WASHINGTON —聽Long before Netflix, Hulu, Apple TV and Amazon Prime, and long before DVD players (do you still have one?), there was videotape.
The first consumer version of videotape hit the market 50 years ago this month.
Sony Corporation introduced an open-reel videotape recorder in January 1966 to individual consumers, notes the Census Bureau鈥檚 鈥淧rofile in America鈥 series.聽 And, while the black and white videotape system didn鈥檛 make much of an impression on U.S. consumers, it set the stage for what would be one of Sony鈥檚 biggest-ever consumer hits a decade later.
The Betamax recorder.
It was a time when the top-rated shows included 鈥淎ll in the Family,鈥 鈥淩ich Man, Poor Man,鈥 and 鈥淭he Carol Burnett Show.鈥
鈥淚ntroducing the art of watching television,鈥 says the announcer in a .聽 鈥淭he Sony Betamax lets you record and see what you want and when you want; to summon into your home a world of wonder.鈥
Sony introduced the consumer-friendly Betamax recorder, a suitcase-sized machine that recorded up to two聽hours of video on a cassette tape off of broadcast or cable signals, in 1975. And that ushered in era of the VCR.聽 (That stands for video cassette recorder, millennials.)
It was the beginning of not only letting consumers record shows to play back when they pleased – what we know as 鈥渙n-demand鈥 viewing today, it also gave birth to the billion dollar business of movie rentals. The Blockbuster Video days.
While considered superior in quality to the larger format VHS cassette, Betamax eventually lost out in the market share to VHS.
Believe it or not, in 2016, Betamax still exists.
But not much longer.
.
If you鈥檙e old enough to remember videotapes, videotape rentals and your Blockbuster account, I offer you this blast from the past.聽 鈥淏e kind. Rewind.鈥
