| Article
by Dan Budnik
Aren't DVDs great? I mean, come
on. They look great, sound great
and have all those great extras
on them. And, what about that internet?
Have you been on that? Isn't that
something? All the things you could
ever want and just that little bit
extra. Convenient, expansive and
loaded. Why on earth would someone
who is currently using the internet
spend any of his time writing about
old video stores? Why not write
an article called "My First Six
Months on Netflix" or "I Just Download
It Now!"? Seems more productive.
Well, Halloween is a holiday. Holidays
are for fun. One of the places holidays
acquire their fun from is through
the concept of "accumulated nostalgia"
and --
Good Lord, do you folks know the
guy in the last paragraph? Friend
of yours? What was he talking about?
The purpose of writing this article
is to spark the memory. Many of
you reading this have been to some
really great video stores in your
lives. We hunt, collect and accumulate
so many of these strange movies.
Now, the internet can make the search
much easier. But, I'm here to send
out just a whiff of remembrance
your way. To take you back inside
those great movie shelters of our
youth (or not youth). I'm going
to sort of ramble through the great
video stores I remember frequenting
at one time or another. There was
much more structure to this article
when I first wrote it but why? The
video store journeys I took weren't
structured, they were fun and exciting.
So, put your good pants on, grab
your membership cards and let's
travel.
There were two ways I remember acquiring
movies (Beta) in the first half
of the 80s. One was mysterious and
exciting and completely above board.
One was a bit on the sleazy side.
Both of them were kind of erratic.
We'd never know what we were going
to end up with. All part of the
experience, however.
I'll start with the sleazy. Although
it was the first place I remember
getting movies from, it wasn't technically
a video store. It was a place I
like to call: Jack's House. Or maybe
his name was Steve or Ted. I think
Jack suits him just fine. Maybe
he'd welcome me calling him Jack,
wherever he is now. I don't know.
But, Jack was a guy that my step-dad
Frank (I'll call him Pop) knew.
Jack would provide us with the newest
releases several times a month.
Sudden Impact,
National Lampoon's
Vacation, Christine,
The Dead Zone,
The Bitch…you
name it, Jack got it for us. The
problem with Jack was the Movie
Pick-Up Procedure.
He was a divorced gentleman with
a son named Jack Jr. I always seemed
to be the one who went along with
Pop to pick up these things. Jack
would welcome us into his house
and say "Jack Jr., show Dan your
new whatever-the-hell-you-kids-play-with-now."
The awkward thing was that Jack
Jr. was two years younger than me.
I was around eleven at the time
and, for kids, this is a hell of
a gap. And, I used to read a lot
and write. Jack Jr. did nothing
but watch TV. I remember sitting
silently for long periods of time.
It wasn't fun.
Meanwhile, Pop and Jack would sort
through the latest batch of movies.
Jack had made copies of them from
somewhere-or-other. We'd generally
walk away from there with two good
ones. The general sleaziness of
Jack's place, however, was nothing
I could articulate but it was palpable.
He'd get too close to me when we
talked. He had dozens of Playboys
stacked in a cabinet in the bathroom.
His shorts were too short. You know
him now. One of those guys. I never
liked it but, as I was the oldest,
I always seemed to be the one to
go along.
The end of our time with Jack happened
quickly and was a sweet relief.
One day, we went over there for
Krull.
I was anxious to see Krull
(what kid wasn't?) and was very
willing to make the visit this time.
It was summer; it was hot. Jack
and Son were in bathing suits with
towels draped around their necks.
My Pop, being a genial sort of fellow,
accepted their offer of stepping
into the backyard.
"Come on in, Frank and Dan! The
water's fine!" Jack was gesticulating
wildly for us to join him. Jack
Jr. was waving too. In my mind,
anything that these two endorsed
so heartily must be creepy.
I was not proven wrong.
"No thanks, Jack! We'll just get
Krull
and go," my Pop said. "Anyways,
we didn't bring our suits!"
"Suits?!"
In one quick movement that has slowed
to a crawl in my mind, Jack and
Son dropped their trunks, smiled
and dove in the water, in full regalia,
enjoying the fresh air.
