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Montage Ends the VHS: Difference between revisions

rephrased the most recent edit to be much less "clunky"
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(rephrased the most recent edit to be much less "clunky")
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{{quote|''Stay tuned to the end of our show for more great coming attractions!''|'''Marc Eliot''', ''[[Disney|Walt Disney Home Video]]}}
 
One of the most common things for home video companies to do in the 1970s and 1980s was to add a series of movie trailers, intros, or just a compilation preview promoting their VHSother tapes or Betamaxvideotapes, at the end of a VHS tape or a Betamax tape of theirs, mainly after athe moviecontent (orthat inthe somecustomer cases,actually televisionpaid episode)for is over. This was because a VHS tape and a Betamax tape in SP mode had room for two hours' of material; most movies clock in at around 90 minutes, while four half-hour or two one-hour TV episodes, minus commercials, last about the same amount of time.
 
When DVDs replaced videotapes in the home market, this was replaced with "bonus content" menus.
 
Related to [[The Stinger]].
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