Do you have or plan to play any vintage video games? Most older consoles don’t play nice with HDTV.
If you are planning on donating it, check to see if there are any Tecmo Super Bowl groups. They love getting their hands on tube TVs to play the games on original NES.
If you haven’t turn it on in 6 years and you want the shelf space back AND you want a reason to keep it, here’s my suggestion:
Get rid of it (however you see fit), then go out and buy a 30" or so (about the same size, right?) flat panel TV. Find one on sale, get a decent brand, look for it to be $250ish and mount it on the wall.
That’ll give you your shelf space back. If you put a ChromeCast in it (make sure it has HDMI and USB ports) you’ll be able to stream your videos to it.
OTOH, you could just get rid of it and move on. It’s pretty much useless at this point anyways. I’m not even sure you could use it if you wanted to.
As someone who doesn’t watch TV, I can tell you that sometimes I’m caught blindsided by major weather events, especially ones that happen on the weekends. I listen to public radio on a regular basis, but it’s still possible to miss out on important notices and warnings.
But since you don’t watch TV anyway, I’m not sure keeping a useless one around is going to help any.
Suppose there is a major weather or other catastrophe in your area and the internet is down, but the TV is still broadcasting. Most people would use the TV to keep up with what is happening.
I had a little Sanyo B&W TV I got when I was about 12. Kept it and even occasionally watched it for well over 25 years. It had a cigarette burn on the top bezel (not mine, I grew up in a household of smokers) and had a fault where the screen would black out until I tapped it in just the right spot.
It went in the discard pile of the Great Move of 1998. I still miss the damn thing.
You’re not really getting rid of something useful that can’t be replaced fairly cheaply with something that is much better.
If you get rid of this you get rid of a big space hog, that doesn’t even work. Even if you had an antenna you’d still need to get a converter box to make it all work.
If you get rid of it and at some point in your life you decide you need a tv, you can go to Wal Mart any hour of the day and get a nice small one with a built-in converter and a $20 antenna. Or you can get a bigger one which will still be lighter and take up less space and have the converter built in.
There’s no reason to keep it. Which, you have figured out already
you should have a tv with an antenna to get local weather and news.
if you have a good signal then a loop or bowtie antenna would work. i made a 4 bowtie antenna that could get some stations some of the time at 70 miles.
Or the reverse. Every time you mention in passing that you don’t have a television people won’t act like you have something wrong with you, or think you’re one of THOSE people.
I haven’t had one in a few years. At first the only time I cared was when I couldn’t watch anything online. Now when the weather is sketchy the local news will stream on their site and even if the lights go out we still have the tablet for a while.
It is disconcerting to know that you have bought and paid for a device that you have no use for. So you keep watching it, trying to redeem some latent value from it.
The local weather is accessible on the internet. It used to be on the radio, and in some markets, it might still be. Why would anybody want or need to know the local news?
We’re no longer using our 20+ year old TV thanks to the housemates. They ditched cable years before moving up there and can’t believe we still have it. They reconfigured our cable box to their flat screen (which actually is a desktop monitor – it’s probably between a 36" and a 40") and added external speakers. We got Chromecast. They have Netflix. We’ve spent the last couple of weekends catching up on the X number of Doctor Who seasons we’d missed since cutting back to basic cable
Can I just mention that a tube TV is more or less hazardous waste (it’s full of lead), and shouldn’t be dumped in the regular trash.
Most towns will take them one way or another, but you might have to take it to the dump yourself or something (my town will pick them up with the trash; you just have to call them ahead of time to let them know).