^You have to have a membership card, not a credit card.
^You have to have a membership card, not a credit card.
Or the cornmeal on the catfish?And the fact they turned down Netflix only to be out-earned by them in the billions, the icing on the cake. Or the salt on the popcorn, or whatever.![]()
RedBox still loses out in cost/day. And some may want to keep a DVD for a few days in order to go through all of the special features, commentaries, etc.
^You have to have a membership card, not a credit card.
^You have to have a membership card, not a credit card.
So, you take your parent's membership card with you to the store. At no point in time did a kid need to physically have a credit card with them to rent at Blockbuster.
For them, I suppose. FUCK Blockbuster.Too bad they didn't think of it earlier.
Nov 07, 2009Blockbuster says it's closing around 900 of its stores by the end of next year.
Nov.12, 2009Blockbuster said it expects to close at most 115 stores in the fourth quarter. That's in addition to the 216 it has closed through the third quarter.
The company said it will have 2,500 Blockbuster Express vending kiosks by year's end.
They are completely changing what type of company they will be. It is such a corporate company which is owned by Viacom. They will no longer be a bricks and morter store in every town. In 2009 they changed their corporate branding to "Blockbuster Media" in some stores on the clerk's uniform & store signage.
They are trying every crazy idea they can including a doomed one like this:
Blockbuster to Rent Movies on SD Cards
November 11th, 2009
This post lays it all out what Blockbuster is truly up against.
http://www.trekbbs.com/showpost.php?p=3542824&postcount=8
Eventually they will be reduced to vending kiosks and that's it. RedBox, Netflix, and downloadable video-on-demand (from many content providers) in the next 5 years will seal Blockbuster's coffin.
Both Bockbuster and Hollywood/Movie Gallery sat and watched the industry change while thinking they didnt need to adapt because people will always rent at the brick&mortar. Now they are trying to catch up to Netflix, Amazon and Redbox hoping that their "brand" will give them business. Not sure thats going to work. Partially because they don't have the cash flow anymore. Ten years ago when the writing was appearing on the wall was when they should have been looking into new technology and business models. Very shortsighted. Also they're still tryin to appeal to a generation that has outgrown their dated business model while driving away the customers that might still be willing to use it.
The large mega Bookstores and music stores are in a similar situation. The music store has pretty much died already. Many bookstores are on shakey ground. I spent over twenty years in retail books and video. The playing field has changed. The big boxs killed the independents. Now "mail order" and downloading is killing the big boxes. Its a digital age and entertainment media is going digital. Music, movies and even books downloaded right to your home or portable device. A hamburger, not so much.Both Bockbuster and Hollywood/Movie Gallery sat and watched the industry change while thinking they didnt need to adapt because people will always rent at the brick&mortar. Now they are trying to catch up to Netflix, Amazon and Redbox hoping that their "brand" will give them business. Not sure thats going to work. Partially because they don't have the cash flow anymore. Ten years ago when the writing was appearing on the wall was when they should have been looking into new technology and business models. Very shortsighted. Also they're still tryin to appeal to a generation that has outgrown their dated business model while driving away the customers that might still be willing to use it.
It's not outdated, just in need of a tune up. For all the talk about "automatic" this, and "walk through/drive through" that, we still have b&m bookstores, music stores, resteraunts, etc.
Cosby, BB corporate stores don't have late fees.
The large mega Bookstores and music stores are in a similar situation. The music store has pretty much died already. Many bookstores are on shakey ground. I spent over twenty years in retail books and video. The playing field has changed. The big boxs killed the independents. Now "mail order" and downloading is killing the big boxes. Its a digital age and entertainment media is going digital. Music, movies and even books downloaded right to your home or portable device.
A hamburger, not so much.
Cosby, BB corporate stores don't have late fees.
only because of netflix they dont, they charged us late fee's up the whazoo for years and years though.
oh yea, and those pesky "rewind fees"... dont miss them much at all
The large mega Bookstores and music stores are in a similar situation. The music store has pretty much died already. Many bookstores are on shakey ground. I spent over twenty years in retail books and video. The playing field has changed. The big boxs killed the independents. Now "mail order" and downloading is killing the big boxes. Its a digital age and entertainment media is going digital. Music, movies and even books downloaded right to your home or portable device.
Great if you're a tech-head. For everyone else, not so much. We've been lectured since the late 90s about how everything was "going cyber" and "eCommerce". It's STILL niche. A sizeable niche, but a niche nontheless. Try browsing a book online, for example. For that matter, I remember being told that by now there wouldn't BE any new printed books, that everyone would have a "book pad" that stored chipped or dl'd manuscripts. That didn't happen either.
A hamburger, not so much.
Not that they didn't try. There have been coin op "automat" cafeterias since the 40s, but they never took off. There is and always will be a considerable number of people who want to conduct business with ACTUAL other people involved.
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