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Thứ Sáu, 3 tháng 5, 2013

10 things we'll miss about the video shop

Internet killed the video store

The Network Video image posted on Facebook this week. Source: news.com.au

"THE INTERNET KILLED THE VIDEO STORE".

That’s the dramatic message a Brisbane Network Video store has posted on its advertising billboard, as the regular visit to the humble video store fast becomes a thing of the past. 

Hundreds of outlets have closed over the past few years - replaced by shopping centre vending machines, rentals on iTunes, Foxtel and even BitTorrents.

If only we could press rewind. We’re nostalgic. We’ll miss those shops, in all their run-down glory. Here’s why.

1. The password challenge – You've got your work password. Your email password. Your phone PIN number. Your ATM PIN. Your PUK number. Probably at least two bloody phone numbers.

Let's face it, when it comes to remembering passwords, your video PIN was never top priority.

But we’ll miss the novelty value of a password you have to speak out loud. (It’s not like anyone else does that. Not exactly a foolproof system). And we’ll miss scrapping our brains for the relative whose name we’d chosen for the honour.

2. The wise and knowledgeable staff – Seeya, guys. Thanks for putting up with our "what movie is better?" questions and providing such a compelling variety of ‘employee picks’.

It’s sad, though. After US ambassador Jeffrey Bleich pleaded with Aussies to "stop downloading Game of Thrones illegally" last week, news.com.au was contacted by a video store franchisee in rural Australia whose store will close in just weeks.

"No more giving young kids their first jobs, no more of all the things which are important to me and my town," the store operator lamented in an email.

Tragic. We’re not so sure we’ll miss the condescension when we take out The Notebook or The Princess Diaries 2, though. Not that we’re ashamed or anything.

Notebook

With every great love, comes an embarrassing visit to the video store. Source: news.com.au

3. The time limit – You’ve always wanted to see Pulp Fiction. And tonight’s the night. You’ve GOT to watch it now, otherwise you’ve just wasted your money. The time incentive encouraged you to stay in and watch that movie so you’d be able to understand what everyone was quoting from.

4. The secret pleasure of the narky reminders - So you forgot take your video back. Frankly, like most people, you wouldn’t frequent the video shop too often. But once you had it, you wouldn’t be taking it back anytime soon.

The threatening letters? So what. It’s a $9 video, how big could the late fees really be? You might even feel proud of your secret rebellion.

The incessant texts and snail mail were all pretty amusing… until you received a letter from the debt collectors.

5. The roll of the dice – To paraphrase Forrest Gump, a trip to the video store was a bit like a box of chocolates. You never knew what you were going to get when it came to the condition of your selected video.

Your DVD might come so scratched that it wouldn't even play. Or you might be able to see some breathtaking images in a flick such as Lord of the Rings… pity the audio doesn’t work.

Now if there’s an issue with the movie you downloaded, chances are it’s a computer problem. The worst kind.

6. The browse - When you log onto iTunes or Quickflix you're usually focused on downloading that ONE particular flick. Come at me Bourne Ultimatum. Get in my DVD player, Star Wars Episode III. But the spontaneity of a trip to the video store is totally absent.

Now they’re gone, your chances of discovering a classic you'd never heard of are much lower. Less Hitchcock or Schindler’s List, more of the latest episode of Game of Thrones.

Game of Thrones

This is a metaphor for how Game of Thrones readers feel. Lost in the wilderness with no end in sight. Source: Supplied

7. The lax age restrictions – The most talked about movies in the playground tended to be R18+ or MA15+.

We're talking about the slasher film Freddy v Jason in the naughties, Scream in the ‘90s or freak-o-rama Basketcase in ‘80s. You’d sound really in-the-know with all your playground movie references… if store staff didn’t care enough to check how old you were.

8. The people looking at the ‘Adult’ section – Before the internet, this was where the shady neighbourhood perverts congregated. Now we’ll never know.

9. The joy of a successful DVD extraction - DVD players have never been the most reliable piece of technology.

So in this whizz-bang new age of "Torrents", ".movs" and "downloads", it's difficult to overstate the pleasure we felt when we finally extracted that DVD out of a piece of machinery that really messed with our minds.

10. Who are the armed robbers going to hit up? – We’re not really that nostalgic about this one. But we are concerned. Everyday it seemed as if a VideoEzy or a Civic Video had been robbed. Who knows why - video stores were never really awash in rivers of gold. Don’t be surprised if you hear about a spike in crime in other stores.

Continue the conversation on Twitter: @drpiotrowski @newscomauHQ


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Thứ Năm, 7 tháng 3, 2013

Gallagher's rant about Muse, BRITs

Noel Gallagher

Noel Gallagher has vowed to boycott the Brit Awards next year after claiming he hated this year's ceremony. Picture: Getty Images Source: Getty Images

ROCKER Noel Gallagher says he realised the music industry was dead when he saw Muse drummer Dominic Howard smoking an electronic cigarette at the BRIT Awards last month.

The former Oasis star launched into a wild rant in a recent interview with Time Out Dubai, lashing out at the state of the music industry and saying that the BRIT Awards was an "instantly forgettable night."

"There are no characters left in the music business. When we first started going there was a healthy percentage of people, and we were all dirt-kickers from council estates, and we all couldn't believe our luck that we were at the Brits.

"You go in now and everybody is a careerist. It's very corporate, and you know what I’ve actually seen people doing at the Brits? Eating," the 45-year-old singer fumed.

"I saw the drummer from Muse smoking an electronic cigarette. A cigarette with a battery in. I had to say to him: 'Really? Really? Is that where you are at? Do me a favour mate, either have a proper one outside, or don’t have one.'

"It lit up green when he had a drag of it. Nonsense. He said that immortal line - 'Oh you know how it is mate'. And I said 'I'm sorry mate, I actually don’t.' " Gallagher continued.

But the outspoken star wasn't done there. He went on to trash the younger generation of musicians, declaring that they are nothing but "a lot of young people in hats, with iPhones".

"There was nothing going on at the Brits, there was nothing going on at the after-show parties. There seemed to be a lot of young people in hats, with iPhones. They're either all involved in some massive video game that they're all hooked up to, or they're just texting each other saying 'where are you, what are you doing?'

"And they’ve all got hats. Where did the hat come from? We're going back to some Dickensian nightmare. I don't understand it. People with hats and Blackberrys under the age of 30 should be shot. Or stoned to death."

In a separate outburst earlier this week, the Don’t Look Back In Anger singer had a dig at Justin Bieber for keeping fans waiting two hours at his sold-out London gig on Monday.

"I would have been relieved if I was one of his fans," Gallagher quipped at Russell Brand's Comic Relief concert.

"I would be [disappointed] because kids are crying. I don't really know a great deal about him. I don't have an opinion on him. But it's not cool."


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