We all have our procrastination techniques. But most of us share one in common: Television.

It’s always there, sending out subconscious messages to you from that spot across from the sofa: “Just a half an hour of The Simpsons. You know you want to. Just a few minutes of the game. Maybe Bonds will get beaned by a pitcher. Come on, you know you want to.”

We got rid of our TV in May. The timing was good. We were moving. The HDTV transition is coming next year, our TV was big and bulky, and I was in no mood to haul it yet again. So we gave the TV away. I signed us up for cable Internet access, but no cable TV (which seemed odd to the Comcast people).

We continue to receive Netflix so we can watch movies and HBO shows. We buy TV shows and movies on iTunes. We watch the occasional YouTube video, and I watch FORA.tv from time to time.

Advantages

  • I spend less money than I would with a cable TV plan (I don’t download pirated content either).
  • I watch less TV, because for me watching video on my PowerBook requires more of a mental commitment. The extra few seconds it takes to pop in the DVD or fire up iTunes gives me enough pause to consider what I’m doing.
  • I watch what I want to watch, rather than what is simply on at the time. We had Tivo before we ditched the TV, and I almost never watched live TV. Even then, Tivo was really good at finding things I’d want to watch (The History Channel, for example). With the laptop approach, I can watch the few things I intend to watch, and not much else.
  • I eat less while watching. I’m cautious with food around my laptop. I’m not cautious about food when I’m sitting in front of the TV.

Disadvantages

  • Live sports may have been the real reason the television was invented. It certainly wasn’t the reason laptops were developed. I long ago gave up on most sports-watching on TV, because I realized I wasn’t actually getting much out of it. But I realize I’m a bit out of the law school mainstream in this regard.
  • A 15″ monitor is spacious for a laptop, but some movies scream out for a bigger screen. This is actually less of an issue than I thought it would be, because the laptop is viewed much closer to your eyes. The resolution and richness of color isn’t as good as a TV screen, but so far not to an unacceptable degree.
  • The sound quality is a step backwards, unless I use my iPod earbuds. External speakers would improve the situation, but negate the laptop’s flexibility.

The TV News Question

I’m going to reveal yet another personal quirk here. I haven’t watched TV news on a regular basis (save a couple of weeks in September, 2001) since the late 1990s. So switching from TV to the laptop made no difference in that regard. Even if you think my rationale for ditching the TV is absurd, try nixing TV news for two weeks. Read your news online and in print publications. You may find that you get better news with far less worthless fluff (ads, transitions from anchor to reporter, nitwit dialogue between anchors, etc.) all in less time.

Final Thoughts

Life without a television may seem completely bizarre, like building a yurt in downtown Manhattan. But it won’t disconnect you from modern life. Television is actually very old technology. It’s been a part of most American households for more than half a century. It is also a one-way medium that encourages passivity.

Finally, TV is an excellent procrastination enabler. I already have enough of those.