**[Note: The above headline is referring to Physical Media as 'Non-Digital' which, of course, is a misnomer...]**
Many an argument I have had with people who declare "Physical media is dead, man. I am all Digital now. Blu ray is a dinosaur." Well, my arguments against Cloud-based digital ownership run the gamut.
Firstly, I believe the digital push is Hollywood's end-run around the fact that they don't (and never have) liked us owning our own movies. They ran with the home video market when it started because Videotape was a (more or less) self destructing medium. You would own it until it fell apart and you had to buy it again. A consistent revenue stream. And Hollywood is short sighted when it comes to quick money. When DVD came along they pushed hard for DIVX DVD. If you don't remember, DIVX was a self-destructing DVD. You had a 48 hour viewing window and then *poof*, it was done. This was (again) a format with a built in self destruction window. (Which is why they pushed that).
Luckily- it didn't fly. DVD became the standard with its Ones and Zeros and so began ownership in digital format. Of course the studios put in safeguards against piracy (like the Macrovision system started with Videotape) but people soon figured out how to make perfect copies. But this was different than copying a VHS tape. There was no generation loss- it was all digital. Perfect copies. This was their biggest nightmare. But money is king, and they were raking it in despite the piracy. But now with digital downloads they have an attractive new way to effectively 'take back their movies' by trying to kill physical media.
"You don't have to worry about physical media cluttering up your space anymore", they say. "Buy from us, and store you movies in the cloud. It could not be easier."
-Except in this scenario, you no longer physically have that content. Your ownership of it is an illusion. They can decide (whenever they choose) that the cloud storage is gonna cost you a fee per month. This will happen. So then you end up paying a fee to view what you thought you already owned. In essence, now you are RENTING the movie. Which is exactly how it comes full circle. You are now, basically, renting from Blockbuster again.
Pay Per View.
I think it is very short sighted of them to not really understand 'why' people love their physical media. I mean, why doesn't everybody take the bus to work? Answer: beacuse people freakin' LOVE their cars. It means freedom, and independence. And people (like myself) freakin' love our physical media. I understand why LPs are having a resurgence. I grew up with them. And even though I was more of a Cassette and (later) CD guy, I did have a lot of LPs. And with LPs- the cover, the art, the vinyl...it was like an experience. A whole package. Just like with the Criterion Collection, Arrow, Twilight Time, and our Steelbook collections...
It is a 'whole package' experience. Not just the film.
Now we have the 'Out of Sight, Out of Mind' digital phenomena.
I have all my movies backed up on my computer. But I rarely look at those files. My physical discs I see everyday as I pass them, and am reminded 'oh, I need to watch that one'. Whereas on my computer, I'll go by the movie file and see something from 2 years ago I totally forgot was even there. These digital files basically get buried like the Ark in the warehouse in Raiders of the Lost Ark. And let's face it- I'm not gonna forget that I have a killer copy of Zero Dark Thirty from Plain Archive. But I did forget that I had a digital copy of 'Coherence' buried 5 folders deep on the F: Drive....Out of sight, out of mind.
Anyhoo...this current article from THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER yesterday, dropped some interesting facts about the state of entertainment media that I am sure will shock the folks who thought the Digital download revolution was all but a foregone conclusion, and won and done.
Not by a longshot. Read and enjoy- I have some steelbooks to go purchase!

LINK:http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/pwc-forecast-80-hollywood-revenue-799401
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