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Ueli Kestenholz, who won snowboarding’s first Olympic medal in 1998, dies in Swiss avalanche

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Ueli Kestenholz, who won snowboarding's first Olympic medal in 1998, dies in Swiss avalanche

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Ueli Kestenholz, the Swiss snowboard pioneer who won bronze at snowboarding’s Olympic debut, has died after an avalanche in Switzerland. He was 50.

Kestenholz was snowboarding Sunday in the Lötschental valley of Valais when he was swept away and buried in the avalanche, the Swiss ski federation said Tuesday.

He was with a friend who was skiing in the valley when the avalanche started at an altitude of 7,900 feet (2,400 meters), Valais police said in a statement. Officials said it remained unclear what triggered the avalanche.

The friend dug out the trapped Kestenholz before a helicopter airlifted them to a hospital, police said.

US OLYMPIC GOLD MEDAL SNOWBOARDER CHLOE KIM’S MILAN-CORTINA HOPES IN DOUBT AFTER SHOCKING INJURY

Ueli Kestenholz, snowboard bronze winner in Nagano, presents his medal on Feb. 16, 1998, in front of the town hall in his hometown of Thun, Switzerland. (Edi Engeler/Keystone via AP)

Kestenholz helped write Olympic snowboarding history when he was thrust into the spotlight at the 1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan, at just 22 years old.

The Games that year marked snowboarding’s debut as an Olympic event. Kestenholz took home the bronze medal for Switzerland in the parallel giant slalom — the first snowboard decision in Olympic history, the Swiss ski federation said.

Ueli Kestenholz snowboarding in competition

Ueli Kestenholz passes a gate during qualification for the men’s duel slalom World Championships, International Snowboarding Federation, in Val di Sole, Italy, Jan. 28, 1999. (Reuters)

The Swiss racer competed at two more Winter Games, was twice snowboardcross champion at the X-Games and continued a professional career in extreme sports.

MEXICAN AUTHORITIES SEIZE $40M IN MOTORCYCLES FROM OLYMPIC SNOWBOARDER TURNED FUGITIVE, FBI SAYS

The ski federation said Kestenholz should be remembered not only for his love of snowboarding, but for being “a true crossover athlete.”

“After retiring from competitive sports in 2006, he remained a professional outdoor athlete — until his last breath,” the federation said, noting that Kestenholz was a freerider, speed rider, paraglider pilot, kite surfer, skydiver, surfer, wingfoiler and mountain biker.

Ueli Kestenholz hugging teammate after bronze medal win

Ueli Kestenholz is embraced by a teammate after taking the bronze medal in the debut of Olympic giant slalom snowboarding in Shiga Kogen, Japan, on Feb. 8, 1998. Kestenholz came from 10th place in the first run to claim the third position. Canada’s Ross Regabliati took gold. (Reuters)

The Olympic medalist’s Instagram account showed numerous photos of the athlete taking part in extreme sports outdoors.

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“To enjoy those rare moments when nature’s wonders align you need to be ready to drop everything and go!” he wrote in one post of a video showing him paragliding and landing on frozen lakes near St. Moritz.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Pakistan-origin cricketers ‘denied’ Indian visas ahead of T20 World Cup

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Pakistan-origin cricketers 'denied' Indian visas ahead of T20 World Cup

The collage of photos shows USA pacer Ali Khan (left) and batter Shayan Jahangir. — AFP

A number of Pakistan-origin cricketers, including players from the United States of America (USA), have reportedly been denied Indian visas ahead of the 2026 T20 World Cup scheduled from February 7 to March 8.

Ali Khan, 36, born and raised in Pakistan’s Attock, moved to the US at the age of 19, took to Instagram to share India’s action.

Sharing a picture of himself and fellow cricketer Shayan Jahangir enjoying a meal, he penned: “Indian visa denied.”

The post quickly drew attention from cricket fans worldwide, underscoring the ongoing visa challenges faced by players of Pakistani descent.

According to reports, Ehsan Adil and Mohammad Mohsin are also among the players who were refused to issue visas by India.

Media reports also revealed that several associate national teams—including Italy, Oman, UAE, Canada, and the USA—have players of Pakistani origin or dual nationality who are reportedly encountering difficulties obtaining Indian visas.

