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Whether or not you actually watch your DVDs anymore, you likely have a bunch lying around -- and depending on what they are, they could fetch you some extra cash if you're interested in selling them.
Physical media has had a resurgence in recent years, helped by the curating and marketing of 4K heritage titles in attractive packaging for a keen, if niche, market of collectors. That was the ...
Due to the unstable nature of any format, films, tapes, phonograph records, optical discs like CDs and DVDs, and digital data stored on hard drives all naturally degrade over time, especially if not kept in correct storage conditions. Preservation efforts attempt to avoid the loss of works; this is usually done by storing them in archives.
Beavis and Butt-Head: The Mike Judge Collection is notable in that it is one of the few times that a home video release of the show has retained music video segments. All prior VHS and DVD releases have lacked these segments except for the VHS releases of Beavis and Butt-Head Do Christmas, Hard Cash, and Too Dumb for T.V., and the last disc of the second and last Time-Life set, presumably due ...
Time Life also owned several radio and TV stations in the United States beginning in the 1950s through to 1983. By 1970, Time decided to sell its broadcasting operations and to concentrate in cable development. Time-Life's television stations were sold to McGraw-Hill in early 1972 following FCC approval. [3] Those stations included the following:
More common but still valuable games like “The Legend of Zelda” or “Super Mario Bros.” can fetch between $50 to $13,000 as with the case of a Super Mario Bros sealed later production NES ...
Well into the mid 1960's, it was still common for news, current affairs, sports coverage, game shows, talk/panel shows, infotainment programs, and variety shows to be broadcast live, and these were usually not recorded. In the early days of television, recording and editing shows on videotape was expensive and time-consuming.
Though most well-known VHS tapes have little to no value today, some of the more obscure ones have a high value. The super-schlocky "Dr. Frankenstein's Castle of Freaks," a 1974 movie released on ...