Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
popularSUCHaDEAL posted Jan 22, 2026 03:29 AM
popularSUCHaDEAL posted Jan 22, 2026 03:29 AM

INSIGNIA 32" Class 720p F20 Series LED HD Smart Fire TV, Voice Remote with Alexa, Free & Live TV $69.99 shipped AMAZON

$70

$130

46% off
Amazon
13 Comments 4,347 Views
Get Deal at Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster

Community Voting

Deal Score
+12
Good Deal
Get Deal at Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: INSIGNIA 32" Class F20 Series LED HD Smart Fire TV with Alexa Voice Remote (NS-32F201NA26)

Deal History 

Sale Price
Slickdeal
  • $NaN
  • Today

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 2/23/2026, 09:19 AM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$79.99

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

13 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 22, 2026 05:57 AM
5,276 Posts
Joined Jun 2019
The_Love_SpudJan 22, 2026 05:57 AM
5,276 Posts
I recall when items from Newegg house brand Rosewill began appearing on Amazon. Some of those are now available shipped and sold by Amazon(!), a seemingly odd development for a brand presumably developed to drive traffic and provide margins to Newegg's e-commerce site.
https://www.amazon.com/stores/Ros...B51856E69E
Another development was seeing infamously regional Micro Center offering items via an Amazon store. Given their limited reach it wasn't nonsensical to imagine the benefits of an Amazon storefront, though like any regional seller part of their historical allure had surely been the scaricity and effort associated with their limited footprint.
https://www.amazon.com/stores/MIC...F46544B28D
Despite all of this, it does seem like a big step to see Best Buy house brand Insignia items appearing on Amazon shipped and sold via a Best Buy storefront. The offerings are mostly Fire TVs and a few TV wall mounts, so this is clearly the result of an agreement regarding sales of TVs using the FIre TV platform (see below).
https://corporate.bestbuy.com/201...smart-tvs/

Good luck!
Jon
1
1
Jan 22, 2026 06:19 AM
2,392 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
CreditGuyJan 22, 2026 06:19 AM
2,392 Posts
One of our first TVs was a 32" Mitsubishi that was considered pretty big for the time. It sat in the corner and the living room wasn't huge so that TV really provided some viewing area that was almost envious to our friends. Today, we would need binoculars to view that TV. That 32" would be a pimple on the arse of my 77" OLED that cost only about $50 more today in adjusted dollars. And that 77" isn't anything special considering 83"-100" are very common.

I guess what I'm saying is that other than a travel trailer, I can't think of too many places where a 32" tv would be appropriate. The kitchen counter?
Jan 22, 2026 08:37 AM
1,148 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
jms209Jan 22, 2026 08:37 AM
1,148 Posts
32" 720p tv might be fine as secondary tv.
1
Jan 22, 2026 11:55 AM
533 Posts
Joined Nov 2020
UniqueMagic721Jan 22, 2026 11:55 AM
533 Posts
Quote from CreditGuy :
One of our first TVs was a 32" Mitsubishi that was considered pretty big for the time. It sat in the corner and the living room wasn't huge so that TV really provided some viewing area that was almost envious to our friends. Today, we would need binoculars to view that TV. That 32" would be a pimple on the arse of my 77" OLED that cost only about $50 more today in adjusted dollars. And that 77" isn't anything special considering 83"-100" are very common.

I guess what I'm saying is that other than a travel trailer, I can't think of too many places where a 32" tv would be appropriate. The kitchen counter?
I have an armoire in my B/R that held a tube tv, and a built in nook above my fireplace in the basement that also held a 32" tube tv. In both of these instances, I found the largest flat screen that would fit in the same area, which in the basement's case was a 32". I just cleared a 44" Vizio in my armoire by removing the doors and hinges and closure system without having to buy new furniture.

So there are other use cases.
Jan 22, 2026 12:02 PM
533 Posts
Joined Nov 2020
UniqueMagic721Jan 22, 2026 12:02 PM
533 Posts
Quote from CreditGuy :
One of our first TVs was a 32" Mitsubishi that was considered pretty big for the time. It sat in the corner and the living room wasn't huge so that TV really provided some viewing area that was almost envious to our friends. Today, we would need binoculars to view that TV. That 32" would be a pimple on the arse of my 77" OLED that cost only about $50 more today in adjusted dollars. And that 77" isn't anything special considering 83"-100" are very common.

