After a bit of Googling it appears the title is Off A Cement Floor, actually. Looks like it appeared on TV in September of 1984 in Pennsylvania.
From here you have a few options. You can either contact the Beaver Creek Times and ask for info, which I doubt will result in much success. Or you contact those who were in charge of or worked at the facility. Doing a bit more research I found an article with a few names that might help. Hell even contacting the author of that article might be worth a shot (his email is at the bottom).
Wouldn't happen to be related to this record would it? There's a ridiculous/hilarious (not AIDS, but the rap itself) terrible pop rap song about catching aids from shooting up. It's like a minute long.
I still have it on DVD. I would have never of guessed it was lost media or even that rare. I think my Nan and I bought it at a Car Boot Sale a few years back. I could probably post it online if you really wanted it.
Edit: No need, the whole thing is on youtube under the name "Once Upon A Halloween", and split into five parts. Their is also a listing on Amazon for the DVD, which is less than £4
Link to first part of the youtube upload: https://youtu.be/kRK56hn3Xqg
Link to Amazon Listing: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Once-Upon-Halloween-Animated-DVD/dp/B000A85TTY
The British release is 104 minutes. It's a region 2 & in pal but I don't think there was a 104 release here in the states. Here is a link to it on amazon & an imdb link talking about the different versions http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103873/alternateversions
https://www.amazon.com/Dead-Alive-Timothy-Balme/dp/B00006RHU4/
Not again for fucks sake. This is a sub for lost film, not help googling stuff. This sub’s really turned to shit, with most posts being wrong. I joined here because the other similarity titled sub was just filled with posts asking for help pirating or googling stuff. Lost films doesn’t mean lost to you but lost to the world. I’m leaving.
A link for Lost and Found 1-7
Thanks for the other films
https://thepiratebay.org/torrent/4261896/Lost.And.Found.Video.Night.1-7.DVDRip.XviD-Z-Com
Dunno if you guys are still interested, but I found a copy on a private torrent tracker with both the original (VHS Rip) audio and the DVD one.
I've uploaded it here for anyone interested: http://rapidgator.net/file/59827790/Where_the_Buffalo_Roam_(Original_Audio).avi.html
As another poster noted, I believe you're remembering the sequel to the original '60s Parent Trap with Hayley Mills, which was made for the Disney Channel in the '80s (they were even two more sequels afterwards!). Disney released that on DVD along with the original film in 2005, and can be found on Amazon. It seems like the their and fourth films haven't seen an official release, but I'm sure you can find them on YouTube.
Looks like it's out of print in Britain, but amazon UK has plenty of second hand copies on dvd.
Here’s it on amazon Canada then https://www.amazon.ca/Mist-Two-Disc-Collectors-Blu-ray/dp/B001AR0D4A/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?keywords=the+mist&qid=1587626655&sr=8-1
Brokering a streaming deal takes a lot of effort, movies that Netflix and the like think won’t get much traction don’t get picked up. The first tv series I worked on has never had any dvd or streaming release. If you googled it, it looks like hundreds of people want to see it again. But when we did a cost analysis, the actual audience was maybe 10,000 people tops, and in order to release we would either have to renegotiate with the rights holders of over fifty songs used on the soundtrack (total cost - who knows, could be 100k could be 1million) or re edit the entire two series and put in licence free music (total man hours, probably 500 at £250 an hour to hire a studio and techs) I think what I’m heading towards is The Mist is probably more scarce as it’s not a film with a massive audience; when you know the great twist, most people wouldn’t bother watching it again. Something like Limitless, a few years later but similar in budget/reviews/cast is available everywhere, perhaps that’s because the twists aren’t as memorable so it’s the sort of movie people watch again every frenzy years. Maybe the market for this film is just best served by being available on DVD and Blu Ray, given that if someone’s desperate enough to watch it, you can pick up a DVD player on amazon for twenty bucks these days
https://www.amazon.com/Mist-weinstein/dp/B003TNM2K6/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=the+mist&qid=1587570199&sr=8-1 On amazon prime in the US. OP doesn’t mention where they live but this movie seems to have the same availability as any other film from the time. There’s next to no money in DVD releases of older films these days so it’s rare for the rights to get sold, unless a studio gets purchased and there’s a mass transfer of assets.
It's probably from a set called Ten Timeless Classics. Is there any information on the animation studio?
Edit: Is it the 1973 Filmation movie?
There is apparently a copy in the San Francisco Public Library:
You have to click "Audio-Visual and Photo Files" on the right side to see it.
Also, this $10 VHS tape might have SOME footage from it.
Someone should buy the Schools Out! The Musical DVD then if it supposedly has it. I would buy it but I'm saving up my money. I did find an Amazon listing for it that promises the special feature on it. https://www.amazon.com/Fairly-OddParents-Schools-Out-Musical/dp/B0008KLV8W
So far, I haven't found it on YouTube. I'm planning on checking other video sites as well. I have a feeling it would be on Dailymotion for some reason.
Also, someone on the Lost Media Wiki found this ToonZone thread talking about the Family Guy episode. www.toonzone.net/forums/threads/trl-family-guys-stewie.3609761/
Nothing from the distributor, a VHS exists but it's pricey. Best bet would be to find someone who has the VHS and get them to rip it or crowdfund an Amazon purchase to put on youtube.
Think this is it.
> Inspired by the studies of Robert and Helen Lynd in 1929 and 1935, this classic six-part series by Academy Award and Emmy winner Peter Davis (Hearts and Minds) explores both the continuity and the change embodied in the people and institutions of one Midwestern community: Muncie, Indiana. Titles in the series: The Big Game - The role of competitive sports, in this case basketball, in the community, for the coaches, and, most of all, for the players themselves. The Campaign - A mayoral race in middle America. Community of Praise - Examines faith working in the lives of a fundamentalist family. Family Business - An American entrepreneur struggles to make his pizza business go. Second Time Around - The complexities of contemporary American marriage. Seventeen - High school seniors hurtling toward maturity experience joy, despair, and an aggravated sense of urgency. In intimate detail, the six films that comprise MIDDLETOWN demonstrate how the society and culture of Muncie, perhaps of the entire American social fabric, have changed less than one might think in the six decades since the Lynds' studies.
Looks like it was available on Amazon at some point.