"We're gonna take off!" Pop could
move fast when required. We were
in the car in seconds.
"Holy God, Danny! Let's never go
there again."
I never did.
The mysterious way of renting
I mentioned involved the earliest
sort of Mom-and-Pop video store.
After a time, chains began popping
up and things become slightly more
systematic. But, around 1984 or
so, every enterprising person seemed
to be opening up a store offering
all the videos they could. "Retail
Price: $79.95" "Have you been to
one of these places? You put down
a deposit of $50 and you get a tape
for $3 a night. You can bring a
movie home!" These stores were usually
in little strip mall areas and attempted
to encompass the whole of creation.
"Video Universe", "Video Galaxy",
"Video Dimension". The employees
were generally one person. I remember
more moms than pops in these stores.
They would rent to you but always
seemed a touch wary and more than
a little surly. Microwave
Massacre is not
a diamond necklace but at 80 bucks
it sure must have felt like it to
these folks. So, I remember occasionally
feeling uncomfortable in these places.
You'd get the "Stink Eye" a lot.
All of this flew by the wayside
when you were in the aisles. Shelf
after shelf of wonder. Some funny,
some action-packed, some scary,
some sleazy and some as unknown
as The Unknown Comic (before we
found out who he was). The big boxes
would leer at us. Since most of
the films weren't first run or well-known
at all, it was box art that sold
it. In fact, the only spot of the
video store that sold itself was
in the closet-like area in the corner.
Usually covered with a curtain or
blanket or whatever they could find
in an old trunk from the attic.
I remember one that used a shower
curtain and one in Canandaigua,
NY that had a curtain with toy boats
on it. "Our good one tore yesterday!"
"Did that one have He-Man on it?"
"If you'd like to be asked to leave
the store, you're talking to the
right guy!"
Because I was absolutely terrified
of horror films that were in any
way modern, I could only look at
the box art. My Uncle Mike and a
girl in my class, Pam Adamski, would
give me all the details on the latest
slashers. But, I could only stare
at the boxes. I was too frightened.
The big boxes didn't help with the
fear of the dark thing but I couldn't
stop looking.
What in the name of the Bright &
Shiny One could be in that basket
on the Basket Case
box? I stared at that box for quite
some time. I was at the Drug Carnival
(?) in Irondequoit, NY around 1984-5.
It was in that spot where the Walmart
now stands. Off the 104. You know
the spot. The Drug Carnival shared
the plaza with some sort of department
store, possibly Two Guy's. They
had mostly drug store stuff but
there were videos in the corner.
And, we occasionally rented from
there. But, not Basket
Case. That would be
later on. The gruesome pictures
on the back gave me the Screaming
Strawberries so I wasn't even considering
that. (Although, if it gave me nightmares,
isn't that sort of like getting
the movie for free?) Then, I saw
the box for Blood
Feast.
"Ma, can we rent this one?"
"My God, no! You'll have nightmares."
"The lady has no tongue."
The actual movie poster is cool
but it doesn't beat that huge close-up
off the de-tongued woman. What is
this movie about? Blood
Feast! What a title!
It's unrated! What does a film do
to be unrated? My mind boggled.
This was one of the first places
that gave us a "List". The stapled
together series of papers that listed
the movie titles, genre and rating.
All very orderly. Pop would call
the kids round the kitchen table
and say "What movie do you kids
want? Pick two in case the one you
want is out." I'd sit with my sister
and, sometimes, my step brother
and we'd peruse. So many choices.
It was always more fun to look around
inside the store but we didn't always
get to go so you tried to make a
good choice. At this time, I was
renting Zucker brothers' movies
(or similar stuff like Ricky),
Benny Hill show tapes or Mel Brooks's
comedies.
As long as there was no visible
T&A in the area, they'd rent
it for me. I remember being so disappointed
at Transylvania 6-5000.
So unfunny. And, I thought this
when I was a dumb kid. That was
a really big "New Release" I was
after for some time. Man, I had
to watch Kentucky Fried
Movie twice to cheer
myself up. At that point, my parent's
sex rule became something I could
get around for the next few years
of renting. We picked up KFM that
night with no problem from the parents.
"It's made by the guys who did Airplane!"
