As VHS tapes become a thing of the past, UC Irvine’s Lucas Hilderbrand doesn’t want us to forget the significant impact of analog media on American culture.
In a new book, the film & media studies assistant professor details how video technology transformed home entertainment by allowing consumers to view movies and TV programs at their leisure and redefined government interpretation of copyright laws.
“VHS held an important role in our society for three decades – from leading the home-video revolution to igniting format wars and legal battles over copyright-protected material,” says Hilderbrand, author of Inherent Vice: Bootleg Histories of Videotape and Copyright.
“Knowing the history of analog helps us understand where we are today,” he says. “As technology shifts toward YouTube and other digital media, similar issues are occurring – such as the entertainment industry and government clamping down on piracy.”
Hilderbrand points to four key years in VHS’s rise and fall:
Hilderbrand believes the VHS format remains valuable: “Entertainment and electronics industries are trying to control circulation and duplication of their content. Analog allows you to legally use content in ways that digital media often do not.
“There is still a place for videotape.”
— Jason Mednick, University Communications