You Can Check Best Price at: www.amazon.com If the heyday of the gigantic-screen rear-projection HDTV is over, somebody needs to tell Mitsubishi. The company is the sole remaining proprietor pushing out 60-inch-plus TVs too thick to hang on the wall and too inexpensive to merit a cameo on MTV's "Cribs." Its 2009 lineup features two series of what it calls home theater TVs--to differentiate from its flat-panels--and the WD-737 is the cheapest. The main reason for buying this TV is to get as much screen for as little money as possible, and the WD-737 series fulfills that role admirably. It can't match the black-level performance of most flat-panels we've tested, it has some uniformity issues unique to its category and of course you'll eventually need to replace the bulb. However, the replacement is relatively inexpensive ($99, plus shipping), color accuracy is very good, and did we mention the picture is gi-normous? If you want to go really big for less, the WD-737 series is the only Game in town. Note Series: We, we evaluate the practical Mitsubishi inch 65 WD - is 65 737, this view also WD - applies to screen size of the others in the series 737: The Mitsubishi-inch 60 WD - 60737 the Mitsubishi inches 73 WD - 73737,82 inch Mitsubishi WD - 82737. All sizes to share the same specification, you need to generate a very similar image quality.