures. This set is working.SIZE
41 x 33 x 25.5
Loading
1953
TG600/A15
Tabletop projection television. Projection televisions made up less than 4% of the US market and 2% of the UK market.SIZE
22 x 21 x 20
Loading
1954
DECOLA "BOWFRONT" 121 PROJECTION TV A specially made commission order in bleached birds-eye maple, possibly unique. 18-inch screen behind twin doors, in veneered cabinet, bowfront profile, vertical radiating fins for speaker grille, on bracket with wheels; matching wireless/record- player with turntable and tuning dial under hinged lid, of rectangular profile, vertical radiating fins for speaker grille and storage cupboards below, both in exceptional condition with very little signs of use.SIZE
37x26.25x19.75
Loading
1955
360
SIZE
42.5 x 35.5 x 27
Loading
1956
17PT904 "PERSONAL PORTABLE" These small sets were immediately popular, as were all of the RCA portables. Many consumers were buying their second television and portability was a popular feature. Although the “personal portable” still had to be plugged in, its small size and light weight broke new ground towards the first truly portable TVs.SIZE
13 x 9.5 x 13
Loading
1957
PB-611-A
This set was used in theatres where groups of people could come andwatch television.
SIZE
66 x 19 x 22
Loading
1958
PREDICTA 4242 HOLIDAY The televisions in Philco’s Predicta line are quite possibly the most distinctive sets ever designed. Radically departing from traditional styling, Philco’s design department decided to mount the picture tube in a separate shell moulded to its shape. Available in a variety of models, this version is a 21-inch tabletop set. All the Predicta models were of classic mid-50’s design. WorkingSIZE
28 1/4x 21 x 16 1/2
Loading
1959
PREDICTA 3408 “DEBUTANTE” This 17” tabletop Predicta was the least expensive of the line, and was purchased in bulk by a number of hotel chains. This set was available in a number of different colours, with or without a clock.SIZE
24.5 x 24.5 x 12.5
Loading
1960
TABLE TOP COLOUR
Clairtone, another Canadian company, was founded by Peter Munk and David Gilmour in the late 1950’s. The company originally made component “Hi Fi” equipment, but moved into the production and design of televisions. Unfortunately, in the mid-to-late 1960’s consumers were waiting for the price of colour television to drop and hence, sales were slow. This, in addition to other business misfortunes, caused Clairtone to fold in 1974.SIZE
22.5 x 30.5 x 23
Loading
1961
PREDICTA 4730 CONTINENTAL This was the last Predicta manufactured. Exclusively black and white, the Predicta was phased out as colour television became more popular. Also, the 21 inch Predictas had poor picture tube performance, and this significantly damaged Philco’s reputation for reliability. In 1962, Philco went bankrupt and its remaining assets and name were purchased by the Ford Motor Company.SIZE
49”x 25”x 15.5”Loading
1962
PORTORAMA TYPE 11
The world’s first all-transistor portable. 8- inch screen, in grey and white moulded plastic case with controls, aerial and carry handle on the top. Most examples of these sets turn up missing the grey button on the top of the aerial for some odd reason. Other problems include seriously bad corrosion from old batteries being left for years in the battery compartment.SIZE
11.5 x 10 x 13
Loading
1965
TV4-203 UW (TUMMY TV) Tiny televisions became commonplace by the mid-1960s. This 6-pound model was known as the “walkie watchie” or “tummy television” because it could be viewed while walking. Nine C-cell batteries provided approximately ten hours of viewing. It cost about U.S. $165.SIZE
6.5 x 10 x 8
Loading
1967
GTV
Television manufactured by Clairtone to compliment the G seriesstereos.
