 Earlier this morning, Techmone posted a video of a bizarre audio CD gimmick he found that's actually made of vinyl and has actually functioning record on the opposite side from the audio CD content. There's a clip of his video here. Anyway, that made me think of this gimmicky audio CD that I got 10 or 15 years ago from AV Geeks. It says AV Geeks there. It's a collection of musical soundtracks from educational 16 millimeter films from the 50s, 60s, and 70s. There's a list on the back. The printed label on the top of the CD is a photograph of a reel of 16 millimeter film. But the real oddity of this thing is that it's solid black. It's solid black all the way through. And it makes you think, how can this actually function? Would it actually function in a CD player? And it does. I'll show you in a second. The AV Geeks produce this in association with something called... Let me see if I can get this label up here. Artists throwing money out the window. That's what it says right there. I have to dust off my old CD player back here. And believe me, it is dusty. Look at this. I'm lucky that the remote still works. That the battery that's in here hasn't melted down. I actually don't really remember the last time I used this CD player. It looks like the last time I listened... I was listening to these. Astra and Pink Floyd. Yeah, this must have been three years. It's been a really long time. Open up the tray. And here we go with this solid black CD. It doesn't seem like it could possibly work. Here it goes. The first track is audio of a 16mm projector starting up. It's kind of clever. It's really funny. The next track is one of my favorite songs. From any old educational film. That's LSD. That's Acid. So yeah, it definitely works. The question is how. I mean it's solid black. When we hold it up to a strong light source. We see that there is light getting through. So it's solid black to the human eye. But not to the laser. So there we are. Another oddity from the collection. See you tomorrow with another video.