Word: videos
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...hype. No true follower is about to waste time reading now the tips within will help "understand the intimate nature of Pac-Man "and" use your own individual talents to design your personal Pac-Man strategy for maximum point potential." If you needed to be told about the "magnificent video game...one of the most ingenious thoroughly enjoyable games ever introduced to any public anywhere. "you probably wouldn't have gotten this...
...There will be competitors, but not for quite a while, say the experts, because the camera's complexity and the intricacy of its lens make it difficult to manufacture. The Disc should come in handy, too, in Kodak's battle against such alternative picture-taking methods as video cameras and Sony's filmless electronic-imaging technology. Though Kodak has no production plans now, the Disc can easily be adapted to show, say, slides over a television...
...response: Shannon Tweed, the November 1981 Playboy centerfold, inviting viewers to join her in Hugh Hefner's new electronic rabbit warren. In partnership with Escapade, a cable programmer that bills itself as an "adult entertainment service," Playboy last month launched the first in a series of one-hour video magazines into 200,000 homes. "The cable market is similar to the opportunities the magazine had in the 1950s," says Hefner. "This is where home entertainment is going. It's a core interest...
...first video incarnation of Playboy was, Hefner says, intended as "a sampier-the show is still evolving." In defiance of all McLuhanish precepts, it is a literal video transposition of printed material. All that seemed to be jettisoned from the first show were the subscription card and "Little Annie Fannie." Playboy maybe, as Hefner says, "a very visual magazine," but a new medium changes the visuals and demands alterations in format. TV Playboy is sticking close to home...
Bottom-line types beef about everything from home recording and sales of blank tape cassettes to the boom in home video games and the counterfeiting of albums. Jules Yarnell, special counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America, estimates that companies lose $800 million every year through counterfeiting, piracy and bootlegging. Walter Yetnikoff, president of CBS Records Group, figures the industry loses 20% of its revenue just from home taping. Jack Reinstein, treasurer of Electra/Asylum/ Nonesuch Records, calculates 400 million albums were taped off the air in 1980 alone, "without any compensation to the artist, the songwriters and publishers...