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Cherie

Cherie

Providence, RI
October 2002

SEP 03, 2005 03:05 PM

Parting Words For VHS Tapes, Soon to Be Gone With the Rewind

By Jen Chaney
Special to The Washington Post
Sunday, August 28, 2005; Page N01

VHS -- the beloved videotape format that bravely won the war against Betamax and charmed millions of Americans by allowing them to enjoy mindless Hollywood entertainment without leaving their homes -- has died at the age of 29. It passed away peacefully after a long illness caused by chronic technological insignificance and a lack of director's commentary tracks.

No one knows exactly when this once-valued objet de home entertainment began its journey toward that previously-viewed-video bin in the sky. Some say it was March 1997, when the slimmer, sexier DVD was introduced to American consumers. Others pin the time of death to the week of June 15, 2003, when DVD rentals first topped those of VHS. And there are some -- technophobic, time-warped souls who still keep their Erol's Video membership cards in their wallets -- who argue that VHS isn't deceased at all. It's just, well, resting its eyes.


In fairness, the remains of VHS haven't been interred yet. After all, 94.7 million American households still own VCRs. And more than $3 billion was spent on video rentals and purchases in the United States last year, according to Home Media Research. But if VHS isn't quite dead, it's at least on life support, comatose, all industry signs indicating it will not be resuscitated.

Many of the major studios, including Buena Vista Home Entertainment (which issues Disney titles), Fox and Warner Bros., are phasing out VHS releases. Circuit City and Best Buy stopped selling them online earlier this year, having removed the bulky cartridges from their store shelves in 2002 and 2003, respectively. (Wal-Mart and Amazon.com, on the other hand, have not announced plans to stop carrying the tapes.)

"I would think 2006 is the last year that there are major releases on VHS, and there won't be many of those," confirms Bo Andersen, president of the Video Software Dealers Association, a trade group for home video retailers.

Even Andy Stitzer, the coitus-challenged electronics store worker played by Steve Carell in "The 40-Year-Old Virgin," is savvy enough to know that VHS and the VCR are VCI: Virtually Completely Irrelevant.

"It's a dead technology," Andy tells girlfriend-to-be Trish when she contemplates buying a videocassette recorder. "It's like buying an eight-track player."

The following might be the ultimate proof of VHS's demise, though: When "Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith" comes to home video on Nov. 1, it will be available only on DVD, marking the first time an installment in the Skywalker saga is not on VHS. As Yoda himself might say, the life of VHS clearly close to ending is.

And while the prevailing attitude toward this turn of events for most might be, "Gee, that's too bad. So, what has TiVo recorded for me tonight?," it's important that we pause to mourn the loss of this clunky cassette and celebrate the many good times we shared. Wait and we might get charged a late fee.

The VCR in our minds slowly rewinds to the early 1980s, when the video rental business first exploded. If you lived in the Washington area, you probably frequented an independent rental store like the aforementioned Erol's chain, where the shelves were filled with movies in freakishly tall red cases lined with gray foam, as if the cassettes needed extra padding to protect them from piracy. On one side of the store: all Beta. The other: all VHS.

To continue the "Star Wars" geekout: Frequenting the Beta area was a bit like going to the Dark Side. It definitely seemed wrong, but once in Vader's grip, it was difficult to escape. ("The quality is so much better," proponents would insist. "I find your lack of faith disturbing.") Going VHS, on the other hand, was like joining the Rebel Alliance; all the young guns -- the Han Solos, the Princess Leias -- were there. When VHS eventually triumphed in the mid-'80s, it almost felt like an Ewok celebration. Except it was cooler, as no actual Ewoks were involved.

VHS captivated us because its personality contained so many facets. It was mysterious: How much tape was actually in there? What would happen if you lifted up that plastic flap across the top? If you left a VHS tape on top of the VCR, would it, as your father always insisted, get demagnetized? (You almost sacrificed the household copy of "Sixteen Candles" to find out, but in the end, your loyalty to Molly Ringwald won out.) VHS was instructive. It taught us how to feel the burn with Jane Fonda, dance like the zombies from Michael Jackson's "Thriller" and, later, do Tae-Bo with Billy Blanks.

VHS was maddening. No matter how many times we tried to fast-forward to a certain scene -- the moment when Leonardo DiCaprio sinks underwater in "Titanic," or the fava beans line in "The Silence of the Lambs" -- it never stopped exactly where we wanted. Inevitably, by the time we hit "play," Leo was already dead and Anthony Hopkins was already saying a breathy "Chianti."

