How to baby-proof your home theater

By Sarah Cavill, Techlicious.com

We’ve all heard it: The clatter of the remote control hitting the hard wood floor. The grind of the disc tray on the DVD player being forcibly closed, often with something in it other than a disc. The gleeful laugh of a toddler that has our phone and is running away with it. Many issues, when it comes to protecting our technology or home theater systems are just annoyances, but others pose real danger — for your child and your electronics.

Fortunately, there are many easy to use baby-proofing measures you can take to keep your new crawler or worse, your new climber, safe and sound while also protecting your technology.

Safety 1st

1. Secure your TV
According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, between 8,000 and 10,000 children are treated in emergency rooms each year because of tip-over injuries, and televisions are major offenders. Flat-screen televisions are front- heavy and often perched on small lightweight bases. To carefully secure your TV you can secure it with a Prograde Flat Screen TV Lock. ($29.32 on Amazon.com).

2. Protect your components
All those flashing lights, sliding trays, and buttons — how they love buttons — make components like Blu-ray players, DVRs, cable boxes and iPod docks very tempting for sticky fingers. You can get an entertainment unit that holds your TV and electronics, with glass or frosted doors that close, like the TOBO TV panel with media storage ($319 on Ikea.com). You can secure the doors with childproof locks and secure the unit to the wall. Most remotes will work through glass.

Sewell

For those that don’t work through glass, or if your unit has wooden doors, you can get an external remote sensor like the Sewell InjectIR ($44.95 on Amazon.com) that sees IR commands from all of your remotes and transmits them to your components via HDMI (see the illustration).

You can also get a clear plastic shield that covers the front of your components. The DVD/Stereo Guard by Parent Units ($12.74 on Amazon.com) keeps wee hands from pushing buttons, but is easily removable for adult access.

3. Cover your outlets and power strips
Though the standard plug covers are quite handy and inconspicuous for plugs you rarely use, they are finger-breaking to remove. A product like the Kidco Outlet Plug Cover ($7.25 on Amazon.com), keeps kids off of the plug, allows you to shorten the cord and it’s easily opened for use. Since most of us are plugging in our entire lives, power strips are an issue as well. A Power Strip Cover from Safety 1st ($7.99 on Amazon.com) keep curious hands from yanking at the plugs.

Wiremold

4. Organize your wires
Hide cords behind cord concealers like the Wiremold CordMate II Cord Organizer ($24.99 on Crutchfield.com) if you’re running cables along a wall. Directly behind the TV, manage cables with zip ties or cover them with a wrap like the Monster Cable-It Wire Management System, which comes in three colors and several lengths ($12.20 for 8 feet on Amazon.com).

5. Protect your remote control
The most oft-dropped item deserves a little protection too. A Remote Control Cover from Remote Wraps ($15.99 on RemoteWraps.com) protects the device, the device’s battery door, and your furniture from getting banged up.

There are many baby-proofing companies that will come in to your home and assess your needs. Make sure when researching a company that they provide full service for home theaters, and not just plugs and cords.

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Discuss this post

How about just watch your kids?

  • 5 votes
Reply#1 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 9:25 AM EST

Are you tethered to your kid 24/7? It takes no more than a couple of seconds for an accident to happen. Baby proof your house to remove unnecessary risks and hazards. The rule I used was a very old one, drop down to their eye level and take a look around the entire room. It lets you now what they see and what needs to be moved.

Either that or find a way to glue your eyes to your child during every waking moment. Don't look away for a second for any reason whatsoever. Yeah, that's possible.

    #1.1 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 11:32 AM EST

    it only takes a second to die you can be looking at your tv then BAM aneurysm or blood clot or car smashes through your living room but mainly for little kids lately its been flatscreens falling on them as for kids they watch themselves these days mainly while mommy and daddy are at work and their sitter is passed out from raiding your weed stash

    • 1 vote
    #1.2 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 11:59 AM EST

    How about quit having kids! Too many people already man!

