OT, but why would the TV industry standardize on Beta when the rest of the world overwhelmingly went with VHS? To keep 'unauthorized use' at a minimum?
Steve Nelson wrote:
So I started a new job a couple months ago, working in the control room of the TV station here in Kalamazoo. My schedule has me working overnights Friday and Saturday, and there's not much to do but monitor equipment. I was poking around in some old videotape archives tonight when I ran across some tapes marked "High On Kalamazoo Airshow 1992."
I couldn't help but watch the tapes, and found tons of footage of the Grumman Cat Flight (complete with an F9F) as well as individual performances of the prop cats (including John Ellis in the T-cat) and Dale "Snort" Snodgrass wringing out an F-14. There's also some footage of the Air Zoo's P-47 and Sue Parrish's pink P-40 cranking up and taxiing out (haven't found any footage of them in the air though.) I was at that show, and the video brought back a lot of memories. That was the year they did the Doolittle Raid re-enactment, but there's no video of it. That was later in the day, and the cameraman may have had to get back to the station in time to get the footage on the 6:00 news.
The footage is crystal clear, but was shot on Beta (the industry standard before digital.) I'm going to see if I can find a way to dub it off onto DVD.
Now, back to the overnight infomercials....
SN