And even in this age of DVD saturation, when you imagine someone watching porn, immediately you think: VHS. And recall that black-curtained corner of the video store that was marked "18 and Over Only," with its nervous-looking browsers.

Where's the lyrical magic in the title "Sex, Lies and DVD"? And where would Quentin Tarantino be sans the tape, having skillfully ripped off everything he saw in every movie he rented while working as a Los Angeles video store clerk.

VHS, occasionally, even turned criminal. In "The Ring" films, a vengeful tape was responsible for the deaths of countless people stupid enough to load it into their VCRs. This was even true in this year's "The Ring 2," in which the plot was not upgraded to hinge on the less-scary DVD format, as its characters were apparently so scared that they couldn't get to a Best Buy.

Still, even with its perversions, its personality quirks, you have to feel some love for the VHS tape. Had it never been born, there might not be DVD, or TiVo, or pay-per-view or microwave popcorn. Without it, 29 years' worth of rainy weekends would have dragged on ceaselessly, movielessly.

As we prepare to bury VHS, we can take solace in the knowledge that its memory will live on. In the current clash between the developing high-definition DVD formats Blu-ray and HD-DVD, we will still hear the echoes of VHS vs. Beta. At every yard sale where a neighbor tries to sell us an aging copy of "When Harry Met Sally" for $1, we will still see VHS's black, plastic face. And on the streets of Manhattan, wherever bootleg videos are being illegally hawked, the wind will whisper the name: VHS, VHS.

source

poptard

poptard

United Kingdom
November 2003

SEP 03, 2005 03:11 PM

a company in the UK


DIXONS i think

has stopped selling VHS players and 35mm Cameras as no one buys them

i think VH is on its way out, give it 5 years,

Vaux

Vaux

I'm lost
January 2008

SEP 03, 2005 03:17 PM

*sob!*

pmonkeyEsquire

pmonkeyEsquire

I'm lost
May 2004

SEP 03, 2005 06:14 PM

I cant wait to scoop up alla those left over vhs tapes for 1 or 2$$$$. and play em on my 13 inch not-plasm, not-flat screen almost-tv.

Pepelepew

Pepelepew

Oak Forest, IL
August 2005

SEP 03, 2005 06:29 PM

ah so sad so sad i will miss u vhs

Dicey

dicey

United Kingdom
February 2005

SEP 03, 2005 06:29 PM

OHHH NOOO!!!! I have so many great tapes and I need to buy a new VCR as mine is broken frown frown

pmonkeyEsquire

pmonkeyEsquire

I'm lost
May 2004

SEP 03, 2005 06:32 PM

Dicey said:
OHHH NOOO!!!! I have so many great tapes and I need to buy a new VCR as mine is broken frown frown




You need to upload them on your pc then burn them on dvd. What, do you live in Edwardian times or sumthin???? wink

Walker

Walker

Redmond, OR
March 2005

SEP 03, 2005 06:33 PM

frown

alpha_hazard

alpha_hazard

Fort Collins, CO
April 2004

SEP 03, 2005 06:41 PM

Kodak stopped servicing and producing slide projectors 18 months ago. Because of that Fuji dropped their Velvia 50 silde film.

Analog is on its way out. Chances are you'll still be able to buy VHS players for a long time coming, especially since some movies can only be found on cassette still. Even if DVD is replaced by another disc format all the new players will, hopefully, be backward compatible. Cassettes just weren't a very efficient form of storing information, because of the size and the short life, since 25 plays on your average cassette reduced the quality 30%, or so I've read, not sure how the quality is measured.

AceTracer

acetracer

Hollywood, FL
January 2004

SEP 03, 2005 06:42 PM

Good riddance to a technology that should never have won over Betamax's smaller form factor and better picture quality.



[Edited on Sep 03, 2005 by AceTracer]

Rosscoe

Rosscoe

I'm lost
March 2005

SEP 03, 2005 06:52 PM

meh.

we had some good times.
I'll miss you old friend

Feifer

Feifer

Encinitas, CA
October 2002

SEP 03, 2005 08:34 PM

shit...no more VHS? I guess I'll have to redo my collection in laserdiscs

wickedmonkey

wickedmonkey

Pawtucket, RI
June 2004

SEP 03, 2005 09:04 PM

there's nothing quite like finding an old VHS, and having no idea whats on it. Porno? Wrestlemania? A bad TV edit of Scarface? An Adam Curry hosted Headbangers Ball? VHS, you will be missed. ooo aaa

CaptSparrow

CaptSparrow

Lexington, NC
April 2004

SEP 03, 2005 09:07 PM

wickedmonkey said:
there's nothing quite like finding an old VHS, and having no idea whats on it. Porno? Wrestlemania? A bad TV edit of Scarface? An Adam Curry hosted Headbangers Ball? VHS, you will be missed. ooo aaa



Or better yet "The Pick Up Artist". biggrin

dingoes8

dingoes8

Milwaukee, WI
March 2004

SEP 03, 2005 09:15 PM

I recently tried to watch some old MST3Ks that I recorded, and found them all jumpy and nearly unwatchable. Kinda pissed me off, they were sitting untouched in a box for years. So good riddance.

