About: TSoPUA Television (1975)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Available? Not in stores, nor sold on the internet. They can be found on the porches of abandoned homes in Maine, Rhode Island, Birmingham, and Maryland. However, most have been taken up by conspiracy theorists, who have given the info needed to complete this article.

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  • TSoPUA Television (1975)
  • TSoPUA Television (1975)
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  • Available? Not in stores, nor sold on the internet. They can be found on the porches of abandoned homes in Maine, Rhode Island, Birmingham, and Maryland. However, most have been taken up by conspiracy theorists, who have given the info needed to complete this article.
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dbkwik:creepy-past...iPageUsesTemplate
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  • Available? Not in stores, nor sold on the internet. They can be found on the porches of abandoned homes in Maine, Rhode Island, Birmingham, and Maryland. However, most have been taken up by conspiracy theorists, who have given the info needed to complete this article. TSoPUA is a television set created by a now defunct company, Terra Soundwaves. The initials were found sloppily engraved into the back of the set, possibly by a child from the ages of five through seven. The set was not popular during the two years it was sold, as over two thousand refunds have been noted. All people who have refunded the television, have claimed to have the same set mailed back to them, in a large, sloppily closed box. Terra Soundwaves, was largely uncredited for doing a large amount of work during 1969-1982, mostly on low budget movies, that are presumed lost (the most famous one named ONE NIGHT MORE (1975).) The films, the ones that exist now, are not available on any DVD or on any streaming site, as the quality somehow grows worse. The audio is much better than most films available in that time period, and strongly sounds like HD audio that wasn't used until the 2000's. The television set has little to no channels, depending on location. The most channels that were available, was 21, not counting the 74 blank channels. All blank channels were reported to play some sort of indistinguishable audio, which could only be described as high-pitched whispering. It is not clear where the signals are coming from, or why they played long after the television set and company were gone.
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