A revolution was televised in 1972. It cost beer drinkers 25¢ a play. After work, thirsty folks rambled into Andy Capp’s Tavern in Sunnyvale, CA to knock back frothy, cool mugs and test their skill against the cruel silver ball. Cheap beer and pinball characterized this workaday watering hole, as did peanut shells casually tossed to the floor. One late summer day, those eager to pull the plunger on Bally’s Skyrocket or Gottlieb’s groovy 4 Square encountered a strange, sedate intruder encroaching upon the world of titillating backglass art, hypnotic playfields, and the cacophony of clamorous clang.Article continues after advertisement There, conspicuously perched on a wooden barrel-cum-pedestal, sat a small hand-painted orange contraption with contact paper decorating its sides in the sordid splendor of woodgrain, its earth tones very much of an era steeped in a melody of harvest gold, rust, and avocado hues. The gizmo’s stout bluntness raised the question: “What is it?” Its modest cabinet revealed nothing more than a small, black and white Hitachi TV. This tube emitted weird photons set deep in a cabinet of curiosity with its protruding wooden bezel deceptively amplifying the dimension of the TV screen, a diminutive 13-inches. In contrast to a conventional TV, this screen didn’t display broadcast television. A mesmerizing phosphorous square ball “bouncing” across the small screen divided by what resembles a “net” has replaced All in the Family. Thin rectangles, possibly “paddles” move vertically. Numbers—“the score”—flash left and right above the “court.” One spot. Two paddles. A square ball, net, and score. That’s it. Sparse, frighteningly minimal compared to the tawdriness of the typical pinball playfield. Beneath the screen a brushed steel plate houses two knobs, one for each pair of hands to turn. Whereas with pinball a player can prod, pulsate, and press on their own here, a player has no choice but to compete directly against another person. This thing’s a soc...
First seen: 2026-03-30 10:05
Last seen: 2026-03-30 12:07