Cable Video Store
| Type | Cable pay-per-view television service | 
|---|---|
| Country | |
| Area | Nationwide | 
| Owner | General Instrument (1986–92) Graff Pay-Per-View (1992–97)  | 
Launch date  | October 1, 1986 | 
| Dissolved | May 1997 | 
Cable Video Store (CVS), was a pay-per-view (PPV) service that was launched on October 1, 1986 by American Cablesystems.[1] General Instrument developed the specialized set-top box that was used to deliver the service, called The Jerrold system.[2][3] Mark Graff, Founder and President of Graff Pay-Per-View, later purchased CVS.[4] Cable Video Store consisted of one channel which carried first run movies and specials (however, it did not carry major sporting events, such as boxing) on a PPV basis. They also offered low cost programs to buy along with the standard PPV fare.
CVS went off the air in May 1997 as the result of other pay-per-view services such as Viewer's Choice (now known as In Demand) and Request TV that provided multi-channels of PPV and the launching of Video on Demand on many cable systems.[5]
See also
[edit]- Request TV
 - In Demand (formerly known in the US as Viewer's Choice)
 - List of United States pay television channels
 
References
[edit]- ^ McLean, Robert A. (September 29, 1986). "Pay-per-movie cable service set". The Boston Globe. p. 26. Retrieved July 10, 2025.
 - ^ McLean. "Pay-per-movie cable service set".
 - ^ Jeremy Rosenberg - Cable Video Store history (Archive)
 - ^ Mark Graff, LinkedIn Retrieved July 10, 2025.
 - ^ Cable Video Store will go dark this month (Archive)