    • 5 votes
    #1.3 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 12:55 PM EST

    3 billion in china compared to 500 million in the united states but if they keep up with the whole one child per household thing it will be 1.5 billion in a few decades

      #1.4 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 5:48 PM EST
      Reply

      NORPLANT!!!!

      • 2 votes
      Reply#2 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 9:32 AM EST

      SWALLOW!

        #2.1 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 8:11 PM EST
        Reply

        .

        • 1 vote
        Reply#3 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 9:32 AM EST

        I don't see anything stating that MSNBC was paid for this adicle. This looks much more like an ad than it does an article especially with the links and everything.

        Was someone paid for this? I really would like to know because as a recommendation I might take a look but if this is a disguised ad I will be on my merry way because of the bias.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#4 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 11:39 AM EST

        No one was paid to write anything that appeared in this article. These recommendations are the writer's.--Suzanne Kantra, Editor-in-chief, Techlicious

          #4.1 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 9:07 PM EST

          Thanks for the response.

            #4.2 - Wed Feb 22, 2012 8:17 AM EST
            Reply

            Watch your kids. Teach them there are things they can't touch. Don't let them have total run of the house. Keep them out of certain rooms.

            • 1 vote
            Reply#5 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 12:22 PM EST

            I hate to negate this article, but my children have conquired every one of their suggestions already. Glass and plastic doors?! Breakable, especially when the wrong edge of a wooden block is used to test the ringing of a glass surface. Plug covers as "finger-breakers" to remove?! My kids managed to pull them out before they even turned one . . . and most regular plugs are perfect choke hazards as soon as they are free from the wall. My kids are only two now and we have already had to go waaay beyond what this article suggests. Lowes has become our best friend when it comes to covering outlets in their bedroom, securing entertainment areas, and preventing harmless silverware from becoming dangerious projectiles. These are normal little boys, folks! Curious, adaptable, agile . . . perfect learning machines! If you are reading this article in preperation for your first kid, please don't buy this expensive junk. It doesn't work. Be prepared to use your imagination and your local Lowes or Home Depot instead. Good luck!

            • 1 vote
            Reply#6 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 12:24 PM EST

            I agree with your comments about standard plug covers, and that's not what we're recommending in the article. I am curious if you tried the covers we recommend and if those didn't work for you.

            Also, the TV securing devices should work for everyone, unless you're arming your kids with a crowbar. And with thousands of injuries a year caused by tipping TVs, it's worth the (small) investment.

              #6.1 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 9:18 PM EST
              Reply

              Or.. You can get off your lazy selfish ass and actually pay attention to your children and arrange your entire @!$%#ing house and life to accommodate their needs instead of yours.

              If your not prepared to do so, you shouldn't have children.

              • 1 vote
              Reply#7 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 2:02 PM EST

              How about instructing your kids to leave expensive and dangerous electronics alone, watch them to make sure they do, and punish them if they don't? Any kid caught pulling on the disc tray or "gleefully" smashing the remote in my household would have been gleefully slapped and sent to the corner.

              • 3 votes
              Reply#8 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 4:38 PM EST

              1-Cover wires.

              2-Put everything else out of reach.

              Problem solved in fewer steps and with less advertising.

                Reply#9 - Tue Feb 21, 2012 8:13 PM EST

                I have two boys - one is a year old, the other is two-and-a-half. Both are very curious and use their fingers to figure out EVERYTHING. While I think the suggestions here are good, I'm actually going to take it a step further and run all my cables through the walls (luckily, I have an attic that's easy to get around in), then mount the TV on the walls and all the speakers on the ceiling. All of the electronics are going into my lockable hallway closet. Short of a kid throwing blocks at the TV (which may end up happening), it should at least be MOSTLY childproof... :)

                  Reply#10 - Wed Feb 22, 2012 12:30 AM EST
                  Comment author avatarAlex Perryvia Facebook

                  I also like the Facebook Timeline Covers on this site very much! -

                    Reply#11 - Wed Feb 22, 2012 12:36 AM EST
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