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The Last Video Rental Store Is Your Public Library

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The Last Video Rental Store Is Your Public Library

This story was reported with support from the MuckRock foundation.

As prices for streaming subscriptions continue to soar and finding movies to watch, new and old, is becoming harder as the number of streaming services continues to grow, people are turning to the unexpected last stronghold of physical media: the public library. Some libraries are now intentionally using iconic Blockbuster branding to recall the hours visitors once spent looking for something to rent on Friday and Saturday nights. 

John Scalzo, audiovisual collection librarian with a public library in western New York, says that despite an observed drop-off in DVD, Blu-ray, and 4K Ultra disc circulation in 2019, interest in physical media is coming back around. 

“People really seem to want physical media,” Scalzo told 404 Media.

Part of it has to do with consumer awareness: People know they’re paying more for monthly subscriptions to streaming services and getting less. The same has been true for gaming.

As the audiovisual selector with the Free Library of Philadelphia since 2024, Kris Langlais has been focused on building the library’s video game collections to meet comparable interest in demand. Now that every branch library has a prominent video game collection, Langlais says that patrons who come for the games are reportedly expressing interest in more of what the library has to offer. 

“Librarians out in our branches are seeing a lot of young people who are really excited by these collections,” Langlais told 404 Media. “Folks who are coming in just for the games are picking up program flyers and coming back for something like that.” 

Langlais’ collection priorities have been focused on new releases, yet they remain keenly aware of the long, rich history of video game culture. The problem is older, classic games are often harder to find because they’ve gone out of print, making the chances of finding them cost-prohibitive. 

“Even with the consoles we’re collecting, it’s hard to go back and get games for them,” Langlais said. “I’m trying to go back and fill in old things as much as I can because people are interested in them.” 

Locating out-of-print physical media can be difficult. Scalzo knows this, which is why he keeps a running list of films known to be unavailable commercially at any given time, so that when a batch of films are donated to the library, Scalzo will set aside extra copies, just in case a rights dispute puts a piece of legacy cult media in licensing purgatory for a few years. 

“It’s what’s expected of us,” Scalzo added.

Tiffany Hudson, audiovisual materials selector with Salt Lake City Public Library has had a similar experience with out-of-print media. When a title goes out of print, it’s her job to hunt for a replacement copy. But lately, Hudson says more patrons are requesting physical copies of movies and TV shows that are exclusive to certain streaming platforms, noting that it can be hard to explain to patrons why the library can't get popular and award-winning films, especially when what patrons see available on Amazon tells a different story. 

“Someone will come up to me and ask for a copy of something that premiered at Sundance Film Festival because they found a bootleg copy from a region where the film was released sooner than it was here,” Hudson told 404 Media, who went onto explain that discs from different regions aren’t designed to be ready by incompatible players. 

But it’s not just that discs from different regions aren’t designed to play on devices not formatted for that specific region. Generally, it's also just that most films don't get a physical release anymore. In cases where films from streaming platforms do get slated for a physical release, it can take years. A notable example of this is the Apple+ film CODA, which won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2022. The film only received a U.S. physical release this month. Hudson says films getting a physical release is becoming the exception, not the rule. 

“It’s frustrating because I understand the streaming services, they’re trying to drive people to their services and they want some money for that, but there are still a lot of people that just can’t afford all of those services,” Hudson told 404 Media. 

Films and TV shows on streaming also become more vulnerable when companies merge. A perfect example of this was in 2022 with the HBO Max-Discovery+ merger under Warner Bros Discovery. A bunch of content was removed from streaming, including roughly 200 episodes of classic Sesame Street for a tax write-off. That merger was short-lived, as the companies are splitting up again as of this year. Some streaming platforms just outright remove their own IP from their catalogs if the content is no longer deemed financially viable, well-performing or is no longer a strategic priority. 

The data-driven recommendation systems streaming platforms use tend to favor newer, more easily categorized content, and are starting to warp our perceptions of what classic media exists and matters. Older art house films that are more difficult to categorize as “comedy” or “horror” are less likely to be discoverable, which is likely how the oldest American movie available on Netflix currently is from 1968. 

It’s probably not a coincidence that, in many cases, the media that is least likely to get a more permanent release is the media that’s a high archival priority for libraries. AV librarians 404 Media spoke with for this story expressed a sense of urgency in purchasing a physical copy of “The People’s Joker” when they learned it would get a physical release after the film premiered and was pulled from the Toronto International Film Festival lineup in 2022 for a dispute with the Batman universe’s rightsholders.

“When I saw that it was getting published on DVD and that it was available through our vendor—I normally let my branches choose their DVDs to the extent possible, but I was like, ‘I don’t care, we’re getting like 10 copies of this,’” Langlais told 404 Media. “I just knew that people were going to want to see this.” 

So far, Langlais’ instinct has been spot on. The parody film has a devout cult following, both because it’s a coming-of-age story of a trans woman who uses comedy to cope with her transition, and because it puts the Fair Use Doctrine to use. One can argue the film has been banned for either or both of those reasons. The fact that media by, about and for the LGBTQ+ community has been a primary target of far-right censorship wasn’t lost on librarians.

“I just thought that it could vanish,” Langlais added. 

It’s not like physical media is inherently permanent. It’s susceptible to scratches, and can rot, crack, or warp over time. But currently, physical media offers another option, and it’s an entirely appropriate response to the nostalgia for-profit model that exists to recycle IP and seemingly not much else. However, as very smart people have observed, nostalgia is default conservative in that it’s frequently used to rewrite histories that may otherwise be remembered as unpalatable, while also keeping us culturally stuck in place. 

