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LA Times: VHS era is winding down

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http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-et-vhs-tapes22-2008dec22,0,7495390.story

The last big supplier of the tapes is ditching the format, ending the long fade-out of a product that ushered in the home theater.

By Geoff Boucher
December 22, 2008

Pop culture is finally hitting the eject button on the VHS tape, the once-ubiquitous home-video format that will finish this month as a creaky ghost of Christmas past.

After three decades of steady if unspectacular service, the spinning wheels of the home-entertainment stalwart are slowing to a halt at retail outlets. On a crisp Friday morning in October, the final truckload of VHS tapes rolled out of a Palm Harbor, Fla., warehouse run by Ryan J. Kugler, the last major supplier of the tapes.

"It's dead, this is it, this is the last Christmas, without a doubt," said Kugler, 34, a Burbank businessman. "I was the last one buying VHS and the last one selling it, and I'm done. Anything left in warehouse we'll just give away or throw away."

Dumped in a humid Florida landfill? It's an ignominious end for the innovative product that redefined film-watching in America and spawned an entire sector led by new household names like Blockbuster and West Coast Video. Those chains gave up on VHS a few years ago but not Kugler, who casually describes himself as "a bottom feeder" with a specialization in "distressed inventory."

Kugler is president and co-owner of Distribution Video Audio Inc., a company that pulls in annual revenue of $20 million with a proud nickel-and-dime approach to fading and faded pop culture. Whether it's unwanted "Speed Racer" ball caps, unsold Danielle Steel novels or unappreciated David Hasselhoff albums, Kugler's company pays pennies and sells for dimes. If the firm had a motto, it would be "Buy low, sell low."

"It's true, one man's trash is another man's gold," Kugler said. "But we are not the graveyard. I'm like a heart surgeon -- we keep things alive longer. Or maybe we're more like the convalescence home right before the graveyard."

The last major Hollywood movie to be released on VHS was "A History of Violence" in 2006. By that point major retailers such as Best Buy and Wal-Mart were already well on their way to evicting all the VHS tapes from their shelves so the valuable real estate could go to the sleeker and smaller DVDs and, in more recent seasons, the latest upstart, Blu-ray discs. Kugler ended up buying back as much VHS inventory as he could from retailers, distributors and studios; he then sold more than 4 million VHS videotapes over the last two years.

Those tapes went to bargain-basement chains such as Dollar Tree, Dollar General and Family Dollar, and Kugler's network of mom-and-pop clients and regional outlets, such as the Gabriel Bros. Stores in West Virginia or the Five Below chain in Pennsylvania. If you bought a Clint Eastwood movie at the Flying J Truck Stop in Saginaw, Mich., or a "Care Bears" tape at one of the H.E. Butts Grocery stores in Texas, Kugler's company probably put it there. He also sells to public libraries, military bases and cruise ships, although those clients now all pretty much want DVDs.

Kugler estimates that 2 million tapes are still sitting on shelves of his clients' stores across the country, but they are the last analog soldiers in the lost battle against the digital invasion. "I'm not sure a lot of people are going to miss VHS," he said, "but it's been good to us."

If you rewind back to the 1980s, VHS represented a remarkable turning point for the American consumer. For the first time, Hollywood's classics and its recent hits could be rented and watched at home.

"It was a sea change," says Leonard Maltin, the film critic and author who has written stacks of books to meet the consumer need for video recommendations. "Hollywood thought it would hurt movie ticket sales, but it didn't deter people from going to movies; in fact, it only increased their appetite for entertainment. Hollywood also thought it would just be a rental market, but then when someone had the idea of lowering the prices, the people wanted to own movies. They wanted libraries at home, and suddenly VHS was a huge part of our lives."

The format was easy to use (although fast-forwarding and rewinding to any particular spot was the worst new-tech irritant since the telephone busy signal) and, of course, the videocassette recorder and blank VHS tapes made it possible to catch up on any missed must-see TV, whether it was "Days of Our Lives" or "Monday Night Football." Hollywood found that movies also enjoyed a second opening weekend, as viewers throughout the country made Friday night trips to the rental store for new releases.

"I think in some ways it even pulled families together, if that doesn't sound too corny, because renting movies became such a part of the weekend," says Jim Henderson, one of the owners of Amoeba Music, the 45,000-square-foot merchant in Hollywood that sells pop culture in just about every format imaginable, including VHS. "It was also a great thing for film fans. You could educate yourself and go back to the well again and again. We're used to choice now, but that was the first time fans could watch what they wanted when they wanted."

Amoeba no longer buys VHS from distributors such as Distribution Video Audio. But customers bring in tapes every day to trade and sell. "We actually sell maybe 200 a day, almost all of them between $1 to $3," Henderson said. "Almost the same amount comes in as goes out."

