Those were the days of my childhood. We did not have a VCP player. What we had was a Black and White 14" Dyanora TV that was just good enough to see the daily Doordarshan serials. No Cable TV still. Those who had the VCP in our locality were richest, at least in my eyes. We used to throng to their houses to catch the latest movies (at least 2 months old).My favorite used to be the Indiana jones series, Jurassic Park, Robocop etc. Their houses were like theatres for us. We just waited for the next video cassette to be brought by them. It was not just the children but also the elders who would gather. For me, all this amounted to a festive like atmosphere.
Then it was the time of cable TV. The traditional cable TV operators (unlike today’s operators) used to broadcast 2 movies every day. If one movie came in the afternoon then the other one was at night. Our Muslim neighbors had a huge magnifying glass which would make a 14" screen of a TV look like a 32" screen. It had become a sort of a ritual visiting their homes at all occasions. The cable TV had become a means of uniting people from different religions. It had helped us in making many as our family friends.
The mid 90s marked the existence of Star TV which was an instant rage. This is when we upgraded our TV to a color 20" BPL along with the Star TV connection. Our comforts of home had brought everything within our reach. The gap between people that were bridged by VCP and the traditional Cable TV was broken at once. Almost every home had upgraded to Star TV and hence the need to go elsewhere was not required. The traditional Cable TV metamorphosed into broadcasting several channels apart from the STAR TV instead of movies. Even the brick like black colored video cassettes had slimmed into spherical CDs and DVDs. The shops that rented out VCDs morphed into renting CDs and DVDs. Since then it has not changed for a while.
Of late I am sensing seeds of change again. My locality used to be a hub for several CD shops. Almost every weekend I used to bring several latest movie CDs so that our family could enjoy sitting together without the nuisance of any advertisements. Now all those shops have either closed or shifted gears to some other chain of stores. Only one or two remain. Even those have either rented out half of its space to accommodate a sweet shop or on the edge of closing it. That’s clearly is a sign of extinction.
Probably the decline started with the advent of Internet and other data transferring technologies like Blue Tooth. Though used sporadically in its initial days, now Internet is slowly becoming as common as Cable connections - Even the Net cafes might be out of vogue very soon -. Almost all the latest movies can be caught in one website or the other. The competition of the various channels also has not done any good to the future of CD shops. Within weeks of release some or the other channel would broadcast a latest movie.
For better or for worse, One Technology has either given birth to a new technology or gobbled up another Technology. All we can do is only use the latest till it gets older and get used to using another till it leads to a new one. Its never good to get stuck with one Technology as thats when we as a generation will get outdated.
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