Type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Video rental |
Founded | 1982 |
Defunct | 2019 |
Fate | Liquidation |
Headquarters | Hobart, Tasmania Australia |
Area served | Australia |
Key people | Terrance Ewing (founder) [1] |
Services | |
Parent | Classic Video Pty Ltd |
Website | Archived website |
Video City was an Australian home video rental business that offered titles on VHS, DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray, as well as console video games, for rent. At its peak, Video City operated 26 stores nationally; 21 in Tasmania, with a further five stores located across Victoria and Queensland. [2] [3]
The first Video City store was opened by founder Terrance "Terry" Ewing in Glenorchy, Tasmania in 1982. Due to the company's early market expansion across Tasmania, competition entry into the state was difficult, with only a handful of Video Ezy and Blockbuster Video stores ever opening on the island. Video City's stronghold in the Tasmanian market assured confidence, and the company expanded the franchise onto the Australian mainland, as well as opening the largest video store in Australia at New Town, Tasmania in 2002. [3] [4]
Video City's demise is largely attributed to the widespread use of illegal digital downloads and the adoption of online streaming services. The world-wide decline of the video rental shop began in the mid 2000s. The industry was initially affected by peer-to-peer file sharing networks such as Limewire and The Pirate Bay which facilitated the distribution of pirated digital video content, and later from the launch of streaming services including Netflix, Stan, ABC iview and SBS On Demand in Australia. As video distribution was a third party business operating brick and mortar stores, Video City, along with video rental businesses including Video Ezy and Blockbuster Video, were unable to shift their business model into the online sphere. The passing of founder Terrance Ewing in January 2015 is also attributed to the company's loss of direction. [1] The Tasmanian Video City stores momentarily profited during the 2016 Tasmanian energy crisis, when the failure of Basslink caused prolonged internet outages across the island. [5] However the renascence was short-lived and flagship stores began to cease trading; the Burnie location closed in 2017, followed by the Launceston store in 2018. [6] [7] After selling its catalogue of over 30,000 video titles, their final location at New Town closed in August 2019. [3]
External video | |
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Video City "Good Times" television commercial |
Video City is well remembered in Tasmania for its sound branding in radio and television commercials, featuring the jingle "Good Times", developed by marketing agency Vision 2000 in the 1990s. [8] [9] [10]
In 1997, the New Norfolk store suffered from a $18,000 burglary and an armed robbery in 2001. [11] Video City donated $4,800 to the Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens Trust in 2001 as a means to compensate overcharging customers GST in the previous year, in which 20,500 customers were overcharged 23 cents for video rentals. [12] The Liquor, Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers Union took Video City to the Federal Court of Australia in 2007 after two employees were wrongfully fired for refusing to sign individual contracts. [13] The original Video City store in Glenorchy was robbed in March 2008 by two assailants. [14]
Glenorchy is a suburb of Hobart, in the state of Tasmania, Australia. Glenorchy is bound by the River Derwent to the east, Mount Wellington to the west, Hobart City to the south and Brighton to the north. The city officially begins at Creek Road New Town, in Hobart's northern suburbs, and includes, Moonah, Derwent Park, Lutana, Goodwood, Montrose, Rosetta, Berriedale, Chigwell, Claremont and Austins Ferry. It is the seat of the local government area of the same name, the City of Glenorchy.
New Town is a suburb of the city of Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, about 4 kilometres (2 mi) north of the central business district of Hobart. It is generally considered Hobart's oldest suburb, settled just a week after Sullivans Cove. It was historically the home of many of Hobart's wealthiest citizens, and New Town features a large number of grand residences, churches, and public buildings. The large farms were broken up following the world wars and it is now an inner city residential suburb. Many of its streets are lined with Federation style cottages. It is surrounded by the suburbs of North Hobart, Mount Stuart, Lenah Valley and Moonah, with the Queen's Domain just to the south-east. Most of the locality is within the Hobart local government area, with 2.5% within Glenorchy.
Video Ezy was an Australian home video rental business that offered titles on VHS, DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray, as well as console video games, for rent. At its peak in the mid-2000s, Video Ezy had over 500 company-owned and franchised video rental shops in the country, and owned 40% of the Australian video rental market after taking over Blockbuster's Australian operations. The company also expanded internationally into New Zealand and Asia.
Football Tasmania (FT) is the governing body for soccer in the Australian state of Tasmania. The federation oversees competitions across Tasmania, Tasmanian representative teams, and development of the sport in the state. The federation was known as the Tasmanian Soccer Association until 1996, when it was renamed to Soccer Tasmania. In line with national changes in March 2006, it became Football Federation Tasmania. In February 2019, the organisation became simply Football Tasmania.
