[quote name=\'Adam Nedeff\' post=\'118245\' date=\'May 11 2006, 07:59 PM\']
One more thing and then I'll shut up. Given that a lot of people come around here probably are looking for tape trades or at least help getting started, I make a motion to archive this thread after everybody's given their two cents. Somebody might appreciate it down the road.[/quote]
Consider it done. Now, as long as we're telling stories...
Back in the age of dinosaurs (or at least before GSN), there was Shokus Video, and maybe one or two other sources for a tiny sampling of old game shows on video. In the earliest days of the Usenet group, I made a dear friend (let's leave proper names out of this, but he knows who he is) who happily gave me copies of maybe a dozen shows from the seventies in exchange for some extra TV Guides I had lying around. Those shows are in just about everybody's collections today, but at the time, before GSN and before widespread tape trading, seeing these games from my childhood that I thought I'd never see again was almost enough to make me weep.
I've never had the desire to own eleventy-billion episodes of Press Your Luck, or even of the civilian shows Cullen hosted, but I'm glad you guys out there are doing it so I can send people your way when they're looking for a particular show. In the meantime, my collection today is of a decent enough size that I've been able to do some good with it. When I can help a fellow whose grandfather appeared on IGAS as a Bill Cullen lookalike, it's a great feeling. I've also been fortunate to watch shows that aren't in the "circuit", from museums and from private collectors who plan to stay private.
As for transferring stuff from VHS to DVD, that's actually part of my "real life" job, but ironically, I've been very slow to do that with my own collection. I've done a lot of the Cullen stuff, of course, but usually I wait until I make a trade with someone else (which I do very rarely anymore) to put something on DVD. I still have several hundred very well-organized VHS tapes (library training pays off) in a single bookcase, where they'll probably stay for a good long time.