RCA Videodisc Demo- Bring The Magic Home

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  • čas přidán 23. 03. 2007
  • This is from the first in-store demo disc for the RCA SelectaVision CED VideoDisc player, which went on the market in March 1981. The disc repeats this segment several times over. During the "Lady Sings the Blues" clip you can see the CED format's trademark skipping- almost every disc does this. The second half of this clip shows the first player in action. The later players had motorized disc loading.
    I've had this posted on some of the better video sites but decided to post it here too. Most of the movie clips are copyrighted by Paramount Pictures, who I thank in advance for not pulling this. Paramount was one of the biggest supporters of the format from the get-go, strangely when DVD came out they waited more than a year to put out anything on that format.
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Komentáře • 80

  • @DarrinBentley
    @DarrinBentley Před rokem +4

    I had one of these when I was 13! I was a video snob and this destroyed VHS resolution wise. Then, Laserdisc started catching on and being a superior format, quickly surpassed the CED.
    I remember when they were dumping titles for $3 each, I bought about 200 of them!
    The CED holds a special place in my heart.

  • @Techraingeek
    @Techraingeek Před 13 lety +8

    ♪ Bring The Magic Home With RCA! ♪

  • @DrLove0378
    @DrLove0378 Před 16 lety +5

    I also own that particular player, the SFT-100-W. It's pretty cool. I experience the skipping, too -- as intelligent as the sleeve design was, dust seems to get in there anyway. Since there's about 9,541 grooves per inch, the skipping effect is more pronounced than a regular phono record. Playing over that section a few times usually helps dislodge the dust, though.
    What amazes me, though, is how the player *still works* 26 years later...

    • @Watcher3223
      @Watcher3223 Před 3 lety +1

      _"as intelligent as the sleeve design was, dust seems to get in there anyway"_
      The disc sleeve was less about preventing dust and more about keeping people from handling the disc itself.
      During prototype testing of discs without sleeves, the disc itself was to be handled by the user. However, it was found that, no matter how the disc was designed to be easy to handle without touching the signal surface, someone always seemed to manage to touch it anyway, leading to signal degradation at the point where the touch occurred.

  • @naughtyringtail2002
    @naughtyringtail2002 Před 14 lety +4

    I just bought a CED player at Goodwill yesterday for $5.99, we had to tinker with it a little to get it working but now it works great!! Also I thought it was hilarious Goodwill had it marked as a VCR, they probably had no idea what this thing was.

  • @MrJthomas70
    @MrJthomas70 Před rokem +1

    flashbacks of walking into Hecht's Company television center and seeing this play in rotation on the demo television.

  • @lovemylogics
    @lovemylogics Před 14 lety +4

    @Watcher3223 The stylus doesn't even have to be physically touching the disc for the electrode to pick up capacitance variations. In fact (and amazingly) towards the end, RCA was working on a pick-up method that kept the stylus a few microns above the disc, eliminating all physical contact, and thus wear, of the CED disc. At the same time JVC was working on a consumer version of laser playback for their VHD discs. They all wanted to get rid of the stylus for so-called "high-end" players.

  • @RkivUnderground
    @RkivUnderground Před 13 lety +1

    Lady Sings the Blues. Looks sweet!

  • @themoviedealers
    @themoviedealers Před 8 lety +7

    I like that they were calling it "a record."

    • @mspysu79
      @mspysu79 Před 7 lety +3

      Well technically it is, A CED is a videodisc with grooves and played with a stylus.

    • @scotthayes4135
      @scotthayes4135 Před 3 lety

      It works just like a record.

    • @TheGlitchyMario
      @TheGlitchyMario Před 5 měsíci +1

      It was

    • @sazanlip
      @sazanlip Před 3 měsíci +2

      Just like a vinyl and pre-recorded CDs/DVDs/Blu-Rays, these were stamped out at the factory, so calling these "records" makes perfect sense.

  • @wilkes85
    @wilkes85 Před 16 lety

    Holy crap!!! i never even imagined that anything like that would exist!!! That's awesome!!! I want one!! too bad they went obsolete so quickly.

