Current:Home > reviewsNetflix’s DVD-by-mail service bows out as its red-and-white envelopes make their final trip -FinTechWorld
Netflix’s DVD-by-mail service bows out as its red-and-white envelopes make their final trip
View
Date:2025-04-26 11:15:21
The curtain is finally coming down on Netflix’s once-iconic DVD-by-mail service, a quarter century after two Silicon Valley entrepreneurs came up with a concept that obliterated Blockbuster video stores while providing a springboard into video streaming that has transformed entertainment.
The DVD service that has been steadily shrinking in the shadow of Netflix’s video streaming service will shut down after its five remaining distribution centers in California, Texas, Georgia and New Jersey mail out their final discs Friday.
The fewer than 1 million recipients who still subscribe to the DVD service will be able to keep the final discs that land in their mailboxes.
Some of the remaining DVD diehards will get up to 10 discs as a going away present from a service that boasted as many as 16 million subscribers. That was before Netflix made the pivotal decision in 2011 to separate the DVD side business from a streaming business that now boasts 238 million subscribers and generated $31.5 billion in revenue year.
The DVD service, in contrast, brought in just $146 million in revenue last year, making its eventual closure inevitable against a backdrop of stiffening competition in video streaming that has forced Netflix to whittle expenses to boost its profits.
“It is very bittersweet.” Marc Randolph, Netflix’s CEO when the company shipped its first DVD, ""Beetlejuice,” in April 1998. “We knew this day was coming, but the miraculous thing is that it didn’t come 15 years ago.”
Although he hasn’t been involved in Netflix’s day-to-day operations for 20 years, Randolph came up with the idea for a DVD-by-service in 1997 with his friend and fellow entrepreneur, Reed Hastings, who eventually succeeded him as CEO — a job Hastings held until stepping aside earlier this year.
Back when Randolph and Hastings were mulling the concept, the DVD format was such a nascent technology that there were only about 300 titles available at the time (at its height, Netflix’s DVD service boasted more than 100,000 different titles)
In 1997, DVDs were so hard to find that when they decided to test whether a disc could make it thorough the U.S. Postal Service that Randolph wound up slipping a CD containing Patsy Cline’s greatest hits into a pink envelope and dropping it in the mail to Hastings from the Santa Cruz, California post office.
Randolph paid just 32 cents for the stamp to mail that CD, less than half the current cost of 66 cents for a first-class stamp.
Netflix quickly built a base of loyal movie fans while relying on a then-novel monthly subscription model that allowed customers to keep discs for as long as they wanted without facing the late fees that Blockbuster imposed for tardy returns. Renting DVDs through the mail became so popular that Netflix once ranked as the U.S. Postal Service’s fifth largest customer while mailing millions of discs each week from nearly 60 U.S. distribution centers at its peak.
Along the way, the red-and-white envelopes that delivered the DVDs to subscribers’ homes became an eagerly anticipated piece of mail that turned enjoying a “Netflix night” into a cultural phenomenon. The DVD service also spelled the end of Blockbuster, which went bankrupt in 2010 after its management turned down an opportunity to buy Netflix instead of trying to compete against it.
But Randolph and Hastings always planned on video streaming rendering the DVD-by-mail service obsolescent once technology advanced to the point that watching movies and TV shows through internet connections became viable. That expectation is one of the reasons they settled on Netflix as the service’s name instead of other monikers that were considered, such as CinemaCenter, Fastforward, NowShowing and DirectPix (the DVD service was dubbed “Kibble,” during a six-month testing period)
“From Day One, we knew that DVDs would go away, that this was transitory step,” Randolph said. “And the DVD service did that job miraculously well. It was like an unsung booster rocket that got Netflix into orbit and then dropped back to earth after 25 years. That’s pretty impressive.”
veryGood! (3597)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Senate border bill vote fails again as Democrats seek to shift blame to GOP
- Arizona man convicted of first-degree murder in starvation death of 6-year-old son
- Baltimore’s Catholic archdiocese will cut parishes as attendance falls and infrastructure ages
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- How many points did Caitlin Clark score last night? Not quite enough as Indiana Fever fell to 0-5
- A’s face tight schedule to get agreements and financing in place to open Las Vegas stadium on time
- Sean Kingston's home raided by SWAT, mom arrested for 'fraud and theft'
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Kentucky governor takes action on Juneteenth holiday and against discrimination based on hairstyles
Ranking
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Mother bear swipes at a hiker in Colorado after cub siting
- Big 12 paid former commissioner Bob Bowlsby $17.2 million in his final year
- Are you prepared for 'Garfuriosa'? How 'Garfield' and 'Furiosa' work as a double feature
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Why some of Alaska's rivers are turning orange
- NBA great Dwyane Wade launches Translatable, an online community supporting transgender youth
- Michael Richards opens up about private prostate cancer battle in 2018
Recommendation
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Urban Outfitters' Memorial Day Mega Sale is Here: Score a $590 Sweater for $18 & More Deals Up to 97% Off
Man is found fit to go on trial in attacks that killed 4 in Rockford, Illinois
New book about Lauren Spierer case reveals never-before published investigation details
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Negro Leagues Museum unveils 24-foot-tall Satchel Paige card ahead of MLB Rickwood Field game
Michael Strahan's daughter Isabella reveals she has memory loss due to cancer treatment
Closed casino hotels in Mississippi could house unaccompanied migrant children