The cricket boards of these nations have formally approached the ICC for guidance but have yet to receive any response or assurance from the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

Currently, the USA team set to play in the tournament includes four Pakistani players.

Khan represented the USA in 15 ODIs and 18 T20Is, claiming 49 wickets across both formats.

Karachi-born Shayan, 31, has played 32 ODIs for the USA, scoring 795 runs, including two centuries and three fifties. In T20Is, he has scored 371 runs in 19 matches at a strike rate of 134.42, including two fifties.

Ehsan Adil, who previously played three Tests and six ODIs for Pakistan, will make his USA debut in the upcoming tournament.

Peshawar-born Mohammad Mohsin, who holds limited experience of playing in the Pakistan Super League (PSL) for Peshawar Zalmi in two matches, is also set to represent the USA on the international stage.

The USA team is set to compete in their second ICC T20 World Cup, following a memorable appearance in 2024 when they defeated 2009 champions, Pakistan, via a Super Over.

The team is drawn in Group A alongside hosts India, Pakistan, Namibia, and the Netherlands.

Their campaign begins against India on February 7, followed by matches against Pakistan on February 10, the Netherlands on February 13, and Namibia on February 15.

USA squad for T20 World Cup 2026: Monank Patel (c), Jessy Singh (vc), Ehsan Adil, Andries Gous, Shayan Jahangir, Shehan Jayasuriya, Aaron Jones, Nosthush Kenjige, Ali Khan, Sanjay Krishnamurthi, Milind Kumar, Mohammad Mohsin, Sai Mukkamalla, Saurabh Netravalkar, Shubham Ranjane, Harmeet Singh, Rushil Ugarkar, and Shadley van Schalkwyk.

CFP National Championship first look: Previewing Miami-Indiana

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CFP National Championship first look: Previewing Miami-Indiana

The journey began in August with 136 teams hoping to taste postseason glory. During 15 weeks of twists and turns, the cast was narrowed to 12. In the past month, favorites have fallen, heroes have emerged, and at last, just two teams have found their way to Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, where a champion will be crowned.

Miami and Indiana will face off (7:30 p.m. ET on Jan. 19) to determine this season’s champion, a matchup few might’ve anticipated when the year began. So many huge moments have turned on a mystifying scramble or a shoestring tackle or, occasionally, a little luck. But what’s clear after watching the Hurricanes and the Hoosiers march through the 2025-26 season is these two teams have earned their place in the title game, and the matchup figures to be one of the best this season has to offer. — David Hale

When: Jan. 19, 7:30 p.m. ET. TV: ESPN

What we learned in the semifinal: Carson Beck can carry this team. Few players have endured the level of criticism Beck has in the past two years, for struggles real and perceived, on the field and off. He has managed it with grace, endearing himself to his teammates, and, despite two frustrating midseason failures, he has delivered Miami to the promised land. If there had been any doubts about whether Miami won because of, or in spite of, Beck, the QB offered an emphatic answer in the Vrbo Fiesta Bowl, driving the Canes 75 yards on 15 plays and capping a game-defining and program-altering scramble into the end zone that carried Miami past Ole Miss. Beck faced 15 third downs in the game. He converted 11 of them, completing 7 of 9 throws and running for 25 yards. “The last two games, you probably hadn’t seen him throwing it enough,” receiver Keelan Marion said after the Fiesta Bowl win, “but the run game — that was the game plan. We had to take advantage of what they give us. But we knew he could do this.”

X factor: The pass rush. In the first two playoff games, Miami’s defensive front, led by Akheem Mesidor and Rueben Bain Jr., dominated, racking up 12 sacks. Against Ole Miss in the semifinal, Trinidad Chambliss and the Rebels’ quick pass game stymied the Canes’ aggressive unit, and it finished with just one sack — on the first drive of the game. Bain and Mesidor were largely limited throughout. Chambliss and the Rebels might have offered a blueprint for how to negate Miami’s best weapon in the loss. That the Canes’ D also flubbed at least four chances at interceptions and cost itself some serious field position with penalties — including a backbreaking call late in the fourth quarter that set up an Ole Miss score — only underscored the concern. But turn on the tape from the previous six games, and it’s easy to see that Bain & Co. won’t be held at bay forever. They’re too good, too strong, too relentless to let the Canes’ season end without a fight.

