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obituary for VHS

jod
11-17-06, 12:48 AM
After a long illness, the groundbreaking home-entertainment format VHS has died of natural causes in the United States. The format was 30 years old.

No services are planned.

The format had been expected to survive until January, but high-def formats and next-generation vidgame consoles hastened its final decline.

"It's pretty much over," concurred Buena Vista Home Entertainment general manager North America Lori MacPherson on Tuesday.

VHS is survived by a child, DVD, and by Tivo, VOD and DirecTV. It was preceded in death by Betamax, Divx, mini-discs and laserdiscs.

Although it had been ailing, the format's death became official in this, the video biz's all-important fourth quarter. Retailers decided to pull the plug, saying there was no longer shelf space.

As a tribute to the late, great VHS, Toys 'R' Us will continue to carry a few titles like "Barney," and some dollar video chains will still handle cassettes for those who cannot deal with the death of the format.

Born Vertical Helical Scan to parent JVC of Japan, the tape had a difficult childhood as it was forced to compete with Sony's Betamax format.

After its youthful Betamax battles, the longer-playing VHS tapes eventually became the format of choice for millions of consumers. VHS enjoyed a lucrative career, transforming the way people watched movies and changing the economics of the film biz. VHS hit its peak with "The Lion King," which sold more than 30 million vidcassettes Stateside.

The format flourished until DVDs launched in 1997. After a fruitful career, VHS tapes started to retire from center stage in 2003 when DVDs became more popular for the first time.

Since their retirement, VHS tapes have made occasional appearances in children's entertainment and as a format for collectors seeking titles not released on DVD. VHS continued to make as much as $300 million a year until this year, when studios stopped manufacturing the tapes.

source (http://www.variety.com/article/VR1117953955.html?categoryid=20&cs=1)

njohnson747
11-17-06, 01:22 AM
At long last. I gave away my collection years ago - once I had it all on DVD. Except for "SuperFly"...I had to wait a while for that DVD release.

I remember a buddy of mine 15 years ago had a stepdad who wanted to copy every VHS movie ever produced and had close to 1,000 tapes. And as we all know the transfer from VCR to VCR is analog at it's worst and the tapes all looked like shite.

All hail the final act of supremacy of the DVD!

jod
11-17-06, 01:30 AM
yeah but we'll be out of date in like 2 years... heyho just use a notepad and draw pictures then flip it really fast

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