San Antonio Express-News

Netflix’s patrons of DVDS loyal, declining

- By Michael Liedtke

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. — Netflix’s trailblazi­ng Dvd-bymail rental service has been relegated to a relic in the age of video streaming, but there is still a steady — albeit shrinking — audience of diehards such as Amanda Konkle who are happily paying to receive those discs in the iconic redand-white envelopes.

“When you open your mailbox, it’s still something you actually want instead of just bills,” said Konkle, a resident of Savannah, Ga., who has been subscribin­g to Netflix’s Dvd-by-mail service since 2005.

It’s a small pleasure that Konkle and other still-dedicated DVD subscriber­s enjoy, but it’s not clear for how much longer. Netflix declined to comment, but during a 2018 media

event, co-founder and COCEO Reed Hastings suggested the Dvd-by-mail service might close around 2023.

When — not if — it happens, Netflix will shut down a service that has shipped more than 5 billion discs across the United States since its inception nearly a quarter-century ago. And it will echo the downfall of the thousands of Blockbuste­r video rental stores that closed because they couldn’t counter the threat posed by Netflix’s Dvd-by-mail alternativ­e.

Demise inevitable

The eventual demise of its Dvd-by-mail service has been inevitable since Hastings decided to spin it off from a then-nascent video streaming service in 2011.

Back then, Hastings floated the idea of renaming the service Qwikster — a bungled idea that was so widely ridiculed that it was satirized on “Saturday Night Live.” It finally settled on its current, more prosaic handle, Dvd.com. The operation is now based in a nondescrip­t office in Fremont, Calif., about 20 miles from Netflix’s sleek campus in Los Gatos, Calif.

Shortly before the breakup from video streaming, the Dvd-bymail service boasted more than 16 million subscriber­s, a number that has now dwindled to an estimated 1.5 million, all in the U.S., based on calculatio­ns drawn from Netflix’s limited disclosure­s of the service in its quarterly reports.

Netflix’s video streaming service now boasts 223 million worldwide subscriber­s, including 74 million in the U.S. and Canada.

“The Dvd-by-mail business has bequeathed the Netflix that everyone now knows and watches today,” Marc Randolph, Netflix’s original CEO, said during an interview at a coffee shop across the street from the post office in Santa Cruz, Calif. The 110-year-old post office has become a landmark in Silicon Valley history because it’s where Randolph mailed a Patsy Cline CD to Hastings in 1997 to test whether a disc could be delivered through the U.S. Postal Service without being damaged.

The disc arrived at Hastings’ home unblemishe­d, prompting the duo in 1998 to launch a Dvdby-mail rental website that they always knew would be supplanted by even more convenient technology.

Planned obsolescen­ce

“It was planned obsolescen­ce, but our bet was that it would take longer for it to happen than most people thought at the time,” Randolph said.

With Netflix’s successful streaming service, it might be easy to assume that anyone still paying to receive DVDS through the mail is a technophob­e or someone living in a remote part of the U.S. without reliable internet access. But subscriber­s say they stick with the service so they can rent movies that are otherwise difficult to find on streaming services.

For Michael Fusco, 35, that includes the 1986 film “Power” starring a thenyouthf­ul Richard Gere and Denzel Washington, and 1980’s “The Big Red One” starring Lee Marvin. That’s among the main reasons he has been subscribin­g to the Dvdby-mail service since 2006, when he was just a freshman in college, and he has no plans to cancel it now.

“I have been getting it for almost half my life, and it has been a big part,” Fusco said. “When I was young, it helped me discover voices I probably wouldn’t have heard. I still have memories of getting movies and having them blow my mind.”

Tabetha Neumann is among the subscriber­s who rediscover­ed the DVD service during the throes of the pandemic lockdowns in 2020 after running out of things to watch on her video streaming service. So she and her husband signed up again for the first time since canceling in 2011. Now they like it so much that they get a plan that allows them to keep up to three discs at a time, an option that currently costs $20 per month (compared with $10 per month for the one-disc plan).

“When we started going through all the movies we wanted to see, we realized it was cheaper than paying $5 per movie on some streaming services,” Neumann said. “Plus, we have found a lot of old horror movies, and that genre is not really big on streaming.”

Konkle, who has written a book about Marilyn Monroe’s films, says she still finds movies on the DVD service — such as the 1954 film “Cattle Queen of Montana,” featuring future President Ronald Reagan alongside Barbara Stanwyck, and the 1983 French film “Sugar Cane Alley” — that help her teach her film studies classes as an associate professor at Georgia Southern University. It’s a viewing habit she doesn’t usually share with her classes because “most of my students don’t know what a DVD is,” said Konkle, 40, laughing.

Signs of deteriorat­ion

But for all the DVD service’s attraction­s, subscriber­s are starting to notice signs of deteriorat­ion as the business has shrunk from producing more than $1 billion in annual revenue a year ago to an amount likely to fall below $200 million in revenue this year.

Katie Cardinale, a subscriber who lives in Hopedale, Mass., says she now has to wait an additional two to four days for discs to arrive in the mail than she used to because they are shipped from a distributi­on center in New Jersey instead of Boston. (Netflix doesn’t disclose how many DVD distributi­on centers still operate, but there were once about 50 of them in the U.S.)

Konkle says more discs now come with cracks or other defects in them and that it takes “forever” to get them replaced. And almost all subscriber­s have noticed the selection of DVD titles has shrunk dramatical­ly from the service’s peak years, when Netflix boasted that it had more than 100,000 movies and TV shows on disc.

Netflix no longer discloses the size of its DVD library, but the subscriber­s interviewe­d reported that the narrowing selection is making it more difficult to find famous films and popular TV series that once were routinely available on the service. Instead, Netflix now sorts requests for titles such as the first season of the award-winning “Ted Lasso” series — a release that can be purchased on DVD — into a “saved” queue, signaling it may decide to stock it in the future, depending on demand.

Knowing the end is in sight, Randolph said he will lament the death of the DVD service he brought to life while taking comfort that its legacy will survive.

“Netflix’s DVD business was part and parcel of who Netflix was and still is,” he said. “It’s embedded in the company’s DNA.”

“The Dvd-by-mail business has bequeathed the Netflix that everyone now knows and watches today.”

Marc Randolph, Netflix’s original CEO

 ?? Michael Liedtke/ap ?? Netflix eventually will end its Dvd-by-mail rental service, known for its iconic red-andwhite envelopes.
Michael Liedtke/ap Netflix eventually will end its Dvd-by-mail rental service, known for its iconic red-andwhite envelopes.

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