  • @DrLove0378
    @DrLove0378 Před 16 lety +1

    I just bought one of these demo discs on eBay! ;)

    • @pbjracing14yearsago49
      @pbjracing14yearsago49 Před 3 lety

      Nice! I bought "the bird man of alcatraz" from a thrift store the other day

  • @CassetteMaster
    @CassetteMaster Před 17 lety

    AWESOME!

  • @scotthayes4135
    @scotthayes4135 Před 3 lety

    I remember where these were popular, now they're just as old school as 8 track tapes.

  • @themovietheatre
    @themovietheatre Před 16 lety

    This was running all the time in Eaton's and Simpsons in Downtown Montréal. They were very poor seller in Montreal since they lacked French tracks unlike DVD's of today.

  • @drbpony
    @drbpony Před 15 lety

    If you've ever taken one of these machines apart, you'll notice a bar with a rubber tip that lifts up the disc when it is ejected. Over time, the rubber could wear out, crumble, or go missing and there would be nothing but a piece of metal scratching the disc, which is probably why so many of them skip.
    If you take a disc out of the sleeve, you can see the vertical markings from that bar lifting the disc up.
    Oh, and if you get a fingerprint on the disc, kiss that video segment goodbye.

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder Před 5 lety

      The bar this poster is talking about is on the last-generation players, with motorized loading. The earlier ones like the player shown here raise the turntable up and down.

  • @skystarless
    @skystarless Před 16 lety +1

    Ah, that skipping brings back memories. Haha! My dad bought one of these players sometime in '83 or '84, and we used it until the early 90s. He got rid of it a few years ago because he said it was "broken"-- I bet anything that it just needed a new belt or stylus. Sigh.

  • @eljheids1115
    @eljheids1115 Před 10 lety

    CEDs are now in the Philippines!
    Dyna Products, Inc. is the CED manufacturer in the Philippines, known as RCA in the Philippines!

  • @kargaroc386
    @kargaroc386 Před 15 lety +1

    a CED was basically a flux capacitor.

  • @DiabloXL69
    @DiabloXL69 Před 3 lety

    3:26 He is playing the ‘Bring the magic home’ song on his banjo

  • @TheMediaHoarder
    @TheMediaHoarder Před 13 lety

    @boface31 That's the needle skipping on the disc! Just about every disc does this during playback at one point or another- discs that had never been played were usually worse on their first play. Though I don't recall angry riots resulting from this, it's probably the biggest reason it didn't last on the market too long!

  • @Alpha8713
    @Alpha8713 Před 5 lety

    Wow--it has a pause feature. On every player, no less!

  • @TheMediaHoarder
    @TheMediaHoarder Před 15 lety +1

    The problem was this WASN'T a solid product. I'll certainly give the players some credit for still working after more than 25 years without any major maintenance, but skipping was unavoidable on it. This never should have been put on the market until they could fix that problem once and for all, though by 1981 they were already several years later than they had wanted. I cherish my collection greatly but this deserves its place in history as the 8-track of video.

  • @TheMediaHoarder
    @TheMediaHoarder Před 15 lety

    Snow White never came out on this format, in fact it never came out on any video format until 1993. There were just a handful of boxed CED sets- the miniseries Jesus of Nazareth on 4 discs in a box, and a couple operas- the interactive games that came later came in thin boxes with instruction cards too.

  • @nomadcowatbk
    @nomadcowatbk Před 13 lety

    Paramount was big Circuit City divx support supporter

  • @eljheids1115
    @eljheids1115 Před 9 lety

    DYNA RECORDS PHILIPPINES, THE LEADER IN MUSIC AND CED VIDEODISC ENTERTAINMENT!!!

  • @WOSArchives
    @WOSArchives Před 11 lety

    Nice find. My Goodwill does not have that stuff.

  • @AlextheMLAATRfan
    @AlextheMLAATRfan Před 8 měsíci

    They could’ve done this to LaserDiscs, DVDs, and Blu-Rays as well

  • @Jal8919536
    @Jal8919536 Před 16 lety

    I love the period music, especially the part at 5:15.

  • @OfficialSoundtracker
    @OfficialSoundtracker Před 12 lety +1

    at 0:42, it says "uninterrupted" but thats bull. didnt you have to flip the disc over at the end of side 1???

