Someone built a working CRT television in your browser.
It streams real 90s programming. Right now. 24 hours a day.
Click the power button. The TV flickers on. You're watching actual cartoons, actual commercials, actual game shows, actual soaps — all of it pulled from real 90s broadcasts, organized into 45,000 channels by genre.
Cartoons. Commercials. Game shows. Soaps. Sports. Trailers. Music videos. Talk shows. Pick a category, or just leave it on random and see what the algorithm of 1994 serves you.
The attention to detail is absurd. The interface is a CRT TV with working channel buttons, a volume dial, and that slight static flicker when you change the channel. The bottom of the screen scrolls the date and time like you're actually watching live TV from thirty years ago.
There's also a 50s version. A 60s version. A 70s, 80s, and 2000s version. Each one its own rabbit hole.
You opened this thinking you'd look for thirty seconds. You're going to be here for an hour watching a 1993 Surge commercial and feeling things you weren't expecting to feel.
Go turn it on.