And, it's loaded with boobs! Goodness.
I sat there with my eyes wide open
and my jaw dropping. I realized
that as long as there was no T&A
implied I could rent anything. That
meant two things: 1) I could come
across boobs and such with a little
subterfuge and 2) I could rent almost
any horror film I wanted.
The implications were startling.
But first, I had to get over my
complete terror of anything horror
related.
It was a little later (86'-'87)
that my sister and my Pop began
watching horror films together.
Well, A Nightmare on
Elm Street at least.
We used to go to Shows-To-Go right
up the street. An actual huge-ass
video store with everything. They
would hang out in horror and I would
be in comedy. I bought a copy of
Top Secret
on Beta for $4.99. Awesome! The
store had its cash register in a
round in the center of the store.
All videos were surrounding it on
the walls. Occasional shelving units
were spread about. Hours spent scanning
up and down walls looking for the
right one. And then, hours spent
scanning horror and wondering.
It wasn't until my freshman year
of high school in '87-'88 that I
got over it and the mania began.
Eric Zydel leant me a copy of Friday
the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives.
Now, granted, there's no gore in
the theatrical version but the night
I sat in our family room and watched
that film was a revelation. The
movie kept me on the edge of my
seat but I watched it. And that
night, I slept well. Evil
Dead 1 & 2 followed.
I was primed and ready to go. The
only problem was that Shows-To-Go
had recently closed down. A new
store that, frankly, catered too
much to the family for my tastes
opened up next door: Blockbuster.
These family leanings were rather
restrictive. I was only 14.
So, I found somewhere else to go.
Wegman's Supermarkets. Great places.
I used to work in their parking
lot, pushing shopping carts, for
a while. ("I've called this meeting
for all the Parking Lot guys to
discuss safety. Bob got hit by a
car again." Bob got hit by a car
a lot. You'd see him pushing a cart,
a car would pass to close and he'd
drop. A moment, later, he'd be back
up. Solid fellow.) Epic stores with…wait
for it…video sections. Last
time I went to Wegman's Video was
December 2004. No fun. Everything
you'd expect. If there was something
there that you didn't know about,
as with most DVD release, it was
because you weren't paying attention.
At the end of the 80s, however,
Wegman's was caught in the middle
of the Trash Flood. I'd pick 2 or
3 every week and still have so many
I had to get to next time. (I once
contemplated alphabetical renting
but that always fell apart quickly.)
My Ma would make a disapproving
noise ("Dr. Butcher,
M.D.? What is this
about?") and rent them. Pop loved
them so he didn't have a problem.
These were mostly VHS by this time
so I'd copy them over to Beta for
easier viewing. (We were a Beta
family until the last possible moment.)
Every week my Ma went to Wegman's
and, until I could rent on my own,
I would go too. With a list.
Back then, it was gore. Now, it's
strangeness. Funny how your tastes
mature.
Eric Zydel was the gentleman who
introduced me to the Old Church
Mall Video store. We spent many
hours, circa 1987-1991, enjoying
some of the sleaziest and stupidest
films you could ever want to see.
We were always looking for new and
exciting places were we could browse
round and find new and crazy trash.
He drove us there in his big truck,
which was always on "E". "I've got
to put gas in the car. How much
change do you have?" "75 cents."
"All right. I have 45. We'll do
that." Anyway...
The Old Church Mall Video store
was in a mall and the mall was in
a church. Well, it was a church.
Now it was a mall. The whole shebang
was in downtown Webster, NY. It
had been a church that they put
a couple of floors in and opened
up as a little mall. Local merchants,
knickknacks, bootleg CDs and, on
the top floor a majestic video store.
If you think about a church real
quick, you can imagine what it looked
like. This was a big, rafter-filled,
almost-Gothic church. You went up,
up a wooden staircase. When the
walls were suddenly covered with
movie posters, you were almost there.
A few more steps. Then, you entered
the worship place. There were huge
wooden rafters stretching all over.
A lot of space. The two side nooks
where the confessional booths and
side pews would have been (down
below) shelved sci-fi and documentaries.