SIZE
32.25 x 30 x 25
Loading
1968
MARTIN LUTHER KING ASSASSINATED Martin Luther King is killed by a sniper at 6:01 p.m. as he steps onto the balcony outside the Motel Lorraine in Memphis, Tennessee.Loading
1969
MAN LANDS ON THE MOON July 20 The first television transmission from the moon is received by NASA and viewed by an audience of 600 million worldwide.Loading
1970
WAR MEASURES ACT
During the October Crisis in Montreal, militant separatists kidnap a British trade commissioner and murder a Quebec cabinet minister. Restrictions under the War Measures Act are proclaimed by Trudeau,"just watch me".
Loading
1971
ALL IN THE FAMILY
Norman Lear's All In The Family debuts, introducing the nation to Archie Bunker- a cantankerous, if ultimately good hearted bigot whose views on nearly everything are both amusingly shocking and uncomfortably familiar. The show's success leads to numerous spin-offs (The Jeffersons, Maude, Gloria), each attempting to use comedy to explore some of the day's thornier issues.Loading
1972
1972 SUMMIT SERIES
September - Hockey fans all over Canada are glued to their television sets to watch the "Summit Series" - a hockey tournament between Canada and the Soviet Union. With 34 seconds left in the final game, Paul Henderson scores the dramatic winning goal and Team Canada defeats the Soviet Union 6 - 5 clinching the series. The whole country celebrates.Loading
1973
WATERGATE SCANDAL
As it unfolds during the summer, the Senate Watergate hearing quickly becomes the most popular program on daytime television. The Big Three networks follow PBS' lead in carrying the hearing live and quickly see it outdraw the usual selection of soap opera fare.Loading
1974
NIXON RESIGNS
Richard Nixon not only becomes the first US President to resign, he becomes the first to do so before the unforgiving television cameralens.
Loading
1975
SATELLITE TO CABLE
Home Box Office (HBO) inaugurates satellite-to-cable broadcasting.Loading
1977
PROJECTOR & VIDEO BEAM 750 Projection television created by Henry Kloss, founder of Advent.SIZE
27 x 17 x 28
Loading
1979
CT-101
Colour TV
SIZE
2 x 4.5 x 7.5
Loading
1980
TR-425C TRANSISTOR TVSIZE
9.25 x 11.25 x 14.5
Loading
1982
CT-3311
Colour TV with case
SIZE
3.5 x 4.5 x 9.5
Loading
1983
TR02-01 TV WATCH
The Seiko TV watch took the gadget world by storm in 1982 and was only produced for a few short years in the mid 1980’s. The first Seiko TV watch has a liquid crystal video display that shows blue pictures on a light gray background. It received UHF and VHF TV Channels and FM radio. The watch uses a regular watch battery for the time, chronograph, alarm and calendar functions.SIZE
5 x 3.25 x 1
Loading
1984
EPSON
SIZE
3.5 x 7 x 1.5
Loading
1985
FD-2A WATCHMAN
SIZE
6.25 x 2.5 x 1.5
Loading
1986
TV-21 POCKET TV
SIZE
2.5 x 4.5 x 1
Loading
1989
KVX-370 INDEXTRON
SIZE
4.25 x 5.25 x 6
Loading
1991
GV-200B VIDEO WALKMANSIZE
8.5 x 5 x 2
Loading
1993
VISIONETTE TELEVISOR - RECEIVER This set comes with a camera (accession # 93.0074.1)SIZE
12.5 x 12 x 7.5
Loading
1996
LCD PROJECTION
This LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) Projection Television is one of the earliest LCD sets used in Japan for two standards, regular video signals and High Density Television, utilizing the 16 x 9 widesreen format. LCD technology is now being replaced by LED. This set is a prototype and is the only one in North America.SIZE
32.5 x 36 x 16
Loading
1998
EV-510 POCKET TV
SIZE
5 x 3 x 1.25
Loading
1999
TV-1400 POCKET COLOUR TVSIZE
6 x 3.5 x 1.5
Loading
2003
MIMO 28”
One of the last quality designed CRT televisions in Europe, with 25W speakers and swivel screen functionality.SIZE
40 x 28 x 21
202 RADIOVISOR
1929
Previous
Date
EVENTS
2020
Mar.09 - Jun.01
All Events Cancelled Until Further Notice Due to COVID-19, all events at the MZTV Museum have been cancelled until further notice.SEE MORE
(Cancelled) Doors Open TorontoMay.23 - 24
2020
SEE MORE MORE
MUSEUM POSTS
Jan.