  • @lovemylogics
    @lovemylogics Před 14 lety

    @eyeh8nbc You are right, there was no future in the CED format and RCA knew it. Unlike LD, the CED format was at its technological limits with no possibility of improving picture quality, adding digital sound, etc, improvements that LD (and tape formats) did with ease. JVC added digital sound to VHD, extended chroma/luma resolution, added 3D and PC control, etc... all things CED could never do because of the 450 RPM speed that caused limited available disc bandwidth.

  • @kawininja81
    @kawininja81 Před 15 lety

    oh yeah, the poor man's vcr (minus the recording)

  • @TheMediaHoarder
    @TheMediaHoarder Před 15 lety

    You had to flip over laserdiscs on most players too- auto-reverse players didn't come along til about 1988, though if CED had lasted til then they probably would've had them too.
    When DVD was being developed Blockbuster wanted them to come in caddies to prevent damage, but the companies said no. I've checked out DVDs from the library and Redbox, some have gone through unspeakable abuse.

  • @WOSArchives
    @WOSArchives Před 11 lety +1

    At the time VHS and Betamax were already on the market. That and other problems killed the format.

  • @lovemylogics
    @lovemylogics Před 14 lety

    @eyeh8nbc RCA was getting the skipping problem under control and the SJT and SKT series of players, especially the interactive player, rarely skipped on discs that weren't otherwise defective. RCA had a number of new circuits in the works that could sense instantly a forward or back skip and get the stylus back on track before the disc had even made a complete rotation - usually within 2 fields.

  • @DiabloXL69
    @DiabloXL69 Před 3 lety +1

    2:58 how do they get slimline tv screen in 1980

  • @VideyoJunkei
    @VideyoJunkei Před 16 lety

    Pause blanks the screen-notice that is NOT shown! later players could pause with 3 frames playing over and over-a strobe or stutter pause. I disconnected the anti-skip as a test on my player, and it does get 'stuck' looping a few frames very fast!

  • @Satlam
    @Satlam Před 12 lety

    @ConfusedSponge That would probably ruin the disc, if you got it out of the caddy. The groove is supposedly 1/37th the width of a normal record groove, so it would skip right over. Furthermore, even if you did have a needle that small, the signal on a CED was read in a different manner, and would likely not sound like much at all on a record player.

  • @yrly59e
    @yrly59e Před 12 lety

    My friend bought one at a thrift the other day. I tried to tell him, it looks like badly recorded VHS. Laserdisc picture quality at the time wasn't much better though, it didn't start to get better until the late 80s.

  • @elineff5941
    @elineff5941 Před 10 lety

    Thank God Technology Has Changed

    • @luisreyes1963
      @luisreyes1963 Před 8 lety

      +Eli Neff Pity the movies haven't gotten better.

  • @eljheids1115
    @eljheids1115 Před 9 lety

    DYNA VIDEODISCS
    Copyright 1986 Dyna Products, Inc.
    "DYNA," "CED," "SelectaVision," the CED logo and devices are trademarks of Dyna Products, Inc.
    Philippines

    • @jesuszamora6949
      @jesuszamora6949 Před 8 lety

      +Joshua Sarmiento I imagine RCA dumped the tech after discontinuing it in 1986.
      Wonder how long Dyna put out discs after that, or if it ever became a hit in the Phillipines.

  • @michaelcarterclassic
    @michaelcarterclassic Před 10 lety

    My disc for the rca videodisc player starts to prepeat playback many times and won't go to the end of every side of on disc dose it mean it's the end of the side of disc or it won't show the end of side sign at end of video disc side

  • @eljheids1115
    @eljheids1115 Před 9 lety +1

    4:27 - WALT DISNEY'S "20,000 LEAGUES UNDER THE SEA" FEBRUARY 1988 DYNA MONO CED

  • @chameleonday
    @chameleonday Před 16 lety

    Ironic that the demo disc skips at 1:45!

  • @RobbieStrike
    @RobbieStrike Před 17 lety

    lol that clip must of been from a ced disk it skips at about 1:47 in

  • @TheMediaHoarder
    @TheMediaHoarder Před 12 lety

    Yeah, but they meant no commercials.