Horror films stretched all the way
up the back wall. Almost to the
rafters. The Church of the Video
was open for business. (Pretentious
or portentous? You tell me. I've
been writing too long to know.)
A lady with glasses and an attitude
ran the whole shebang. Her name
was Mrs. Barnaby. (I don't know
for certain but that's what I'll
call her.) She was very nice to
the fellows who rented porn. But,
she was always snippy whenever I
approached her.
"Hello. These two please."
"Zombie?
Bloodeaters?
Why do you want to rent these?"
"I like horror movies."
"I don't."
A gentleman would lean in, talking
loud. "Hey! Have you got Three
Nude Sisters and Their Hot Gramma
III? Or Horny
Old Men?"
"We have both. Would you like me
to see if the first two Hot Grammas
are in stock?"
"Sure."
"Ummm…Could I get these two
movies, please? I was here first."
"Look at the movies this kid is
renting, Rod!"
"Kid, why do you want to watch those?...Oh,
Mrs. B, when you're back there,
could you see if Grampa's
Got A Boner is in
stock!?"
"That's a good one!"
The horror section was formidable.
The films rented so stores stocked
them. The larger the video box,
the higher up the wall it went.
What is that up there with the jack-in-the-box?
Blood Fury?
No. Blood
Frenzy. Awesome.
They've got Blood Feast
and Two
Thousand Maniacs!
We'll get a pizza, throw some logs
in the fireplace and enjoy. With
great strain, I'd get the boxes
off of the wall. "Ahhh!! Just give
me the number! The number!" I'd
turn and see Mrs. Barnaby pointing
at a copy of The Goonies.
She wasn't lying. There was a small
white sticker with a number scrawled
on it on the front of each box.
So, I strained the boxes back onto
the wall, memorized the numbers
and got handed copies of Sex
with a Smile and Ride
in A Pink Car.
"I think I got the wrong numbers."
"Marty Feldman's in this one."
"I wanted The Prey."
"I should have known."
In the winter time, sitting before
the fire, with this weird, weird
trash was the best. It still is.
Without the joy of the hunt though,
it wouldn't have been the same.
The Old Church mall might, possibly,
be my favorite of all the stores.
Just the feel of the place. Even
Mrs. Barnaby's complaining didn't
blunt anything. Face out and startling,
the horror section was a sloppy
bath of sweat and joy. It also had
that great musty smell that you
really don't get anymore. Blockbuster
Videos are like Subway Sandwich
shops. In a pinch, the sandwiches
are OK but it's all very antiseptic.
Every once in a while you might
get an awesome sandwich but they
really aren't built for that. It's
convenience and volume. Blockbuster
is the same. They get you the new
stuff. They get it for you now.
But, that isn't what the adventurous
movie renter is after. I don't want
guarantees when I rent. I want things
to be as lawless and as musky as
the Old West. There had to be a
corner of the store (documentaries,
kids, softcore) that felt like no
one had been there in years. I want
to be able to rent Carnival
of Blood or not,
depending upon availability and
human whim. The Old Church Mall
was wonderful. Unfortunately, I
found it too late. I was going away
to college soon. The Church Mall
would be visited on vacations only.
And, because I had to work whenever
I was home, there wouldn't always
be time to stop by. The memories
are strong, though. I still have
my green, laminated membership card
somewhere.
(A word in Blockbuster's defense:
I haven't been in one for a while
but, when they first opened up,
they carried some decent horror
films. There was a brief period
where they seemed to be moving from
"Largest Chain of Video Stores"
to "Largest Chain of Videos Stores
for the Whole Family". Burial
Ground, Buried
Alive, Pigs,
Microwave Massacre,
Boarding House
(for Heaven's Sake). They used to
have some good stuff but, apart
from the rare exception, nothing
that other places didn't have.)
Shall we go to Ithaca, NY for
a while?
Ithaca is sort of in a valley between
two large hills. My Alma Matter
is on one: Ithaca College. My wife's
is on the other: Cornell. As you
hit the bottom of the hill, there
is a lovely town with plenty of
good time video stores scattered
about.
The first place I discovered was
Video Ithaca. Large and spacious
with lots of corners. Sci-fi and
horror were in a musky nook but
the New Releases were in a spot
with a great, big window. They seemed
to specialize in more artistic stuff
(I think folks call them "good movies".)