They can win if… The Canes can be the more fundamentally sound team. To watch the Fiesta Bowl was a study in frustration for Miami fans. The power run game dominated, but too often, the Canes got cute on offense and a drive fizzled. Beck appeared to have a receiver running open for a score on two occasions, only for the throw to be off-target. The pass rush that had been dominant was hemmed in by Ole Miss’s game plan. The defense was solid, but allowed too many chunk plays, including Kewan Lacy‘s 73-yard touchdown run. The DBs, so effective earlier in the playoff, dropped one potential interception after another that might’ve turned a close game into a blowout. Miami missed its fourth field goal attempt of the postseason. The Canes had 10 penalties, many of them in critical moments. Miami won despite all that, but the game was far more dramatic than it should have been. In the title game, Miami is unlikely to have the same luck in overcoming its self-inflicted miscues, and so the game plan and execution have to be far better. The story of Miami’s recent history has been, too often, that of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. That it escaped another disaster in the Fiesta Bowl is proof of Miami’s talent and also a reminder that the margin for error at this point in the year is razor-thin. — Hale


What we learned in the semifinal: The Hoosiers are an absolute juggernaut. Indiana cornerback D’Angelo Ponds picked off a pass from Oregon quarterback Dante Moore on the first snap of the game and coasted in for a touchdown, setting the tone for the coming onslaught. As they have all season, the Hoosiers dominated the line of scrimmage on both sides of the ball. The defense rattled Moore and shut down the Oregon running game while jumping to a 35-7 halftime lead. Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza, meanwhile, was nearly flawless, completing 17 of 20 passes for 177 yards. Through two playoff games, Mendoza, the presumptive No. 1 pick in the upcoming NFL draft, has more touchdown passes (8) than incompletions (5). Since the start of the Rose Bowl against Alabama, the Hoosiers have totaled 94 points, piled up 770 yards of offense and blasted the Crimson Tide and Ducks by a combined margin of 69 points. The Hoosiers even delivered an exclamation point in the fourth quarter with a blocked punt, which set up yet another Mendoza touchdown. Indiana is now one win from completing one of the most stunning — yet resounding — championship runs in college football history.

X factor: The Hurricanes feature an elite defensive line, led by a pair of blue-chip pass rushers in Mesidor and Bain. But Indiana’s defensive front has also been smothering, especially this postseason. Since its Big Ten championship victory over Ohio State, Indiana has taken away the running game and harassed the quarterback. The Buckeyes, Crimson Tide and Ducks combined to rush for just 174 yards while averaging only 2.5 yards per carry against the Hoosiers. Indiana’s swarming pressure also forced Ohio State quarterback Julian Sayin (a Heisman finalist), Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson and Moore — both projected to go in the first round of the draft — into their worst performances of the year. The Hurricanes’ talented and bruising offensive line figures to provide the biggest test yet for Indiana’s relentless defensive front. But the Hoosiers will test Miami in the trenches, too.

They can win if… The Hoosiers keep playing the way they’ve played all year. The Hurricanes are formidable, especially up front. Beck has been spectacular in Miami’s past two playoff wins, especially on third down and in key situations. The Hurricanes also boast several dynamic playmakers, headlined by running back Mark Fletcher Jr. and receiver Malachi Toney. But does Indiana have any weaknesses? The Hoosiers have outscored opponents by 473 points this year. According to ESPN Research, that ties 2019 Clemson for the largest point differential entering a national championship game in the playoff era, dating back to 2014. Indiana will be the betting favorite in the title game for a reason. — Jake Trotter

Trump urges Iranians to keep protesting, says ‘help is on its way’

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Trump urges Iranians to keep protesting, says 'help is on its way'

US President-elect Donald Trump gestures at Turning Point USA’s America Fest in Phoenix, Arizona, US. — Reuters
  • Trump urges protesters to ‘take over’ institutions.
  • US president did not specify “help” for protesters.
  • Terrorists behind deaths of protesters, security men: Iran.

US President Donald Trump urged Iranians on Tuesday to keep protesting and said help was on the way, without giving details, as Iran’s government tackled the biggest demonstrations in years.

“Iranian Patriots, KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!!… HELP IS ON ITS WAY,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social, adding he had canceled all meetings with Iranian officials until the “senseless killing” of protesters stopped.

