Short answer, yes
What you need is the iPod A/V cable. It connects to the headphone port on the ipod and has 3 RCA plugs on the other end. Normally, yellow is the video channel, and red and white are the two audio channels. A few older TVs only support one audio channel, but that is beside the point. Having said that, the last time I saw this cable I think the three RCA plugs were all white, to conform to Apple's color scheme, so it would require some testing to figure out which plug is for what channel. If you are connecting to a stereo system to listen to music, I would recommend using this cord, as well, because the fidelity and quality through the RCA jacks is going to be much better than through a microphone jack with the regular 1/4" plug. Of course, that also depends on the system. I happen to use an old 2.1 (2 speakers and subwoofer) system for computers that provides the 1/4" plug which I put straight into the ipod, but most home stereo setups have input ports and RCA is almost always one of them. And by all means, plug the video channel into the flat pannel and the audio into your sound system for a sort of surround sound!But here's the rub--the ipod video format only supports video to 640x480 resolution. I'm gonna guess that flat-panel of yours supports HD. 640x480 is the resolution supported by your average-joe-23-inch-cathode-ray-tube-hotel-TV, a lot like my TV. You'll get a picture, but it will not be DVD-quality. On the other hand, it won't be any worse than VHS. Most likely, the quality will fall somewhere in the middle because you have the advantage of digital fidelity over VHS. All of this, of course, depends on what ipod you have or are considering. It must be a fifth-generation "Video iPod" model because only these have the composite video/audio headphone jack. They were made with 30, 60, and now 80GB capacities. According to Apple, 30GB gets you 3.5 hours of video. In my opinion, too many variables affect that number positively and negatively, so consider it very rough estimate. This says nothing about the effect different file formats have on capacity and quality, though I can post more on that.Lastly, two issues often creep up with this. First, you get no picture at all. If this is the case, then TV-OUT under video settings on the ipod is not ON. Make sure TV-OUT is ON. Second, the picture is is black and white. There are two possible causes: also under the video settings TV SETTING must be to NTSC which is the standard video system for the United States. The other reason may be a/v cable. I've never seen any, but I am sure other companies have made cables to compete with Apple's own product, but it is my understanding that only the Apple A/V cable is color-compatible with the ipod. And charts: charts are just big pictures. Video ipods support pictures in .jpeg, .bmp, .gif, .tiff, .psd, and .png formats. I believe most charts are coded as jpeg, tiff, and occassioally png. Select the picture (chart) and view it on the big screen.What would I do? Well, I really can't say for sure without seeing the video quality. I have the means to get videos, format them to ipod if they are not yet the correct format, and store them on my computer, which addresses the ease of just keeping DVDs on hand and dropping them in the DVD player. It is tough to make a recommendation without knowing exaclty what you have because an entertainment system is just that, a system. Everything is interrelated and the smallest component may change your course entirely.