A lot of those are the classic or foreign films that are not available on DVD, such as "The Magnificent Ambersons" or Gregory Nava's "El Norte," or vintage music videos by punk bands or new wave pioneers such as Black Flag or Siouxsie and the Banshees. Some older customers simply don't want to switch to DVD, others just like the bargain-basement price of the tapes.

But, Henderson said, unlike with vinyl records, no one seems to cling to VHS for romantic reasons.

"DVDs replaced VHS really fast compared to other format changes through the years," Henderson said. "VHS took too long to rewind, they were boxy and cumbersome, the picture was kind of flawed. The tape inside was delicate and just didn't hold up. DVD just blew it away."

It's true, the VHS tape never really had a chance once the DVD arrived in the late 1990s with all its shiny allure -- higher quality image, nimble navigation and all that extra content. After a robust run at the center of pop culture, VHS rentals were eclipsed by DVD in 2003. By the end of 2005, DVD sales were more than $22 billion and VHS was slumping badly but still viable enough to pull in $1.5 billion. Next year, that won't be the case.

Just before Halloween, JVC, the company that introduced the Video Home System format in 1977 in the United States, announced that it would no longer make stand-alone videocassette recorders. The electronic manufacturer still produces hybrid VHS-DVD players, but it's not clear how long that will last.

For a format that made Hollywood so much money, VHS leaves behind a shallow footprint in the movies themselves. There was "The Ring," a 2002 horror movie and its 2005 sequel, about a mysterious VHS tape that brings death to whoever watches it, but that's a sad valentine. This year Jack Black and Mos Def starred in "Be Kind Rewind," a loopy comedy that finds its center at a VHS rental store that is holding out against the DVD era, but the rebellion didn't go beyond the script -- the movie is available for rent or purchase on DVD and Blu-ray, but it was never released on VHS.

Kugler is one of the rare people who can stir up some nostalgia for the black, boxy tapes. His father bought Distribution Video Audio in 1988 and carved out a niche as an inventory supplier for the video rental stores that were popping up everywhere. His young son was interested in a different end of the entertainment business; the younger Kugler spent many afternoons in his teen years sneaking onto the Paramount Pictures studio lot and soaking it all in.

But life took Kugler on a less glamorous path. He started working at Distribution Video Audio in 1991 and in short order took the company to new heights by negotiating directly with studios to buy their overrun inventory.

The approach led the company beyond VHS, and soon Kugler's warehouses were filling up with CDs, books and merchandise like "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" wristwatches and "America's Next Top Model" T-shirts.

A casual observer might wonder how much shelf life those sorts of products could possibly have, but Kugler has moved hard to the Internet and says the "scavenger culture" mentality and sites such as Half.com, Amazon Marketplace and EBay have made it easier than ever to match narrow-niche and oddball customers with the products they want -- especially when it's priced to go at $2 or $3.

With some things, though, even Kugler the great salvager can't find a buyer no matter how low he goes. He took a loss on 50,000 copies of "Yo-Yo Man," a Smothers Brothers instructional video for the stringed toy. ("I'm not sure what I was thinking on that one," Kugler said.)

The majority of his firm's business today is with big box retailers including Target, Wal-Mart, K-Mart and Sears, where the company sets up displays of its discounted DVDs, such as "Superman Returns" and "Proof of Life," which are often priced at $10 or less. Plenty of customers see that price as an invitation to build up their DVD collections.

But Kugler, with a sly smile, offered a warning to consumers thinking of putting up shelving to handle their burgeoning libraries.

"The DVD will be obsolete in three or four years, no doubt about it. Everything will be Blu-ray," Kugler said, anticipating the next resident at his pop culture retirement home. "The days of the DVD are numbered. And that is good news for me."

geoff.boucher@latimes.com
 
Joining the ranks of 8-track and other formats of the past. It certainly outlasted our family's Sony Betamax, though. First movie I ever rented was Monty Python's Life of Brian on Beta when I was a kid. It scandalized my Catholic chum from next door. After a year or so you couldn't find a place to rent Beta and I was reduced to recording Friday Night Videos for entertainment.

No tears shed for VHS here!
 
http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-et-vhs-tapes22-2008dec22,0,7495390.story


"The DVD will be obsolete in three or four years, no doubt about it. Everything will be Blu-ray," Kugler said, anticipating the next resident at his pop culture retirement home. "The days of the DVD are numbered. And that is good news for me."

geoff.boucher@latimes.com

I'm a huge Blu-ray fan but many people don't see the difference and could care less about upgrading or moving from DVD. Unless the studios force feed Blu-ray to the masses, I'm not so sure that it will kill DVD anytime soon.
 
