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The image is a bar graph that displays the annual number of rentals and sales (in various formats) of films from a particular store between 2002 and 2011. The vertical axis represents the annual number of rentals/sales, ranging from 0 to 250,000. The horizontal axis represents the years, ranging from 2002 to 2011. Four types of film formats are shown: Rentals, VHS sales, DVD sales, and Blu-ray sales. Each year has four bars representing the number for each format. The bars for rentals are consistently the tallest across all years, with a slight decline from 2002 to 2011. VHS sales start from a considerable number in 2002, with a steep decline to almost negligible by 2011. DVD sales show an upward trend until 2005, remain relatively stable until 2009, and then display a slight decrease in 2010 and 2011. Blu-ray sales start from zero in 2002, show a small increase in 2006, and then a significant upward trend from 2007 onwards, reaching a peak in 2011. Specific numerical data points or percentages are not visible; however, the trends and relative comparisons between formats and over the years are clear.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The vertical bar chart represents the number of movies rented and sold in a specific store each year in three different formats (VHS, DVD, and Blu-ray) over a nine-year period beginning in 2002.
Overall, film rentals indicated a gradual decrease throughout the years; however, there was a substantial growth in DVD sales, outselling other formats in the middle of the decade. In the remaining years, while VHS movie tapes vanished, Blu-ray films were first released at the same time.
Initially, there were approximately 185,000 film rentals from this specific store in 2002. The figure gradually declined over the recorded period and finally hit the lowest sales number of around 60,000 in 2011. In terms of the DVDs, despite starting at a modest volume of roughly 495,000 discs, the figure soared in the first four years. It reached a peak of 215,000 in 2007, which is over four times higher than its initial rates in 2002, before gradually decreasing to 190,000 at the end of the period.
At the starting point, VHS films registered the second-highest sales position, with approximately 85,000 videotapes. From this year onwards, the figure collapsed before being eliminated in 2005. Meanwhile, the Blu-ray counterparts emerged a year after the vanishment of the VHS format, but they did not receive much interest among consumers, with sales only ranging from 1700 to 5000 discs.
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