Not the answer you're looking for but, OLED. The last few gens have been really impressive and easily the closest thing to the good broadcast CRTs I've seen.
It's not just the perfect black bars, the *motion* is insane. My friend who has a bunch of PVMs (and who almost gave me one before I went in this direction) was floored by the way I set up my C2. She stopped buying PVMs and slowly moved her stuff over to OLEDs. According to her, beyond some professional level retro gaming stuff, the OLEDs are a very capable replacement.
Low key like, I don't keep a broadcast / 'professional' monitor running anymore. 95% of stuff I can start and finish on my desk C2. If it's for the web? Easy. For broadcast? You'd be surprised. It took a month or two to like, in my head figure out the limits and be able to take those into account but it's a total game changer.
I output video in a ~120hz container (~100 for the less common 25/50 stuff) and that's seemed to work best for me. BFI is sort of up to you.
For gaming, I use RESHADE to 'fix' blacks in games who either have artistically 'difficult' post processing or just problematic post processing. What I've found is ideal is taking the last 2 not black, black 'levels' and pushing them down to 0 (you can also sort of do something similar on the LG displays, 'black stabilizer' I believe). Most recent games seem to do a good job at their post processing but older ones may need a little more love. I don't consider this a big change, I tend to use RESHADE anyways since I like to handle grain on my own vs in game.