




The Store closed just 10 minutes ago.Ĭarlos and the Customer lock eyes and Carlos stops mid-dance move, he's a little embarrassed. The man tried to enter, but the doors are locked. Lost in the moment, Carlos doesn't realize a Customer has walked up to the front doors. He turns the song up, jumps out of his chair, and we watch him dance all around the Store. The music hits him and he starts moving to the beat.Īs the song progresses, his movement gets bigger. Carlos suddenly hears the song playing on the radio. Polaroid's new TV will certainly be an entry point to 4K when it launches this spring, but it's far from the cinematic viewing experience that interested buyers might be dreaming of.It's a little past seven, the store has just closed.Ĭarlos is finishing up his work for the night. The set also doesn't have any smart TV features - that certainly isn't something to expect at its low price, but it's worth remembering that you'll probably end up investing more money in a media box to put beneath it. Though they don't dip off completely, even while watching from the arm of a couch that's centered in front of a TV, you'd probably be far enough off to see a dimmer, grayer image. The set's bigger issue is in its viewing angles, which will keep viewers sitting right in front of it. The set also showed some color strobing when fading to black, and there was a small amount of jagged, noisy pixels that appeared along certain fine lines when in motion. After seeing TVs like Sony's wedge sets, the colors on Polaroid's 4K TV come off with a distinct lack of pop. At just $999.99 for the 50-inch set, it's one of the least expensive ways you can get in on 4K, though its low cost only gets you so far. While most 4K TVs seem to be getting bigger and bigger, Polaroid's new set is focused on shrinking something down: price.