Indeed, I think Blu-Ray is more likely to die if a better format is developed.
 
^I don't see that happening anytime soon, with so much effort put into developing Blu-Ray so we can buy HD movies. Blu-Ray can replace DVD if it can be made to be as cheap. I can see DVD hanging on for a long time though, Blu-Ray is more of a premium version of DVD than an outright replacement. The fact that Blu-Ray players can play DVDs and CDs is a big plus.
 
DVD is already cheap and ubiquitous, and will be hard to displace (even if Blu Ray were the same price). There are plenty of even better technologies in the pipeline that will offer substantial improvements over Blu Ray. I think Blu Ray's biggest challenge is that it isn't a large enough improvement over DVD for data storage.
 
Personally, I think the video quality of standard DVD is high enough already, unlike VHS. I already have 10 times more movies on DVD than I ever did for VHS.

Bottom line is I don't see myself paying extra for players and discs to use any newer format anytime soon. Most new widescreen TVs are HD-ready though, so that doesn't matter.
 
Last edited:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_Versatile_Disc

Hvd_disc.jpg



imagine buying every season and episode of a television series and having it all on one disk!


blueray won't dominate forever. there will probably be combo players that could play CD, DVD, BRD and HVD. as long as physics will allow, they will keep trying to cram as much data as possible on a medium. they will find a use for that extra space.
 
Wow the LA Times is really with the times eh?
VHS has been dead for a while...

I do have som VHS I'm still hanging on to, because the items are not available on DVD.
 
Wow the LA Times is really with the times eh?
VHS has been dead for a while...

I do have som VHS I'm still hanging on to, because the items are not available on DVD.

if the items are important to you, you should convert them to digital format. magnetic tape seriously degrades with time. in england, there is actually some type of mold or fungus that eats tape.

and when you store on a digital media, you should choose your manufacturer wisely. some disks could become unreadable in a few years time. you should also copy burned disks every few years just in case the original becomes unreadable with time.
 
As the VHS Video cassette era winds down...

Everyone: Interesting news on the passing of the VHS video tape era.
I had a feeling when I found how easy it was to use and store DVD's that the VHS video tape's days were numbered.

The VHS video tape had its drawbacks like having to rewind and take care of the tape correctly and must we forget the spinning head in the VCR that eventually wears out. As mentioned those rare BETA tapes are practically antiques now!

The reason I feel that people feel differently about audio CD's comparing them to plastic and vinyl record albums is due to the much longer use of that technology and the physical number of record albums out there.

Some people-like me-were long time holdouts until I acquired a CD player and found out just how easy they were to use compared to the Album/cassette tape system I used for so long-and still do.

Another thing that is harder to find are audio cassette tapes thanks to the evolving recording technology. Interesting observations here!

Long Island Mike
 
Personally, I think the video quality of standard DVD is high enough already, unlike VHS. I already have 10 times more movies on DVD than I ever did for VHS.

Bottom line is I don't see myself paying extra for players and discs to use any newer format anytime soon. Most new widescreen TVs are HD-ready though, so that doesn't matter.
Ever see a movie in high definition? There's a big difference! Same with sports.
 
"The DVD will be obsolete in three or four years, no doubt about it. Everything will be Blu-ray," Kugler said, anticipating the next resident at his pop culture retirement home. "The days of the DVD are numbered. And that is good news for me."

I highly doubt this. Blu-ray's offer very little improvement over DVD's compared to what DVD's offered over VHS when viewed on a high-def (720p, 1080i, 1080p) set.

DVD was the true revolution in home theatre and blu-ray is merely an upgrade to that. Going from 480i to 480p was drastically better than going from 480p to 1080p (unless you have a 70 inch + set and sit close enough to appreciate it). DVD also offered a serious upgrade on the audio front , blu-ray not so much (if at all, if you can tell the difference you sure have better ears than I, DD/DTS is plenty good enough for 99.9999% of all home theatres out there).

Consumers aren't buying into blu-bay... I personally think it will be passed over in favour of digital distribution in a few years (heck you can rent high-def movies straight to your xbox 360 or ps3 these days).

Now if only the CRTC would do their damn job and get rid of those hopelessly outdated bandwidth caps Canadians are being forced to deal with even as third world countries are starting to offer significantly better service at lower rates... hmm
 
Wow the LA Times is really with the times eh?
VHS has been dead for a while...

The article clearly acknowledges that the VHS format has been “dead†for a long time – it simply highlights the very last large-scale buyer and distributor of VHS finally calling it quits.

"It's dead, this is it, this is the last Christmas, without a doubt," said Kugler, 34, a Burbank businessman. "I was the last one buying VHS and the last one selling it, and I'm done. Anything left in warehouse we'll just give away or throw away."
 

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