The unrest, sparked by dire economic conditions, has posed the biggest internal challenge to Iran’s rulers for at least three years and has come at a time of intensifying international pressure after Israeli and US strikes last year.

An Iranian official, speaking to Reuters, said that people he called terrorists were behind the deaths of both protesters and security personnel. The official, who declined to be named, did not give a breakdown of who had been killed.

On Monday evening, Trump announced 25% import tariffs on products from any country doing business with Iran — a major oil exporter. Trump has also said more military action is among options he is weighing to punish Iran over the crackdown, saying earlier this month “we are locked and loaded”.

Tehran has not yet responded publicly to Trump’s announcement of the tariffs, but it was swiftly criticised by China. Iran, already under heavy US sanctions, exports much of its oil to China, with Turkey, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates and India among its other top trading partners.

Russia condemns ‘subversive external interference’

Russia condemned what it described as “subversive external interference” in Iran’s internal politics, saying on Tuesday that US threats of new military strikes against the country were “categorically unacceptable.”

“Those who plan to use externally inspired unrest as a pretext for repeating the aggression against Iran committed in June 2025 must be aware of the disastrous consequences of such actions for the situation in the Middle East and global international security,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Despite the protests, which come at a particularly vulnerable moment for authorities, given the scale of economic problems, and years of external pressure, there are as yet no signs of fracture in the security elite that could bring an end to the system in power since the 1979 Revolution.

However, underscoring the international uncertainty over what comes next in Iran, which has been one of the dominant powers across the Middle East for decades, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he believed the government would fall.

“I assume that we are now witnessing the final days and weeks of this regime,” he said, adding that if it had to maintain power through violence, “it is effectively at its end”.

He did not expand on whether this forecast was based on intelligence or other assessments.

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi dismissed Merz’s criticisms, accusing Berlin of double standards and saying he had “obliterated any shred of credibility”.

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Federal agents deploy tear gas, rubber bullets on agitators outside Minneapolis federal building

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Federal agents deploy tear gas, rubber bullets on agitators outside Minneapolis federal building

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Federal agents fired tear gas and rubber bullets after agitators hurled fireworks at them outside a federal building in Minneapolis on Monday amid continued resistance to immigration enforcement in the Twin Cities.

The tense incident unfolded outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building, which houses roughly a dozen federal agencies, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, a branch of the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The confrontation began after demonstrators threw snowballs at federal vehicles, authorities said. 

MINNEAPOLIS ICE SHOOTING OFFICER FOLLOWED TRAINING AS POTENTIALLY ‘DEADLY THREAT’ DROVE AT HIM: FORMER AGENT

A firework explodes near fencing outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building during protests on Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jen Golbeck)

Agents then issued warnings before deploying crowd-control chemicals at a group of roughly 80 to 90 protesters. Many demonstrators fled as agents fired rubber bullets and released tear gas. 

One protester then threw a firework over a fence while fleeing and it exploded shortly afterward. Other protesters were also seen launching fireworks toward agents, with the munitions lighting up the night sky. 

Officers and agents maintained a perimeter around the building late Monday, and it was unclear whether any arrests had been made.

The unrest came as Minnesota, joined by the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul, filed a lawsuit Monday seeking to halt or limit a surge of federal immigration enforcement in the Twin Cities.

DHS DEMANDS MN LEADERS HONOR ICE DETAINERS, ALLEGES HUNDREDS OF CRIMINAL ALIENS HAVE BEEN RELEASED UNDER WALZ

WATCH: Anti-ICE agitators harass federal agents in Minneapolis 

“This is, in essence, a federal invasion of the Twin Cities in Minnesota, and it must stop,” state Attorney General Keith Ellison said at a news conference.

The lawsuit alleges the Department of Homeland Security violated the First Amendment and other constitutional protections, accusing the Trump administration of targeting a progressive, Democratic-leaning state that welcomes immigrants. The suit claims the federal operation has flooded the Twin Cities with armed agents, sparked fear and unrest, and interfered with state and local authorities.

Fireworks explode above federal agents during a protest outside a Minneapolis federal building at night.

