I agree with you on trying to have the most compatible demo reel, and VHS is excepted just about everywhere, my only problem with VHS is the cost. It cost me $200 dollars to rent a lab with editing stations to make 3 15 min master VHS demos that were at best half assed in comparison to the dvds I can make at home in iDVD for $5 a pop. Granted I can Dub a VHS off one of my masters but then it looks even worse, as well as having work that is 18 months old and outdated. With iDVD I can transfer the file from my workstation to my MAC and burn a Crisp clean DVD showing off my latest efforts.
My other reason for recommending DVD to Dragonmaster Dyne, was becase he said he was new at it. And being relitivly new at it myself I've found that when now that i no longer have access to my nice digital studio at school, that with buying programs at 2 thousand a piece and a decent workstation at 4 thousand, as well as allpurpose Mac at 2500, as well as paying at least 25 a month to have a decent web site hosted (which is in no way worth it), that it is expensive as hell to try and break into this Biz. Anything to cut cost is worth it to me, even if it eliminates me from a few places' hiring consideration. With this economy, and paying for all of this with a dead-end customer service job, VHS is not an option for me.



(i am looking for this too)
and I LOVE my job 

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