1) A blue pin with two cartoon French Fries, one pouring salt on the other. A red banner with white text reads “anything goes” and the white text continues off the banner saying “French Fries.”
2) A pale green pin with a picture of a gray and white tabby cat, it has a thought bubble with purple text reading “happy cats drink thirstycat.”
3) An orange pin with two shades of blue text on each word reading “birthday boy” with red confetti around it.
4) A white “I heart” button with black text reading “I ♥️ mistakes” with the k in mistakes facing backwards.
5) A white buttons with black boxes surrounding red text saying “bone donation”. Red text continues out of the boxes saying “ is constructive!” and a black logo reads “Robi” which stands for “regional organ bank of illonois.”
6) A pink and purple gradient button with music notes, money signs, and a CD with a blue sleeve with an orange circle reading Hollywood. White text in a black box reads “music video cash” with a blue music note as the i in music and a green money sign as the s in cash. White text below it reads “get your $3.00 coupon.”
There was a home video tape format called Video 2000 (V2000), that was released in late-1970s and discontinued in late-1980s. It was mostly owned by Philips. These kinds of tapes can literally record video content on both sides in the similar way as audio cassettes.
The format itself, had minor success in Europe, just like what Sony's Betamax (Beta) had its same level of success in the US. However, both of them lost to VHS. But, Video 2000 is obscure and unpopular in North America.