Fireworks are set off by protesters outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Minneapolis. (AP Photo/Jen Golbeck)

According to court filings, the plaintiffs accuse federal immigration agents of carrying out militarized raids across the Twin Cities, including stops at schools and hospitals, engaging in racial profiling, warrantless arrests and excessive force, and overwhelming local law enforcement. The lawsuit claims the enforcement surge was politically motivated retaliation rather than legitimate immigration enforcement.

The legal action comes nearly a week after an ICE agent shot and killed a 37-year-old Minneapolis woman during a federal enforcement operation in south Minneapolis. Federal officials said agents were attempting to make arrests when the woman tried to use her vehicle as a weapon against officers, prompting an agent to fire in self-defense.

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Fireworks explode above federal agents during a protest outside a Minneapolis federal building at night.

Fireworks are set off by protesters outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Minneapolis.

The Department of Homeland Security said more than 2,000 arrests have been made in Minnesota since December as part of what ICE has described as its largest enforcement operation in the state.

ICE officials on Saturday released a shocking list of the “worst of the worst” criminal illegal immigrants arrested during their recent surge. ICE officials said those arrested during the surge included convicted murderers, child rapists, pedophiles, domestic abusers and other violent offenders.

‘Tell Me Lies’ surprise fans with unexpected news ahead of season three

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‘Tell Me Lies' surprise fans with unexpected news ahead of season three

‘Tell Me Lies’ surprise fans with unexpected news ahead of season three

Tell Me Lies delighted its fans with thrilling news ahead of the release of season three.

Based on the novel of the same name by Carola Lovering, the story follows the toxic relationship between Lucy Albright (Grace Van Patten) and Stephen DeMarco (Jackson White). 

They first met during Lucy’s first year at college in 2007, in the drama department, and have kept on ruining each other’s lives till their present in 2015.

With season three around the corner, the streaming platform Hulu dropped the third episode along with previously released episodes one and two.

The first two episodes were titled You F*cked It, Friend and We Can’t Help It If We Are A Problem. Meanwhile, the third is called Repent.

The new season will continue after the jaw-dropping season two finale that ended with Stephen and Lucy’s best friend, Bree (Cat Missal), hearing a voice recording of her groom, Evan (Branden Cook), confessing that he slept with Lucy (Van Patten) back in college.

Their one-night tryst was known to viewers but not to Bree, who was finding out right before she was to walk down the aisle to marry Evan.

Following the cliff hanger which left the viewers with questions, White in conversation with USA Today teased season three saying, “people are dealing with consequences” this season, “and they’re having repercussions from the last few years.”

“It’s all coming to a head,” he said, “and it’s going to be explosive.”

Van Patten also hinted at what to expect from Lucy and Stephen relationship in season 3, saying that it geos “beyond what I even thought toxic was. I couldn’t even imagine these things if I wanted to.”

Season three of Tell Me Lies is set to premiere on January 13, on Hulu and Disney+. The episodes will release weekly on Tuesdays and will conclude on February 24.

Women’s Bracketology: First loss drops Texas off top line? Not so fast

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Women's Bracketology: First loss drops Texas off top line? Not so fast

A five-point defeat at LSU doesn’t erase the Longhorns’ five Quadrant 1 wins. The SEC has seven teams (!) in the top 16.

EPFO, India Post Launch FREE Doorstep Digital Life Certificate For EPS Pensioners — How To Book Home Visit

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EPFO, India Post Launch FREE Doorstep Digital Life Certificate For EPS Pensioners — How To Book Home Visit

New Delhi: In a major relief for pensioners, the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) has partnered with India Post Payments Bank (IPPB) to launch a free doorstep Digital Life Certificate (DLC) service for pensioners covered under the Employees’ Pension Scheme (EPS).

The new initiative is aimed at helping elderly pensioners, particularly those with mobility issues, avoid repeated visits to banks, post offices, or EPFO service centres to submit their annual life certificate. Submission of a valid Digital Life Certificate is mandatory every year to ensure uninterrupted pension payments.

What Is the Doorstep DLC Service?

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Under the doorstep facility, trained postal staff—such as postmen or Gramin Dak Sevaks—will visit pensioners at their homes and assist in generating the Digital Life Certificate using Aadhaar-based biometric authentication. The certificate is generated digitally and uploaded directly to the EPFO system, ensuring real-time verification.

