I've been thinking about the first two Rugrats video releases - "A Baby's Got to Do What a Baby's Got to Do" and "Tales from the Crib". I've noticed that every episode in "A Baby's Got to Do What a Baby's got to Do" have all four of the main babies, but all the episodes on the original release of "Tales from the Crib" are Tommy and Chuckie stories, without Phil and Lil (the Paramount rerelease contains The Trial, which has all the babies).
I've also noticed something about those titles. "A Baby's Got to Do What a Baby's Got to Do" sounds like a good title for episodes about adventures or new challenges (episodes like Weaning Tommy and Chuckie vs. the Potty would have been good episodes for such a release), but it has Touchdown Tommy which isn't really an adventure story. In fact, the title is a quote from an episode not on the video (The Barbeque), while the cover is based on a scene from an episode not on the video (Tommy's First Birthday).
Meanwhile, "Tales from the Crib" sounds like a good title for a release of episodes with a horror theme, or even a bedtime theme, but the only such episode on that release is Real or Robot. Let There Be Light would have been a good episode for this (but it's included in "A Baby's Got to Do What a Baby's Got to Do"), and if it were themed around bedtime (not neccessarily scary-themed), then Slumber Party and Be Careful What You Wish For would have made good episodes to include.
When looking at a Rugrats videography, I was reminded of the fact that very few VHS releases overlapped pre-1997 and post-1997 episodes. Post-1997 holiday specials are the main exception. I wonder if this was deliberate or more of a coincidence (well the post-1997 episodes kind of have a different style). I was recently looking at the contents list for the 10th anniversary releases, and it seems like the post-1997 episodes dominated those releases (but at least the unaired pilot got to be included as a bonus). I'm starting to feel that there was a way for fans to nominate/vote for episodes to include (can't remember for sure, do know that I didn't participate), so maybe the shows target audience preferred the later episodes.
And I must say that I recently watched one of the post-1997 VHS releases, Angelica Knows Best. For years I've been thinking that they weren't as good as the pre-1997 ones, but watching the video, I found that most of the episodes included were really good. When the show was brought back in 1997, I really enjoyed the new episodes, though there are some that I don't remember being too fond of back then (though there are classic episodes I'm remember being too fond of, like the one where Tommy dreams of alien versions of his family, or Grandpa's Teeth, or the one where they think Lil turned into a butterfly). Of course I started watching the show a lot less around the time Rugrats in Paris was released.
For years I've known that Touchdown Tommy was the first major appearance of Chaz (after he appeared in the background a few times), and for years I've noticed that Howard didn't get any dialogue in that one (though there are a lot of episodes where he doesn't get dialogue or has a real minor role), and something about this hit me recently. Could it be that Phil Proctor, the voice of Howard, wasn't available for this episode, so they gave Chaz a big part (the two do seem a little similar, both kind of nerdy). Of course with the plot involving the fathers watching a big football game, they probably wanted another adult to be included as well (of course they could have had Boris fill that role).
And after watching a few episodes recently, I've noticed a few instances involving Angelica where I wonder if they had intended on using Susie but settled for Angelica instead. I know I mentioned somewhere that her scene in Feeding Hubert seems like it should have been Susie (she helps the kids in that scene, and it doesn't look like she's trying to get them in trouble). And there's the ending to The Mysterious Mr. Friend, where she shows up with the Mr. Friend doll that the babies got rid of by luring it past the loose fence board. The babies run off, but she doesn't seem too proud of the fact that she knows a new way to scare them... She just looks slightly confused but says that she thinks it's a neat toy (I could see Susie enjoying it while the babies are scared of it). And I feel like there's another time that I was thinking about recently that I just can't remember now.