Might as well go rent some films or games from the library, since we’re already culturally here. On the plus side, audiovisual librarians say their collections dwarf what was available at Blockbuster Video back in the day. Hudson knows, because she clerked at one in library school.

“Except we don’t have any late fees,” she added.

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tpbrisco
12 hours ago
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Glad someone else is figuring out that libraries exist. Between Netflix and COVID, they've been my weekly "go to" for years now. Oh, they have books, too - even electronic books. Visit, it'll be refreshing.
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Dorset Council ditching customized SAP for £14M Oracle overhaul

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Authority follows Birmingham and West Sussex, which both suffered disastrous transitions

Updated Southwest England's Dorset Council is preparing to swap its legacy SAP ERP for an Oracle-built replacement in a project set to cost £14.2 million over three years.…

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tpbrisco
6 days ago
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Nothing could go wrong here. Move in, mind your business.
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Vimeo Acquired

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Jamie Lang (Hacker News):

Vimeo, once the internet’s most prestigious stage for independent filmmakers and animators, is being acquired by Milan-based app developer Bending Spoons in a $1.38 billion all-cash deal. The sale, expected to close later this year, will end Vimeo’s turbulent run as a public company.

[…]

Bending Spoons CEO Luca Ferrari promised “ambitious investments” in Vimeo’s future, citing enterprise video services and AI-enabled features. But given the company’s track record — including significant staff cuts and restrictions at Evernote and WeTransfer — many in the creative community are skeptical.

Via Manton Reece:

Says something about Vimeo’s decline that I heard about them being acquired not from the tech news websites that I read all the time, but from Cartoon Brew in my RSS reader[…]

Previously:

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tpbrisco
70 days ago
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Think it was hard to NOT include AI?
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2 public comments
jepler
70 days ago
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pouring one out for a person I know who moved their catalogue from YT to Vimeo to escape awfulness
Earth, Sol system, Western spiral arm
jhamill
70 days ago
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Bending Spoons is acquiring all the early web 2.0 companies that are left. They took ownership of Evernote a year ago. Interesting.
California

ABC News: College Democrats and Republicans send unified messages after Kirk’s death

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Groups try to turn down the temperature after the activist's assassination.

Some college chapters of the Democratic and Republican parties are trying to turn down the temperature on discourse surrounding Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk's assassination, as several groups across the country issued joint statements condemning the attack and calling for non-violence.

One of the first examples came from Rhode Island, where the Rhode Island Young Republicans and Rhode Island Young Democrats issued a rare joint statement on Wednesday evening.

"We may disagree on policy, but we are united in our belief in the value of life, civil discourse, and mutual respect," said Ken Naylor, chairman of the Young Republicans. Anthony Cherry, vice president of the Young Democrats, added that young leaders must "make political nonviolence our pledge," warning that "when our dialogue becomes toxic it has unimaginable consequences."

In a phone interview, Naylor told ABC News that Kirk's death "hit home with a lot of activists" who came of age watching his videos and campus debates. He said he immediately called up the leaders of the Democratic group and they agreed to put out a statement together.

"All of us believe that if you're independent, Republican or Democrat there's no reason for this to be happening. In this country we have the right to express ourselves and nobody should be silenced," he said.

That message soon echoed across the country.

The Ohio College Republican Federation and College Democrats of Ohio released a joint statement on Thursday, rejecting "political violence in all its forms" and calling the killing "unacceptable," writing that "violence undermines the very foundations of our republic" and urging students to "foster a culture where disagreement never escalates to harm."

At The Ohio State University, the OSU College Democrats and OSU College Republicans issued their own joint statement on Wednesday, warning that political violence "erodes trust in our institutions" and "threatens the very foundations of civil discourse." They said college campuses should remain "institutions of education and free speech" and affirmed their commitment to making OSU "a place where students feel safe to express their opinions, regardless of their political affiliation."

The College Democrats at the University of Utah condemned the killing on Wednesday evening and offered condolences to Kirk's family and to the students who witnessed it. Their statement said the tragedy "underscores the need to address the epidemic of gun violence in the U.S." while also affirming the right of all Americans "to engage in civil dialogue without fear of violence."

At Georgetown University, the Georgetown Bipartisan Coalition, Georgetown University College Democrats, and Georgetown University College Republicans Thursday said violent attacks "inject poison into the very heart of political dialogue" and urged Hoyas of all ideologies to "foster an environment of respect" and reject all forms of aggression. They emphasized that "the right to express one's political beliefs without fear for one's personal safety -- particularly on college campuses -- is fundamental to American life and a key component to a healthy, fully functioning democracy."

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tpbrisco
84 days ago
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It's amazing that a bunch of college kids show more temperance and empathy than many grown newscasters. It gives me greater hope for the future
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Windows Power Users Frustrated as Microsoft Forces Automatic App Updates

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Microsoft has removed the ability to disable automatic app updates in the Microsoft Store, according to screenshots from Deskmodder.de. Windows users can now only pause updates for one to five weeks. The Registry tweak that previously allowed users to modify update behavior has been removed. Group Policy editor remains the sole method for creating update exemptions on workstations and enterprise systems, but this tool is unavailable in Windows Home editions. The change is being deployed gradually to all Windows users. Microsoft has not commented on the modification, which affects all apps distributed through the Microsoft Store including both UWP and Win32 applications added in 2024.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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tpbrisco
110 days ago
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"On DOS, deletes are blocked if a file is in use." - most annoying thing ever
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Nvidia, AMD to pay 15% of China chip sale revenue to U.S. government

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Two chips are shown on a laptop computer.

Nvidia and AMD agreed to share 15 per cent of their revenues from chip sales to China with the U.S. government, a U.S. government official has confirmed.

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tpbrisco
118 days ago
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I wonder if this constitutes a first step in nationalization of a private sector business?
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