Importantly, the entire service is free of cost for pensioners, as EPFO bears the service charges payable to IPPB.

The Digital Life Certificate, commonly known as Jeevan Pramaan, confirms that the pensioner is alive and eligible to continue receiving monthly pension benefits. Earlier, pensioners had to physically visit designated centres, which often caused inconvenience, especially for senior citizens and those living in remote areas.

Who Can Avail the Service?

The facility is available for EPS pensioners whose life certificate is:

Due for submission, or

Likely to expire within the next 30 days

This proactive approach is expected to significantly reduce delays and pension disruptions.

How to Book a Doorstep Visit

Pensioners or their family members can book a home visit by calling the IPPB helpline number 033-2202-9000. Once the request is registered, a postal representative equipped with biometric devices will be assigned to complete the process at the pensioner’s residence.

EPFO’s Instructions to Field Offices

EPFO has directed its zonal and regional offices to widely publicise the doorstep service and assist pensioners in choosing the most convenient mode of life certificate submission. Pensioners are also encouraged to explore alternatives such as self-submission using mobile phones through face authentication.

The initiative reflects EPFO’s broader push towards digital inclusion, ease of living, and pensioner-centric governance, ensuring that age or physical limitations do not become barriers to accessing rightful pension benefits.

 

 

Experts reveal the ‘sweet spot’ for the most valuable Disney VHS tapes

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Experts reveal the ‘sweet spot’ for the most valuable Disney VHS tapes

Despite what viral TikToks suggest, experts say most dusty Disney VHS tapes hidden in basements are worth only a few dollars, far from the fortune needed to buy Cinderella’s castle.

Streaming has sparked a wave of nostalgia, prompting people to dig through old collections in hopes of striking it rich. But experts, cited in a resurfaced Heritage Auctions article, warn that most claims of valuable Disney tapes are wildly exaggerated, enough to make Pinocchio’s nose grow.

That said, there is a 10-year “sweet spot” for VHS collectors in which experts say tapes were rarer and therefore, more sought after today. Unfortunately, the commonly found animated classics from the late 80s and 90s, including “Snow White,” “The Little Mermaid,” “Cinderella,” and “The Lion King,” remain plentiful and inexpensive, often selling for under $10 from both online resellers and thrift stores.

Still, how much a Disney VHS tape is worth really comes down to a few key factors, including the release year, condition, whether it’s still sealed or already opened and rarity.

According to Heritage Auctions, which frequently appraises and sells vintage media, only very specific types of VHS tapes attract collector interest. Tapes that tend to sell well include films released before the 1990s, select titles from the late 70s and early 80s, sealed copies with original studio watermarks, and a handful of early Disney releases such as “Tron,” “The Black Hole” and early cartoon compilations.

Most Disney animated films released after 1990 hold little to no collector value, with only the earliest VHS releases produced before 1985 attracting interest from serious collectors
Most Disney animated films released after 1990 hold little to no collector value, with only the earliest VHS releases produced before 1985 attracting interest from serious collectors (Getty Images)

Early VHS tapes matter more with a “sweet spot” from 1977 to 1986, when VCRs were expensive and fewer tapes were produced, making surviving copies rarer today.

By the 1990s, Disney mass-produced VHS tapes, sharply reducing their resale value. Even among Disney tapes, only a few categories consistently sell for higher prices, including pre-1986 releases, limited or controversial titles like “Song of the South,” and select Black Diamond editions in exceptional condition.

The so-called Black Diamond editions, early Disney VHS releases from 1984 to 1994, marked with a black diamond “The Classics” logo on the spine, are one of the most talked-about categories online, fueled by myths about high collector value. Yet, experts at Heritage Auctions said the idea that all Black Diamond tapes are valuable is misleading.

Context is important here. For instance, a Black Diamond copy of “Beauty and the Beast” reportedly sold for over $10,000 in April 2024, but it was part of a charity auction, which can greatly inflate prices. Under normal circumstances, even high-end Disney VHS tapes typically sell between $100 and $300 if sealed or rare, while most opened copies fetch only $5 to $25, experts said.

Unless you’re holding one of the very earliest Disney VHS releases from before 1985 in near-perfect condition, most Disney animated films released after 1990 are essentially worthless to collectors, so they can safely stay in the basement.