A husband and wife who were childhood sweethearts had no idea what to expect when they found an old VHS with a handwritten note attached to it.

Zachary Rogers and his wife, Skye, met in high school around 15 years old when they shared a French class together. As was the style at the time, they added each other on Yahoo Messenger and "immediately clicked."

Now in their 30s, together for almost two decades, married for eight years, and parents to a daughter, they've been through it all together, including, recently, the sad loss of Skye's beloved grandmother, who helped raise her.

Skye's grandfather, while going through his late wife's things, made a discovery: a VHS with a note to Skye from Rogers that he made in high school in 2006, with the words: "To Skye. I love you."

"He didn't recognize the handwriting and thought it was from Skye's Dad or something, but we immediately knew from the handwriting it was from me," Rogers told Newsweek.

"I sat there and just kept trying to think of where the heck that tape came from because I absolutely did not remember making it or what could be on it," he said.

Zachary Rogers and his wife, Skye, have been together since high school. They recently discovered a VHS with a note from 2006, with no idea what was on it. Zachary Rogers and his wife, Skye, have been together since high school. They recently discovered a VHS with a note from 2006, with no idea what was on it. Zachary Rogers

Unfortunately for Rogers, the VHS began to die in the market in the 2000s, being replaced by DVDs, Blu-ray, and, later, streaming. In 2008, the Los Angeles Times reported that the last-ever truckload of VHS tapes had left a warehouse belonging to major supplier Ryan J Kugler.

So while they waited to find a VHS player to play the mysterious tape, he shared the discovery to popular Facebook group Dull Men's Club, where it racked up over 1,700 likes and hundreds of comments demanding an update when they learned what was on it.

One user wrote, "Oh man. I'm so excited for you good luck," while another declared they were "on the edge of my seat."

And one, like many others, insisted: "I'd love an update once you find out!"

"The comments and reactions were shocking—how many came in and how interested everyone was in what could be on it," Rogers said. "People making jokes about what 'inappropriate content' could be on it, people who thought it was so sweet, people thinking I was making it up, people who desperately wanted me to update it and let them know what was on the tape."

Eventually, the couple went to his mother's house as she still had an old VCR, but as they "were not sure what could be on the tape," they sent their daughter and Rogers' mother out of the room, just in case.

"At this point, I was sure it was nothing bad and probably nothing amazing either. I had a camcorder and liked to edit videos, but I didn't remember making a video edit for a girlfriend, like ever," he told Newsweek, initially thinking it could be a movie she liked or a show he wanted her to watch.

"I was definitely hoping that 15 or 16-year-old Zach would have made an awesome romantic gift that we were just rediscovering, but upon hitting play, we were greeted with a lot of static. At first, I thought maybe it was a blank."

As the static faded and a familiar face came on screen, they realized what it was: WWE wrestling. Or, to be exact, the Saturday Night Main Event from March 18, 2006.

"Triple H was on the screen talking some trash, followed by John Cena and Shawn Michaels," he said. "I looked over at my wife, and she slowly turned her head towards me with this look that was equal parts, 'Omg, this is so funny,' and 'Omg, are you serious? More wrestling?'"

Rogers explained Skye was often forced to "tolerate" WWE when she was at his house as a teenager, and he likely made the video as a joke. The couple are pictured here in the early... Rogers explained Skye was often forced to "tolerate" WWE when she was at his house as a teenager, and he likely made the video as a joke. The couple are pictured here in the early days of their relationship. Zachary Rogers

He explained that he and his dad loved WWE during high school, and when Skye came over, she would "have to tolerate it, as she wasn't a big fan."

"I would ask her every now and then on a Monday morning—still do, actually—'Hey Skye, ready to watch Raw tonight?' I was and am normally greeted with an eye roll and a flat response of 'no,'" he said, laughing.

When the wrestling episode started playing on the rediscovered tape, "I almost immediately knew it must have been a joke tape," Rogers said.

"I just busted up laughing so hard. She joined pretty shortly after, and now we have a pretty hilarious story to add to our book."

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