I guess what I'm saying is that other than a travel trailer, I can't think of too many places where a 32" tv would be appropriate. The kitchen counter?
I have an armoire in my B/R that held a tube tv, and a built in nook above my fireplace in the basement that also held a 32" tube tv. In both of these instances, I found the largest flat screen that would fit in the same area, which in the basement's case was a 32". I just cleared a 44" Vizio in my armoire by removing the doors and hinges and closure system without having to buy new furniture.

So there are other use cases.
Jan 22, 2026 02:41 PM
295 Posts
Joined Nov 2019
StinktoothJan 22, 2026 02:41 PM
295 Posts
As long as people keep buying these they will keep cranking them out. It really depends how far away you sit, but for a computer monitor even 1080p will have a screen door effect from a few feet away. I would want at least QHD or 1440p. If you sit 6 feet away you might be fine though.
Jan 22, 2026 03:55 PM
2 Posts
Joined Dec 2019
Cobix928Jan 22, 2026 03:55 PM
2 Posts
In the garage above your work counter would be ideal as well.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Jan 22, 2026 04:20 PM
73 Posts
Joined Aug 2013
Metalbender01Jan 22, 2026 04:20 PM
73 Posts
Even being a 720 and kinda trash, buying a TV for 70 bucks is kinda wild.
Jan 22, 2026 09:27 PM
17 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
atlantavipJan 22, 2026 09:27 PM
17 Posts
Works great for my Airstream
Jan 23, 2026 12:23 AM
1,988 Posts
Joined Feb 2021
AquaGalley8616Jan 23, 2026 12:23 AM
1,988 Posts
ok, here is my story with these Insignia hdtv's. I have about 6 of the 24 inch 720p tv's and I love them. Why? because it weighs 5 pounds, and it fits on my porch, bedroom small table and I sit about 2-3 feet from me. My 55 inch 4k fire tv hisense is in the bedroom too. I have my mac mini m4 on it and my xbox in it. In living room more of these fire hdtv's in different sizes. Today I put a 32 inch 1080p Insignia 2025 FE model .... on my porch I bought for 89 dollars the 2 days ago , and it will replace my 24 inch 720p tv on porch.

Now, I have not had problems with these insignia tv's. BUT ... If I encounter a problem which over the years has happen, I research the problem on youtube and redit and other places to figure out HOW to fix the problem! FIXED all my problems.

Everybody might have favorite brand, I'm fine with that. To each his own. Different sizes for different situations and rooms. I practice being FLEXIBLE ... and experiment.
720p is great in 24 inch tv's for me, 1080p for 32 inch tv's works for me, 42 inch and above 4k works for me. But that is just me.
I test my tv's big and small by going to youtube and watching 4k or 8k or 12k ultra demo's that sony and other company's put out to see if it looks great in 720p, 1080p, 4k for me at MY VIEWING location! Does it pop, and does it look good and sound good, and for me it works where I put it.

I didn't talk about the cool features of these insignia fire tv's, I don't want to make this posts any longer, you can look at pro's on youtube to explain that stuff.
Whatever you get, ... get something that works for you, size and brand, and other preferences. To each his own. peace
Last edited by AquaGalley8616 January 22, 2026 at 06:13 PM.
Jan 23, 2026 04:03 AM
4,214 Posts
Joined Sep 2019
LavenderPickle7682Jan 23, 2026 04:03 AM
4,214 Posts
So what's the difference between "Smart Fire" and "Dumb Fire"?
2
Jan 23, 2026 04:46 AM
93 Posts
Joined Jun 2021
DameTimeJan 23, 2026 04:46 AM
93 Posts
Quote from CreditGuy :
One of our first TVs was a 32" Mitsubishi that was considered pretty big for the time. It sat in the corner and the living room wasn't huge so that TV really provided some viewing area that was almost envious to our friends. Today, we would need binoculars to view that TV. That 32" would be a pimple on the arse of my 77" OLED that cost only about $50 more today in adjusted dollars. And that 77" isn't anything special considering 83"-100" are very common.

I guess what I'm saying is that other than a travel trailer, I can't think of too many places where a 32" tv would be appropriate. The kitchen counter?
I've seen computer monitors 32 inches lol
Jan 23, 2026 07:12 AM
1,988 Posts
Joined Feb 2021
AquaGalley8616Jan 23, 2026 07:12 AM
1,988 Posts
I should add, I did try the 32 inch Insignia on the porch but it was too big to use where I have it sitting on chair 2-3 feet from me, so I went back to the 24 inch 720p insignia Fire TV. Getting the right sized display for situation for me becomes more important as I experiment with different display sizes.
Last edited by AquaGalley8616 January 23, 2026 at 01:53 PM.
1

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals