Talk:Deluxe Digital Studios: Difference between revisions

From Home Video
Content added Content deleted
Line 3: Line 3:


[[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:4000:A8C0:F8F9:E963:D17A:BB1C|2601:4C4:4000:A8C0:F8F9:E963:D17A:BB1C]] 23:08, 11 April 2024 (UTC)
[[Special:Contributions/2601:4C4:4000:A8C0:F8F9:E963:D17A:BB1C|2601:4C4:4000:A8C0:F8F9:E963:D17A:BB1C]] 23:08, 11 April 2024 (UTC)

== Latest and Earliest Known Uses of VBI Code Prefixes ==

In mid-1998, what was the latest known use of the "RVSA" VBI codes and the earliest known use of the "DELUXE" VBI codes?

[[Special:Contributions/69.85.235.45|69.85.235.45]] 16:52, 10 May 2024 (UTC)

Revision as of 16:52, 10 May 2024

Label/Distributor Letter Codes

So even though Rank Video Services America was renamed Deluxe Video Services in mid-1998 (which resulted in their letter code being changed from "RVS" to "DLX"), some labels/distributors such as Paramount and probably Columbia TriStar continued to use their own letter codes until sometime in 1999 (Paramount's letter code was PAR, Columbia TriStar's letter code was CTV). I wonder when in 1999 that label/distributor letter codes were phased out in favor of the "DLX" code. For example, my copy of "Rugrats: Angelica Knows Best" (a Nickelodeon Video/Paramount release) was pressed during the 4th week of 1999 (PAR 904 instead of DLX 904), while my copy of "It's Christmastime Again, Charlie Brown" (a Peanuts Home Video/Paramount release) was pressed during the 37th week of 1999 (DLX 937).

2601:4C4:4000:A8C0:F8F9:E963:D17A:BB1C 23:08, 11 April 2024 (UTC)

Latest and Earliest Known Uses of VBI Code Prefixes

In mid-1998, what was the latest known use of the "RVSA" VBI codes and the earliest known use of the "DELUXE" VBI codes?

69.85.235.45 16:52, 10 May 2024 (UTC)