But, they had wonderful, wonderful
trash. The Wizard of
Gore was the first
film I rented from there. That night,
a bunch of us were renting Woody
Allen films, John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock
and, somehow, H.G. Lewis. How'd
that happen? I couldn't tell you.
I did get some looks that night.
"Why is there plastic sheeting under
that woman? Is that so when her
guts falls out she doesn't ruin
the floor of the restaurant? Or
is this all part of the illusion?"
In the end, folks enjoyed it. I
am always surprised at how folks
can profess to love the popular
and the good but be perfectly willing
to slog through the grime when given
half a chance.
Video Ithaca had a slightly sweet
musky odor. They used to have a
big, big rack of candy and two entrances.
So there were extra smells and a
cross-draft. Probably the nicest
musky odor of all of them. It was
the sort of smell that encouraged
one to go that little bit further.
I remember asking them when Black
Belt Jones was going
to come back in stock. The big box
was there but the movie never was.
I was told it was damaged. So, I
asked "How much for the box?" "We
can't sell you that." When I pointed
out that if they were getting another
they'd get a new box with it, I
was told to stuff it. When I pointed
out that if it was permanently damaged
what good was the box to them, I
was told to cram it. The fun we
had.
One weekend, Kevin J. Jolly (the
J stands for Jolly) and I took it
in our heads to become more sophisticated
movie viewers. So, we took to wearing
bath robes over our clothes. We
called them "smoking jackets". We'd
have in-depth "salons", which were
immediately enhanced by our generous,
cosmopolitan attitudes. One fine
afternoon, we decided to pick up
some films. We drove into town and
visited Video Ithaca with our smoking
jackets on. Were there bon mots
aplenty on this journey? You can
bet your big, square ass there were.
Oddly enough, no one who saw us
mentioned the odd vestments we were
in. We expected "Hey, what are you
two doinks doing in your bath robes?"
Maybe because it was a college town?
I don't know. I remember we rented
Girls
Nite Out and Weekend.
Cosmopolitan conversations were
afoot that night I can tell you.
After a few semesters of nothing
but Video Ithaca, I drove down the
road a bit. I saw a sign with a
little man wearing a crown and smiling.
What's that in his hand? A VHS tape!
Oh yeah! He's the Video King and
this is his domain. Mondays and
Tuesdays were 4 for 3 Day. You could
rent 4 good ones for $3.25 and have
them for three nights. What a selection!
Twisted
Nightmare? You
bet. Winterbeast?
Right here. Mark of
the Devil, you are
my friend.
Video King was a bit grimier than
Video Ithaca but it was large and
they always seemed to have strange
new releases that we'd never heard
of. (Winterbeast,
The Dead Next Door)
It was a big space that had a wall
extending down the middle of it
almost cutting it in half. Horror
and sci-fi on one side; new releases
and random odd stuff on the other.
I never met the King but I imagine
he is a happy man.
The final Ithaca joint was, I believe,
a Shows To Go. (I actually think
that's wrong but I can't quite remember
the name.) They had two locations.
One was a block or two away from
the King! The other was halfway
up the hill near Cornell. Both were
smallish, musty places. One of them
had their horror section up against
the back wall. The sci-fi section
was in a shelving unit in front
of it. You had to squeeze by the
sci-fi to get to horror. If I remember
correctly, when Ernest went back
to School, there was a large pencil
that jutted out of the cardboard
display for the movie. It sat in
the corner and it would goose you
when you went into or out of Horror.
You didn't bring ladies.
Real quick: This was the video store
were I rented Don't
Go In The Woods
for the second time. I went to the
counter, handed the lady the movie
and smiled. A moment later, she
stared at me, a little cross. "Where'd
you get this?" "Horror." "This isn't
one of ours." "Sure it is." "I don't
see it on the computer." "Well,
it's one of yours." "Oh, I see.
Here it is. Congratulations. This
film has been here for ten years
and it's never been rented. Enjoy."
I felt like a foster parent for
wayward videos.
All three of the video stores in
Ithaca had great character and charm.
