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Content provided by Heather Jolley and Nicole Barr, Heather Jolley, and Nicole Barr. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Heather Jolley and Nicole Barr, Heather Jolley, and Nicole Barr or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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Please Be Kind, Rewind

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Manage episode 515294754 series 3608912
Content provided by Heather Jolley and Nicole Barr, Heather Jolley, and Nicole Barr. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Heather Jolley and Nicole Barr, Heather Jolley, and Nicole Barr or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Pop the tape, hear that whirr, and step back into the glow of a Friday night video run. We unpack the magic of VHS-era rituals—debating picks under fluorescent lights, scanning cover art for clues, trusting the clerk’s scribbled staff picks—and then follow the trail that turned neighborhood browsing into a streaming scroll. From VCRs and the Betamax vs VHS showdown to rapid rewinders, tape splicing, and late fees, we map how home viewing became a social ritual as much as a technology shift.
Then we zoom out and tell the Blockbuster story like a rollercoaster: the scale, the data, the guaranteed new releases, and the clean family branding that pushed mom-and-pop shops aside. It’s a masterclass in expansion… until the format flips. DVDs streamlined shipping, Netflix removed late fees, and streaming erased the last mile. We revisit the fateful moment Blockbuster laughed off a $50 million Netflix acquisition, why Total Access arrived too late, and how the 2008 downturn turned leases and late-fee dependence into liabilities. By the time the dust settled, bankruptcy had closed most doors, leaving one outpost in Bend, Oregon, as a living postcard from the browsing era.
Between personal counter stories, awkward back-room chores, and genre love letters to Ghostbusters, Fright Night, and Ferris Bueller, we ask what we really lost when aisles vanished: the serendipity of discovery, the talk with a neighbor, the feel of a night out that started with a plastic case. Streaming gave us access and convenience; the old stores gave us ceremony and community. We think there’s room to keep both spirits alive.
Enjoy the nostalgia, learn the business pivots, and share your rental-era memory: the title you chased, the cover that tricked you, the late fee that still stings. If this took you back, follow, rate, and share the show—and tell a friend who always grabbed the last copy before you did.

Send us an email

Support the show

#genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J

https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Cold Open And Netflix Show Rants (00:00:00)

2. True Crime And Serial Killer Docs (00:03:10)

3. SNL Memories And Pop Culture Tangents (00:07:10)

4. Sponsor Read And Listener CTA (00:10:37)

5. Announcing The VHS Rentals Topic (00:11:19)

6. VCRs, VHS Vs Betamax, And Home Recording (00:12:04)

7. Video Stores As Community Hubs (00:16:23)

8. Working The Counter And The Curtain (00:20:05)

9. Genres We Rented And Loved (00:23:52)

10. Tape Defects, Splicing, And Store Tech (00:28:35)

11. Sponsor Read And Music Tangent (00:31:29)

12. Chains Take Over: Enter Blockbuster (00:32:15)

13. Blockbuster’s Business Model And Expansion (00:35:00)

14. Diary Segment: 1984 Slumber Party (00:41:30)

15. Chicken Pox, Shingles, And 90s Parenting (00:46:30)

16. Blockbuster’s Global Growth And Acquisitions (00:49:00)

17. Early Trouble: DVDs, Internet, And Netflix (00:56:00)

18. The $50M Netflix Pitch Rejected (01:01:10)

19. Total Access, The Crash, And Bankruptcy (01:04:30)

20. The Last Store In Bend And What We Lost (01:09:00)

21. Tech Leaps, Timelines, And Pac-Man Theory (01:12:00)

22. Closing Gratitude And CTAs (01:21:30)

56 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 515294754 series 3608912
Content provided by Heather Jolley and Nicole Barr, Heather Jolley, and Nicole Barr. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Heather Jolley and Nicole Barr, Heather Jolley, and Nicole Barr or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Pop the tape, hear that whirr, and step back into the glow of a Friday night video run. We unpack the magic of VHS-era rituals—debating picks under fluorescent lights, scanning cover art for clues, trusting the clerk’s scribbled staff picks—and then follow the trail that turned neighborhood browsing into a streaming scroll. From VCRs and the Betamax vs VHS showdown to rapid rewinders, tape splicing, and late fees, we map how home viewing became a social ritual as much as a technology shift.
Then we zoom out and tell the Blockbuster story like a rollercoaster: the scale, the data, the guaranteed new releases, and the clean family branding that pushed mom-and-pop shops aside. It’s a masterclass in expansion… until the format flips. DVDs streamlined shipping, Netflix removed late fees, and streaming erased the last mile. We revisit the fateful moment Blockbuster laughed off a $50 million Netflix acquisition, why Total Access arrived too late, and how the 2008 downturn turned leases and late-fee dependence into liabilities. By the time the dust settled, bankruptcy had closed most doors, leaving one outpost in Bend, Oregon, as a living postcard from the browsing era.
Between personal counter stories, awkward back-room chores, and genre love letters to Ghostbusters, Fright Night, and Ferris Bueller, we ask what we really lost when aisles vanished: the serendipity of discovery, the talk with a neighbor, the feel of a night out that started with a plastic case. Streaming gave us access and convenience; the old stores gave us ceremony and community. We think there’s room to keep both spirits alive.
Enjoy the nostalgia, learn the business pivots, and share your rental-era memory: the title you chased, the cover that tricked you, the late fee that still stings. If this took you back, follow, rate, and share the show—and tell a friend who always grabbed the last copy before you did.

Send us an email

Support the show

#genx #80s #90s https://youtube.com/@likewhateverpod?si=ChGIAEDqb7H2AN0J

https://www.tiktok.com/@likewhateverpod?_t=ZT-8v3hQFb73Wg&_r=1

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Cold Open And Netflix Show Rants (00:00:00)

2. True Crime And Serial Killer Docs (00:03:10)

3. SNL Memories And Pop Culture Tangents (00:07:10)

4. Sponsor Read And Listener CTA (00:10:37)

5. Announcing The VHS Rentals Topic (00:11:19)

6. VCRs, VHS Vs Betamax, And Home Recording (00:12:04)

7. Video Stores As Community Hubs (00:16:23)

8. Working The Counter And The Curtain (00:20:05)

9. Genres We Rented And Loved (00:23:52)

10. Tape Defects, Splicing, And Store Tech (00:28:35)

11. Sponsor Read And Music Tangent (00:31:29)

12. Chains Take Over: Enter Blockbuster (00:32:15)

13. Blockbuster’s Business Model And Expansion (00:35:00)

14. Diary Segment: 1984 Slumber Party (00:41:30)

15. Chicken Pox, Shingles, And 90s Parenting (00:46:30)

16. Blockbuster’s Global Growth And Acquisitions (00:49:00)

17. Early Trouble: DVDs, Internet, And Netflix (00:56:00)

18. The $50M Netflix Pitch Rejected (01:01:10)

19. Total Access, The Crash, And Bankruptcy (01:04:30)

20. The Last Store In Bend And What We Lost (01:09:00)

21. Tech Leaps, Timelines, And Pac-Man Theory (01:12:00)

22. Closing Gratitude And CTAs (01:21:30)

56 episodes

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