The year is 1997. It's movie night! You hop in the car and drive to Blockbuster. When you open the door, new movies flash out from the shelves: Independence Day, Space Jam, and Baz Luhrmann's Romeo + Juliet. Having picked out your movie--Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs--you finally make your way to the front of the line. As the teenager working the counter hits you with a $40 late fee for Apollo 13, you can't help but wonder if there's a better, more convenient way to rent movies, without late fees. A version of this story was Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings's elevator pitch when explaining the genesis of Netflix and the problem it aimed to solve. Hastings now admits he did not actually pay $40 in late fees for Apollo 13. Yet the true story of Netflix is much messier than a packaged anecdote.
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