The Tasmanian State League (TSL), colloquially known as the Tasmanian Football League (TFL) (formerly known as the Tasmanian Australian National Football League (TANFL) and several other short-term names) is the highest ranked Australian rules football league in Tasmania, Australia.
EzyDVD is an Australian specialist home video retailer offering DVD, Blu-ray, and Ultra HD Blu-ray discs for purchase. At its peak in the mid-2000s the company had over 70 retail stores around Australia, but is now exclusively an online retailer.
Australian rules football in Tasmania, has been played since the late 1870s and draws the largest audience for a football code in the state.
Metro Tasmania, commonly called Metro, a Tasmanian Government business enterprise, is the largest bus operator in the state of Tasmania, Australia, with operations in three of the four largest urban centres of Hobart, Launceston, and Burnie. Urban services in Devonport are provided by a private operator, Merseylink Coaches. Services are provided by Metro under a range of urban and non-urban contracts with the Transport Commission, a division within the Department of State Growth.
FitzGerald's Department Stores (FitzGerald's) was Tasmania's largest chain of department stores. The chain was rebranded and relaunched as Harris Scarfe in 1995, and the renamed stores continue to trade today.
Red Herring Surf is a brand of surfwear in Tasmania, Australia. It is strongly involved in local youth culture, sponsoring a local band and taking part in surf events. Tasmanian surfer Bill Thwaites founded the company in 1971, originally naming his store Seaworld. The store name was changed to its present form as more stores opened in the 1990s. Red Herring Surf was the first surf store opened in Tasmania, and now has over fifty employees. Since beginning operation in Hobart in 1971, the company has expanded with four stores now open, within the cities of Burnie, Launceston, Glenorchy, and Hobart.
The Tasmanian State Premiership was an Australian rules football tournament which was contested at the conclusion of the season, initially between the reigning Tasmanian Football League (TFL/TANFL) and Northern Tasmanian Football Association (NTFA) premiers, and then from 1950 also by the NWFU premiers, to determine an overall premier team for the state of Tasmania. The state premiership was contested 57 times between 1909 and 1978.
The 2009 AFL Tasmania TSL premiership season was an Australian rules football competition, staged across Tasmania, Australia over eighteen roster rounds and six finals series matches between 4 April and 19 September 2009.
The 1999 TSFL premiership season was an Australian rules football competition, staged across Tasmania, Australia over eighteen roster rounds and four finals series matches between 10 April and 18 September 1999. This was the fourteenth season of statewide football and the League was known as the Chickenfeed Super League under a commercial naming-rights sponsorship agreement with Chickenfeed Bargain Stores in Hobart worth A$350,000.
Statewide Australian rules football competition has been played in Tasmania, Australia under the umbrella of the Tasmanian Football League from 1986–1998, Football Tasmania from 1999–2000 until the competition was disbanded in December 2000 and AFL Tasmania from 2009 when a new ten-club competition, this time known as the Tasmanian State League, was formed.
The Basslink electricity interconnector is a 370 km (230 mi) 500 MW (670,000 hp) high-voltage direct current (HVDC) cable linking the electricity grids of the states of Victoria and Tasmania in Australia, crossing Bass Strait, connecting the Loy Yang Power Station, Victoria on the Australian mainland to the George Town substation in northern Tasmania. Basslink is bidirectional and enables Hydro Tasmania to supply some of the peak load capacity to the Australian mainland and take some of the excess power from the mainland when the generation on the mainland exceeds the demand.
The 2014 AFL Tasmania TSL premiership season was an Australian rules football competition staged across Tasmania, Australia over eighteen home and away rounds and six finals series matches between 5 April and 21 September.
The 2015 AFL Tasmania TSL premiership season was an Australian rules football competition staged across Tasmania, Australia over eighteen home and away rounds and six finals series matches between 3 April and 19 September.
The 2017 AFL Tasmania TSL premiership season is an Australian rules football competition staged across Tasmania, Australia over twenty-one home and away rounds and six finals series matches between 31 March and 23 September.
The 2018 AFL Tasmania TSL premiership season is an Australian rules football competition staged across Tasmania, Australia over twenty-one home and away rounds and six finals series matches between 30 March and 15 September.
The Glenorchy Art and Sculpture Park (GASP) is a sculpture park in Glenorchy, Tasmania, Australia. Commencing at Montrose Foreshore Community Park, GASP follows Elwick Bay's foreshore, terminating at Wilkinsons Point. GASP is in close proximity to the MyState Bank Arena, Elwick Racecourse and the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) in Berriedale.