icerunner
Is it a relatively new expectation of society that content should be indefinitely preserved? Prior to the widespread adoption of VHS I wouldn't have thought it would be in the public consciousness.
I'd class myself on the 'keep all the things' side of any preservation argument as building on our cultural history can only be a good thing (artistically speaking - I don't care much for the capitalist tears regarding copyright infringement). Yet I find it interesting, amusing even, that we expect, by default, that content should be preserved and readily available. In 100 years we'll still be able to view any episode or 'Mrs Brown's Boys' yet have no way to see Shakespeare's premiere of 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'.
For clarity, in 100 years I still will not have watched even 1 episode of 'Mrs Brown's Boys'.
The 1975 be like
Alternative text: Meme image from the movie Zoolander, "You know what we have to do now? Kill the Prime Minister of Malaysia."