A Decisive Argument for Physical Media
It was six years ago. Six years. Do you remember? Do you remember the lockdown summer of 2020?
Things may have been easing up by then where you were, but here in California the ball was just getting rolling. Ah, the joys of living on the Golden State’s cutting edge! Half your income goes for bandages and blood transfusions. (I’ll spare you the story of my fourth-grade year in an “open,” chart-your-own-course California classroom, where I didn’t learn any math but did listen to a lot of Cheech and Chong records.)
Rough as COVID was, though, we got through it, one way or another. Never were our books, our music, our television shows and movies more important to us. They became more than mere diversions; often they were literally lifelines anchoring us to a sanity that we felt we were floating farther away from each day. (Sometimes I was amazed that the whole social and economic life of the United States was put on hold just so I could get caught up on The Mandalorian.)
All of this came back to me just last week, when I got the email that I wait for every June or July, the one announcing the annual Criterion 50 percent off sale at Barnes and Noble. Criterion, as I’m sure you know and if you don’t, you should, is “dedicated to gathering the greatest films from around the world and publishing them in editions of the highest technical quality, with supplemental features that enhance the appreciation of the art of film.” For movies, Criterions are the gold standard of physical media.










