Thursday, September 23, 2010

Redundancy and some such....

In this hobby, loss of material is a constant battle we face. For years, we've been fighting against the elements: fire, water, dust in the destruction of rare prints or footage of game broadcasts. Once we lose these precious resources, they are gone forever.

However, in today's world of technology, we face a new adversary: data loss. In that battle, I lost. A little personal backstory: Since 2006, I've been a nearly rabid collector of St. Louis Cardinals complete game broadcast. There were, up until a few weeks ago, only a handful of games from the 2006-2010 seasons that I didn't have. With this being a hobby and not the entirety of my life, recordings don't get edited right away, drives get filled, things don't always get done in a timely fashion. Not to mention, my collecting/recording was not limited to the Cardinals. Some NFL, PGA and the Cleveland Cavaliers also kept the personal collection going year round.

Then data loss hits. A combination of Cavaliers games, Cardinals games (2009-2010) and the reason this blog hasn't been updated: my classic game recordings all were lost. Now, that doesn't mean all my classic game material is gone. Hard copies were made, some games and footage were already transferred to portable drives.

None of this is an excuse for going dark. It just sucked the joy out of the hobby. A lot of stress and work went into maintaining free space and manipulating a personal schedule to acquire those games only to see them disappear in a nanosecond. Anytime I even thought about writing, it was a reminder of the games I lost that I doubted I'd ever get back. It was also a reminder of my own personal failings in falling behind in my editing and cataloging of materials. With that, the totality of the data loss will never be truly known.

Hopefully, with a return to some normalcy I'll begin to try to go out into the community and fill in the missing holes I have from my collection. For someone that was very specific in how he recorded the games and how he maintained quality on them, that will be a challenge. With that, though, I will hopefully begin to update this blog again as the off-season clip shows and rebroadcasts begin to pop-up on schedules.

To those who have contacted me over the last few weeks, I appreciate the words and the interest. Those who I had arrangements with, those will be coming soon.

Thanks to all for your patience and BACK UP YOUR DATA!!!!

5 comments:

  1. Sorry to hear that, dude...I was wondering where you went.

    Keep your chin up. If you acquired those games once you can do it again. You have lost some time, and while that is precious, there actually are a lot worse things that could have happened. And you learned a lesson.

    Although that's not to downgrade what did occur. How the heck DID you lose them????

    Anyway, as far as I can see your site is the main clearinghouse for the possible discovery/recovery and public presentation of any old baseball kinescopes, and you do a nice job, so we need you to pull through. Your passion will be back and you'll be in the swing again soon, I'm sure.

    The 1967 Red Sox Guy

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  2. Hey guys, did you see this news from Sept. 23?!

    As first reported by the New York Times, an entire copy of NBC's television broadcast of Game 7 of the 1960 World Series was recently found in a wine cellar at Bing Crosby's old home near San Francisco.

    And MLB is going to put out a DVD!!!!

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  3. Yes, I did see that. Very exciting news and was to be the subject of my next post for this Tuesday.

    Along with this info, the articles that followed also gave more info about a broadcast I've been meaning to write about for a while.

    Great to see this coming out.

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  4. Your news sticks--sorry to hear it. On the other hand, it's good to see you're back. Best wishes filling in your collection. The perhaps ironic aspect of it is that if you collected older games rather than something much more accessible like 2006-present Cardinals games, you would have an easier time finding them in the collector community.

    It's too bad there isn't an easy way to grab and save them from MLB.com.

    On the Bing Crosby front, any word on whether (a) the kinescope has the original commercials (I would assume it does), and (b) will the DVD include the radio broadcast as an alternate audio track like the Don Larsen perfecto does on the Yankees no-hitters DVD set?

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  5. Your news sticks--sorry to hear it. On the other hand, it's good to see you're back. Best wishes filling in your collection. The perhaps ironic aspect of it is that if you collected older games rather than something much more accessible like 2006-present Cardinals games, you would have an easier time finding them in the collector community.

    It's too bad there isn't an easy way to grab and save them from MLB.com.

    On the Bing Crosby front, any word on whether (a) the kinescope has the original commercials (I would assume it does), and (b) will the DVD include the radio broadcast as an alternate audio track like the Don Larsen perfecto does on the Yankees no-hitters DVD set?

    ReplyDelete