Your landline is ringing, no joke
Morning from The Rock — here's what's happening in Flin Flon. You ever think about how much we're all glued to screens these days? Well, apparently, some folks are trying to rewind the clock. There's a whole thing happening where "retro" landline phones are making a comeback. Yeah, like the old rotary phones you might've seen in your kokum's house. People are buying them, even Gen Alpha, because their parents want to cut down on screen time.
It's wild, right? We're out here in Flin Flon, where sometimes your cell service decides to take a coffee break between the Manitoba and Saskatchewan sides of town, and people in the city are actively choosing to go *back* to landlines. I mean, we've got enough trouble keeping our internet reliable up here, let alone finding a landline jack that hasn't been buried under three layers of renos since Hudbay was in its prime. This isn't just about nostalgia; it’s about a real pushback against the always-on digital world.
### Why This Matters for Flin Flon
* **Our Own Pace:** We live a different kind of life up here. We're not chasing every trend, but we do get the appeal of slowing down. Less screen time, more time out on Phantom Lake or at the Community Hall.
* **Connectivity Challenges:** For us, a landline was always a practical choice, especially when you're out past Ross Lake where cell signal drops off. Now, it's a lifestyle choice for city folk.
* **Community First:** Maybe it's a reminder that real connections aren't made through a screen, but by showing up, by talking face-to-face, like we do at a Bombers game.
It makes you wonder if maybe Flin Flon has been ahead of the curve all along, living life a little more unplugged, a little more grounded in what's real. We're built on Canadian Shield rock and held together by community, not Wi-Fi signals.
Cole Chicken, MiTL Sports Desk, Flin Flon.
The guys on the morning show are always talking about this kind of stuff — you can catch 'em live at mornings.live.