But on the other hand, it was still cool to find them. I can't really imagine having something Tivoed for years and stumbling onto it one day.

mamet

mamet

Charleston, SC
March 2005

SEP 03, 2005 09:19 PM

AceTracer said:
Good riddance to a technology that should never have won over Betamax's smaller form factor and better picture quality.



[Edited on Sep 03, 2005 by AceTracer]



My family still has a working Betamax player.

But I will miss the VHS. I still have several movies on VHS that I regularly watch.

mamet

mamet

Charleston, SC
March 2005

SEP 03, 2005 09:20 PM

Boygeorgeismymom said:
noooo
i love them
i just bought 2 porns



VHS still sells better than DVD in the porn market, doesn't it? Perhaps that industry will keep them around for a little longer.

_biblia_

_biblia_

Tuvalu
March 2005

SEP 03, 2005 09:22 PM

wickedmonkey said:
there's nothing quite like finding an old VHS, and having no idea whats on it. Porno? Wrestlemania? A bad TV edit of Scarface? An Adam Curry hosted Headbangers Ball? VHS, you will be missed. ooo aaa



Mine usually have 120 Minutes episodes on them!

ChezGeek

ChezGeek

Port Orchard, WA
January 2004

SEP 03, 2005 09:24 PM

wickedmonkey said:
there's nothing quite like finding an old VHS, and having no idea whats on it. Porno? Wrestlemania? A bad TV edit of Scarface? An Adam Curry hosted Headbangers Ball? VHS, you will be missed. ooo aaa


hahah that made me laugh a lot biggrin

AceTracer

acetracer

Hollywood, FL
January 2004

SEP 03, 2005 10:25 PM

mamet said:

Boygeorgeismymom said:
noooo
i love them
i just bought 2 porns



VHS still sells better than DVD in the porn market, doesn't it? Perhaps that industry will keep them around for a little longer.


I don't see why. You can't do multi-angle shots in VHS. And it's not very portable. Plus, it was a real pain hiding VHS porn.

pananarama

pananarama

Worcester, MA
August 2003

SEP 03, 2005 10:46 PM

pmonkeyEsquire said:
I cant wait to scoop up alla those left over vhs tapes for 1 or 2$$$$. and play em on my 13 inch not-plasm, not-flat screen almost-tv.


word, Po-siiiiide!

pananarama

pananarama

Worcester, MA
August 2003

SEP 03, 2005 10:49 PM

alpha_hazard said:
Kodak stopped servicing and producing slide projectors 18 months ago. Because of that Fuji dropped their Velvia 50 silde film.

Analog is on its way out. Chances are you'll still be able to buy VHS players for a long time coming, especially since some movies can only be found on cassette still. Even if DVD is replaced by another disc format all the new players will, hopefully, be backward compatible. Cassettes just weren't a very efficient form of storing information, because of the size and the short life, since 25 plays on your average cassette reduced the quality 30%, or so I've read, not sure how the quality is measured.


Yeah what about all the great movies that won't make the cut for dvd release, are we just to lose them forever?

tech29

tech29

I'm lost
July 2004

SEP 03, 2005 11:24 PM

I have a VHS DVD/r player in one. I'm in the middle of converting all my VHS to DVD and for family and friends ...... has to be done. wink

Keith

Keith

Oklahoma City, OK
August 2002

SEP 03, 2005 11:34 PM

Why would anyone miss the VHS? Which part of DVDs make you nostalgic? That they're more permanent, have vastly superior picture quality, crystal clear 5 channel sound, are more attractive to store, and take up less space?

venomkid

venomkid

I'm lost
January 2003

SEP 03, 2005 11:39 PM

To hell with VHS. Good riddance.

And to anyone who's feeling some sort of nostalgic revivalism, you need to pull your head out of your ass. This isn't vinyl. Spare us the jeremiads and pseudo-luddite hand-wringing. There is *nothing* that VHS offers that DVD doesn't.

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