They lost me when they stopped producing Kodachrome!
Me also. And Plus-X. And especially Panatomic-X, which I loved. There was, never has been, never will be another film like the old Panatomic.
I stocked up in the late '80s when almost expired stocks of Panatomic were being dumped in Australia for as little as $1 for a 36 roll. Also several 100 foot cans, two of which I still have in my film fridge. My goal is to use them before I pop off to that big darkroom in the wherever. But it looks as if Kodak as we knew it when I started in photography in the early '60s, will be in cloud land before I get there.
I did try Tmax 100 and 400, both good films but for me, nothing like the older emulsions. Eventually I moved to Ilford FP3 and HP5, and I've never looked back.
As for color, I used Ektachrome in the 1960s when I first got into photography. later Kodachrome with my first '35 camera. When Eastman pulled the plug on the latter film I followed what zillions did and went over to Fuji. Velvia 50 served me well until digital came along. That decision alone to dump Kodachrome probably cost Kodak a significant amount of its photo business. I know my long-held loyalty to Rochester certainly went down the tooter.
PS All the above of course written without any knowledge of what hidden agendas lie behind Kodak's 'leaking' of this information to the business media. WAs we know, in the bad mad sad murky world of business, when there is a will, there is always a way.
It can be difficult to know what to say or write when this sort of news hits the media. If this latest news is in any way accurate, it's sad news to me when an icon goes into decline and eventually fades into the ether.
I would be the last to say it's a deserved end to Kodak for the bad business decisions they made decades ago and the crappy way they've treated their customers at times, but that thought lingers in the back of my mind.
PS All this written without any knowledge of what motives Kodak has or had in 'leaking' this little bit of news to the media. As we know, in the murky world of business, when there is the will and the intent, there is always the way.