Gigantic VHS videotape hoard of thousands of videos stored in McDonald's boxes being given away for free — Internet Archive looks set to claim the tapes of U.S. news output spanning 2004-09
Do you have a working VHS cassette deck and some spare time for archiving?
If you would like to rehome thousands of old VHS videotapes, there’s an incredible hoard of these nostalgic artifacts from the days of analog TV, stored carefully in McDonald's boxes, being given away for free. However, you’ll need a convincing story, as it already looks like a representative from the Internet Archive is a hot favorite to claim this truckload of tapes and digitize them. Redditor whatdoyouthinkisreal shared images of this gargantuan collection of tapes a few days ago.
Free: Thousands of tapes preserved. 2004~2009 CNN/MSNBC/FOX News recorded at home in Ann Arbor area from r/DataHoarder
The OP notes that the collection of tapes has already shrunk by around 18 boxes.
The general goal of whatdoyouthinkisreal’s giveaway is to “give them to someone who is going to save and digitize the tapes.” Bonus – the donor will get a lot of garage space back.
So, what TV and cinematic gems should the new owner expect to find in this massive collection, recorded at an Ann Arbor area home between 2004 and 2009? Apparently, it is wall-to-wall news coverage from that era, featuring channels like CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News.
That content might be of some interest to someone, we guess. The Redditor suggests that “I think the commercials might be even more valuable than the news, but there is Hurricane Katrina Coverage here too.”
Other notable round-the-clock news coverage events during that time may have included:
- Janet Jackson had a ‘wardrobe malfunction’ at the Super Bowl in 2004
- Two presidential elections, 2004 (Dubya won) and 2008 (Obama won)
- The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
- The 2005 London bombings (7/7)
- Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston divorced in 2005
- The Execution of Saddam Hussein in 2006
- Release of the first iPhone in 2007
- 'Keeping Up with the Kardashians' premiered in 2007
- 2007 U.S. troop 'surge' in Iraq
- The 2008 Beijing Olympics
- The 2008 Financial crisis
- Russia–Georgia war in 2008 (they're still at it)
- Michael Jackson died, and Lady Gaga rose to fame in 2009
- The 2009 Colorado Balloon Boy hoax earned 24/7 coverage
In case anyone finds the McDonald's franchise cardboard carton packaging questionable, the OP explains, “They're in McDonald's food boxes because the woman who recorded these worked at McDonald's at one time.”
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As we mentioned in the intro, any potential suitor for this titanic collection better have a good story. One of the first Redditors to throw their hat in the ring and claim this incredible prize was Jason Scott of the Internet Archive. Many other Redditors upvoted this suggestion, understandably. However, there were a few grumbles about the IA currently sitting on tons and tons of content without getting around to digitizing it and sharing it online.
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Mark Tyson is a news editor at Tom's Hardware. He enjoys covering the full breadth of PC tech; from business and semiconductor design to products approaching the edge of reason.
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Kridian lol She recorded Janet Jackson's boob slip at the 2004 Super Bowl.Reply
I think the consensus was that it was staged. -
ashinms I remember hearing about her years ago. She called out media bs that we're talking about today back in the 80s and started recording everything the news agencies said on VHS. This is a treasure trove.Reply -
TerryLaze ReplyAdmin said:If you would like to rehome thousands of old VHS videotapes, there’s an incredible hoard being given away for free on Reddit.
Gigantic VHS videotape hoard of thousands of videos stored in McDonald's boxes being given away for free — Internet Archive looks set to claim the... : Read moreDo you have a working VHS cassette deck and some spare time for archiving?
Just one VHS player isn't going to last through all them tapes, these are 8hr tapes, from the one crate shown in the pics at least, you are going to need to repair the VHS or use another one at some point. -
bill001g I would be surprised if the tapes are good. I remember when we used magnetic tape reels for computer backups...yes I am that old. They would at some interval bring back the older tapes and run them to end of the tape and the rewind them. There was concern if the tape sat too long the layers would stick to each other. When you looked in the dust trap on the drive after they did a couple hundred tapes you could see a lot stuff. Seems the magnetic coating flakes off over years of time. Hard to say if the data was actually good we never verified it but there where always multiple backup tape copies.Reply -
abufrejoval I remember the nightmare of trying to convert the S-VHC-C recordings of my small kids to something digital well enough to understand how I'd never want to do something like that ever again, unless it had such unique personal value.Reply
Especially since the noise in ordinary VHS even makes digitalization way more difficult than it should be, for the resolution it actually recorded: S-VHS was better, still nowhere close to what digital video did soon after.
It's one of the few use cases, where AI may actually seem useful, only to invent visual details that have little to do with facts.
In Europe many state-owned broadcasters did their own digitalization, perhaps required by law. I'd rather be able to tap into those than anything self-recorded.
No idea what the situation is or obligations are in the US: that could become a significant issue in a few decades, when print is completely gone and collective memory 100% political.