In the cable and satellite biz, they're called cord cutters -- people who drop their service with the cable or satellite provider because they're dissatisfied with the cost, the quality of programming, bad reception, ugly cable boxes or poor customer service.
So they cancel their service and revert to rabbit ears, a rooftop antenna or something in between.
"It cost too much for stuff I wasn't watching," Doug Mooney of North St. Paul said about the Comcast service he dropped two years ago. After doing some research, he bought a $30 bow-tie shaped antenna on the Internet and asked his son to install it on the roof.
It took some old-fashioned adjustments to get it to work. Mooney kept an eye on the TV screen inside and hollered to his son through a window when the antenna was positioned just right and the signal came in.
"It's a better picture than I got with cable," he said. He gets about 25 stations, including those broadcasting in high definition, since he has a high-definition TV.
Mooney isn't alone in making the switch, which is driving up business for antenna providers.
"My business was phenomenal last year," said Mike Ness, of Ness Electronics in St. Paul, an antenna wholesale business. "Antennas are cheap and you can use them with any TV."
The growth in the antenna business doesn't seem to have made a big dent in cable and satellite subscriptions. In 2010, the pay-TV market was up 0.2 percent, although in recent years the growth has been 1 to 2 percent each year.