You can safely say very bad--that is, if I had extra room to type in those four letters on the subject line.
I was going through some piles of paper and noticed a card that was left over from my grandparents, when they were the first people in our family to subscribe to cable back in 1982.
We had only 36 channels, and it was a set-up box that looked like this:
http://smartfixsolutions.blogspot.com/2012/04/technology-throwback.htmlYou simply moved the lever to access that specific row and you had to push hard on whatever button that particular station was entered.
If you didn't push hard enough, or the lever was stationed halfway up or down, static would appear.
With Lisa Robertson leaving QVC on Friday night, here were some of the channels that were around then and what has changed since, with some corresponding clips to underline my point:
- Nashville Network, later would become SpikeTV
- People That Love, originally an inspirational channel, take your pick on what channel has taken over that moniker

.
- FNN was the original Financial News Network, only on during the business day. After hours, some markets took you to BET. FNN of course, would dissolve by the end of the 1980's and become, for better or for worse, CNBC.
- On June 21, 1982, this little known news channel would surface:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnmjRIfZgPISatellite News Channel definitely gave CNN and Headline News (originally started as sister cousin CNN2) a true run for its' money in their 16 months on the air before saying farewell a few days before Halloween 1983:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3M9Lr_SyGGoBy the time Jerrold came out with its' digital Starcom VI system, it was definitely a true golden age for cable TV viewing.
I can safely say that with the drastic and yes, depressing changes that took place to Nickelodeon (early 1990's), MTV (with the introduction of reality shows like
The Real World, (early 1990's), Headline News (with the departure of very popular newsreader Lynne Russell), TWC (with Jen Carfagno introducing Friday Night movies, along with the subsequent historical weather reality shows that would follow), and to some extent--the USA Network, originally a home for game shows by day and NHL hockey by night--but has gone heavy on female crime dramas most of the time, QVC midas well take their place in line under the past banner of formerly great cable channels, but is no longer the case.