30
EARL MORAN’S VISION OF MARILYN MONROE WITH NOTHING ON BUT THE TVSEE MORE
Jan.30
02:42 am
JOHN LOGIE BAIRD (1888-1946) UNITED KINGDOMSEE MORE
Jan.30
02:41 am
CHARLES FRANCIS JENKINS (1867-1934) USASEE MORE
Jan.30
02:39 am
Other Television Exhibitors at the FairSEE MORE
MORE
EXHIBITS
Now on Display
DO NOT ADJUST YOUR SET! AN EXHIBITION OF TV SETS FROM THE MOSES ZNAIMER COLLECTION From the post World War II era to the emergence of personal computers in the early 80s, one technological wonder was at the core of domestic bliss: the television set. We have given it a number of names – from TV to “the tube” or simply “the box” – testifying to our long time relationship. For most of us, our awareness to the world and reality as well as our imagination has developed in front of the television set. TV has been and continues to be much more than a mere screen. It brings us entertainment, information and education. “Do Not Adjust Your Set!” presents an extensive selection of television sets from the Cinémathèque québécoise’s Moses Znaimer collection. Rather than presenting the technical and design evolution of the television set in a chronological order, we have chosen to go back in time, starting from space age models and working our way to initial experimentations in mechanical television receivers. How does a colour tube work, exactly? What happened at the 1939 World’s Fair? And did you know that television in Canada started in 1931? Discover one of the great iconic objects of the 20th century through some of its most outstanding specimens. THIS EXHIBIT IS ON DISPLAY AT THE CINÉMATHÈQUE QUÉBÉCOISE IN MONTRÉAL. SEE MORE×
MZTV MUSEUM TEMPORARILY CLOSED The MZTV Museum of Television is closed to the public until further notice. While our doors may be closed, our museum activities continue online! If you're looking to fill your day with something new, take a virtual tour of the museum now in English, French
, or German
. We invite you to explore the wide range of content available here on the website, and you can also learn all about the museum by downloading the MZTV app.
The virtual tour includes 16 different tour stops like the Pioneers of Television, FelixTheCat - the first star of television, the rarest TV on the planet, Space Age TV, and the history of the sets owned by Elvis Presley and Marilyn Monroe. Plus, explore two new exhibits about the inventors of mechanical and electronic television. The virtual tour is free and perfect for anyone interested in pop culture, technology, and the history of the world's most popular medium. TAKE THE TOUR NOWTESTIMONIALS
Tell people what you think DON’T MISS MZTV’S SALUTE TO “FORGOTTEN GENIUS” FARNSWORTH |BRIOUX.TV
__
_October 14, 2018_
------------------------- That all these artifacts are now on display in one Canadian museum is a world class triumph. Follow this… That all these artifacts are now on display in one Canadian museum is a world class triumph. Follow this link for more information on the interactive exhibit on now at MZTV.See more
LEAVE A REPLY CANCEL REPLY Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment
Name *
Email *
Website
LOCATION
MZTV Museum of Television (at The ZoomerPlex) 64 Jefferson Avenue Toronto, Ontario, Canada M6K 1Y4Hours & Admissions
* Closed until further notice * ADMINSSION & HOURS* Adults $10
* Seniors and Students $5 * Groups 10 + $5/person* CARP Members FREE
* Children 12 and under FREE * Please contact us to make special arrangements or appointments.*
*
*
*
*
Connect with us
* Phone: 416-599-7339 * Email: mztv@mztv.com*
*
*
*
*
* PRESENTED BY
*
MZTV is a member of the ZoomerMedia Interactivenetwork
Details
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0