  • @kargaroc386
    @kargaroc386 Před 2 lety

    this comment section has both the crazies and the normal folks

  • @meowza3k
    @meowza3k Před 16 lety

    is this a laserdisc?
    what were the magnetic discs called? they were like a giant floppy disk with a sliding cover that would reveal the disc.

    • @TheVideoLover3
      @TheVideoLover3 Před 2 lety

      The CED discs were played with a stylus, not a laser.

  • @wswfootball19
    @wswfootball19 Před 16 lety +1

    i don't know what side 1 is for and where the fbi warnings and previews and hv logos

  • @Jal8919536
    @Jal8919536 Před 16 lety

    Is there a 'stop' button so you can stop anytime?

  • @drews1998
    @drews1998 Před 14 lety

    i THOUGHT CED IIS THE FORMAT THAT WASN'T SUPPOSED TO SKIP

    • @randykoger27
      @randykoger27 Před 4 lety

      Drew Nachreiner that was never a promise by RCA or any individual. No idea where you got that notion.

  • @gregory06
    @gregory06 Před 14 lety

    1:08 HUMAN DANCE IN World of warcraft

  • @Dr_Xyzt
    @Dr_Xyzt Před 15 lety

    I must have the Godfather on this. "is that a DVD?" Uh, no!

  • @OfficialSoundtracker
    @OfficialSoundtracker Před 12 lety

    Oh... It was a good invention, though.

  • @DiabloXL69
    @DiabloXL69 Před 3 lety +1

    1:47 Glitching was obviously a low point in CED.
    So why the f**k did RCA keep it in their 6 minute “masterpiece”

    • @DrLove0378
      @DrLove0378 Před 3 lety +1

      H W I’m sure that wouldn’t have happened with a brand-new demo disc back in 1981... until they got played to death in a retail setting, anyway. The disc was decades old by the time this video was captured from it.

    • @DiabloXL69
      @DiabloXL69 Před 3 lety +2

      Jason Lovelady thanks. BTW the video was made in 1980

  • @MrROTD
    @MrROTD Před 12 lety

    why didnt this catch on? too expensive? it seems pretty frikken cool for back than

    • @PixarMan2001
      @PixarMan2001 Před 5 lety +1

      A better competing product existed 3 years before that. It was called LaserDisc.

  • @Chub4ChubsRule
    @Chub4ChubsRule Před 17 lety

    I had one of these machines for a while and the bitch skipped like hell!

  • @jugglingembalmer
    @jugglingembalmer Před 14 lety

    Why?? Just flat out why? You couldn't record on them and you had to flip them over midway through the film. Why?

  • @cobolsaurus
    @cobolsaurus Před 15 lety

    they used a stylus ----- no laser

  • @lovemylogics
    @lovemylogics Před 14 lety

    @germ317 Send me a message if you're still on CZcams - I'd love to talk to you about your fathers work on the CED VideoDisc format.

  • @mgabrysSF
    @mgabrysSF Před 16 lety

    Nah - the crap they put over the Rolling Stones to make them sound like " the musikadorkus generic blandage band" is far superior.

  • @harrysboy
    @harrysboy Před 14 lety

    Funny to see what was considered a great film back in the early 80's, take casablanca and the godfather out of this ad and your felt with a lot of dated films

  • @ANATOLIACHTZEIN
    @ANATOLIACHTZEIN Před 12 lety

    It was and still is just blurry videotaped analog signal encoded onto a disc - PHYSICALLY (lol) - not digitally & they SKIP LIKE HELL unmercifully from the lowest device to the most expensive ones. UGGGH I wish I had never bought one.

  • @WeRateU
    @WeRateU Před 14 lety

    Corporate America is getting greedier and produces really bad quality. General Electric for example is really taking advantage of their customers. Recently, I sold homes in a tract of 280 homes and appliances were by GE. Every home owner had problems with one or more of their home appliance. The warranties had ran out in some cases and problems kept repeating. So GE was making money from their customers over and over on new appliances. GE's customer service is one of the worst as well.

  • @mgabrysSF
    @mgabrysSF Před 13 lety

    God that public-domain music thrown over the movies makes me want to projectile vomit. The rolling stones was particularly horrible.