Matrix Video Duplication Corporation: Difference between revisions
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== List of Customers ==
* 3-G Home Video (1992-1993) (some tapes)
* Cinderella Distributors
* Disneyland (1995-1996)
* Edde Entertainment (19??-19??) (some tapes)
* ESPN Home Video (Sports Blooper Awards, College Hoop Bloops, and College Football Funnies)
* Feature Films for Families (1993-19??) (some tapes)
* Focus on the Family (1992-1993) (seen on Adventures in Odyssey tapes)
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* Goldstar Video (1992-1993)
** The Little Red Schoolhouse (1993)
* Hallmark Home Entertainment
* Leucadia Family Films
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* Polynesian Cultural Center (????-19??) (some tapes)
* Showtime Entertainment
* Streamline Pictures (early copies of Akira Production Report and Akira)
* Timeless Video
== How to Tell ==
*
* Numerous tapes from this duplicator have a record tab intact.
*
*
* Goldstar Video tapes by this duplicator under the Goldrix Entertainment label said
▲File:Matrix Video Duplication Corporation.png|The company's logo
== Locations ==
* Los Angeles, California
==Notes==
* Feature Films for Families referred to the company as simply '''Matrix Video''' on the labels of tapes duplicated by the company.
* In 1992, a few tapes returned by Cinderella Distributors were reused by The Video Company in a 32,500-unit production run of ''The Best Christmas Pageant Ever'' for Scholastic. One such tape was shown by a Salt Lake City classroom a few days before Christmas that year; due to TVC forgetting to erase the originally recorded pornographic material, scandal ensued and the producers of the special sued both TVC and Matrix over the affair.<ref>[https://law.justia.com/cases/california/court-of-appeal/4th/64/1306.html Schaefer/Karpf Productions v. CNA Ins. Companies (1998)]</ref>
== References ==
[[Category:Duplicators]]
[[Category:Duplicators founded in 1987]]
[[Category:Duplicators closed in 1996]]
[[Category:Duplicators from California]]
[[Category:S-VHS duplicators]]
[[Category:Sony Sprinter customers]]
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Revision as of 05:50, 28 February 2024
![](http://static.miraheze.org/homevideowiki/4/4b/Matrix_Video_Duplication_Corporation.jpg)
List of Customers
- 3-G Home Video (1992-1993) (some tapes)
- Cinderella Distributors
- Disneyland (1995-1996)
- Edde Entertainment (19??-19??) (some tapes)
- ESPN Home Video (Sports Blooper Awards, College Hoop Bloops, and College Football Funnies)
- Feature Films for Families (1993-19??) (some tapes)
- Focus on the Family (1992-1993) (seen on Adventures in Odyssey tapes)
- Front Row Entertainment
- Goldstar Video (1992-1993)
- The Little Red Schoolhouse (1993)
- Goldrix Entertainment (1993) (possibly a joint venture for certain tapes duplicated at this company)
- Hallmark Home Entertainment
- Leucadia Family Films
- Lightyear Entertainment
- Pamplin Entertainment
- Polynesian Cultural Center (????-19??) (some tapes)
- Showtime Entertainment
- Streamline Pictures (early copies of Akira Production Report and Akira)
- Timeless Video
How to Tell
- Tapes from this duplicator do not have any form of printing on the cassette, nor do they have anything in the vertical blanking interval.
- Numerous tapes from this duplicator have a record tab intact.
- Most tapes from this duplicator have the static roll of death at the end, and sometimes at the beginning. However, a few tapes from this duplicator may not have the static roll of death at all.
- Occasionally, a few tapes from this duplicator had some extra black screen following the blank space at the end.
- Goldstar Video tapes by this duplicator under the Goldrix Entertainment label said “MTX” in the top left corner of the label.
Locations
- Los Angeles, California
Notes
- Feature Films for Families referred to the company as simply Matrix Video on the labels of tapes duplicated by the company.
- In 1992, a few tapes returned by Cinderella Distributors were reused by The Video Company in a 32,500-unit production run of The Best Christmas Pageant Ever for Scholastic. One such tape was shown by a Salt Lake City classroom a few days before Christmas that year; due to TVC forgetting to erase the originally recorded pornographic material, scandal ensued and the producers of the special sued both TVC and Matrix over the affair.[1]