Outdoors Magazine

The CIA, Affirmative Action, and a #&@% Video Shop

Posted on the 26 April 2017 by Thervproject @thervproject

Back in the late 80's and early 90's, there was a video shop in Isla Vista, CA that catered to the students at UC Santa Barbara. It was called @*&# Video Shop and Climbing Boutique, was owned and managed by Steve Edwards, and served as the de facto epicenter of a nascent Santa Barbara climbing community.

It was a time before the ubiquity of cameras, which presents a challenge: Steve's video shop is a central element in the story, but we have almost no footage or photos from the interior. It will be difficult, even with several people's descriptions, to get the special quirkiness of the place across.

In our interviews, several people have mentioned the ads that Steve put in the Daily Nexus, UCSB's student newspaper. I popped over to the Nexus archives yesterday to look for these ads, of which I found a couple, and I had a somewhat mind-bending experience, leafing through yellowed, ancient copies of a paper that I used to read daily. I found that, in some ways, nothing's changed. In some ways, the world is a very different place. Mostly, I found that flipping through 8 months of newspaper headlines in 2 hours is a very disorienting experience.

This was all before the internet delivered everything. It's pretty wild to think about the ways in which the classic video shops of the 80s and 90s are obsolete. VHS tapes, the "adult" section behind the curtains, underemployed young people discussing cinema. Instead, we now have streaming services, Pornhub, and Rotten Tomatoes...RedBox if we feel the need to hold an actual disc.

Anyway, here are a few more gems from my time in the archives. I highly recommend contriving a reason to leaf through old newspapers.


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