You couldn't beat a town where if
you needed a movie you just traveled.
One of them would have it. Of course,
that's not necessarily true but
I always thought it might be. It
certainly put my little "K"
car through the ringer. Those hills
got pretty steep and the car was
always on the verge of collapse
anyways.
That makes me think… I love
digital technology as much as the
next guy. I like the proper aspect
ratio and some neat extras. But,
these stores with their skuzzy tapes
and anonymous movies had so much
character and they smelled so much
neater. I would always go the extra
mile to get something from one of
these places. One winter, I hopped
in the car and drove to the distant
Shows To Go. You drove down the
hill into town and then back up
another hill with a two-lane highway
road that had a grassy median that
dipped in sharply. Normally, it
was pretty safe but today a blizzard
was coming down. Visibility was
getting pretty bad. The roads were
getting slippery. But, dammit, I
needed to get some trashy films.
They had Satan's
Blade and The
Slayer at this
one. I had to go. You'll be happy
to know that I got the movies. The
lady in the store was quite surprised
that someone had come out. "I thought
the police had advised folks to
stay off the roads." That's no deterrent.
The drive back, though, had one
shaky moment that I'll never forget.
I was driving back down the hill
towards town. The grassy median
was now a white triangle shape dipping
into the ground. White falling.
White being churned up on the road
ahead. It looked like the police
warning had been ignored because
the highway was packed with cars
moving slowly but steadily. I was
in the right lane, focusing on my
driving and thinking "We'll order
pizza, watch movies and this'll
be great." At that point, I turned
and looked at the woman driving
next to me. She was probably in
her mid-40's, bundled up warm. As
I looked at her, she looked at me.
Her face was kind of sad. I wondered
why she looked like that. It's a
blizzard. We have these all the
time out here. Then, her face started
sliding away from me, leaving my
line of sight. Her melancholy face
never changing. I heard a horn beep
and snapped out of it. She had rolled
off the road into the median. I
looked into my rearview mirror and
saw her car at an awkward angle,
still. I like to imagine she had
the same look on her face. Oh, the
dumb things I'd do to get these
movies. You won't find me doing
something that crazy on EBay when
an original VHS copy of Tales
from The Quadead Zone
comes up for sale. Well, don't hold
me to that.
After Ithaca, I moved to Los Angeles.
The only video store I've found
here that has the thrill in it (or
had) was Super Duper Video in North
Hollywood, CA. They've been a Hollywood
Video since late-2003 but I still
remember them fondly. When you walked
in, it looked and smelled like a
Blockbuster. But, then you'd start
looking at the tapes. They had quite
a few movies I'd never seen or found
before. I began to loosen up here
and start diving into sci-fi, action,
softcore nonsense. All fun stuff.
Eventually, I realized that the
place did smell musky. It had just
been a while since I'd encountered
the smell. When they closed, I sighed
audibly. The whole San Fernando
Valley sighed with me.
Eddie Brandt's Saturday Matinee
is great. They are in North Hollywood
and have tons of VHS and DVD. Not
everything but quite a large selection.
Unfortunately, a lot of genres are
mixed together so there is never
that overwhelming horror/trash rush
you'd get elsewhere. Movies are
spine out because they have so many,
so the visceral thrill of accidentally
spotting something is gone. And,
rentals can get a little pricey
compared to the cheap Super Duper
Video. All these things shouldn't
discourage you, however. I go there
almost every weekend and find something
exciting. It's just the layout that
doesn't completely grab me. Searching
here takes a bit more. But, you
can find it.
I don't know. I think, at the end
of the day, that the old-school
video store was just more fun. All
the gross and offensive box art
was its proper context. It was being
used to sell the movies. Now, it's
historical. Still great to look
at but something is lost. I keep
an eye on recent direct-to-DVD,
low budget stuff and most of it
looks so desperately uninteresting.
Pictures on VHS boxes were usually
hilarious and banal or overly gruesome.
DVD pictures always make me think
"Oh look, a Jeff Stryker-wannabe
and Honey ‘Big Boobs' McGee
emoting like nobody's business.
Boring!" I can't help thinking,
though, that even these films might
have some interest in the old time
setting. We used to rent anything
that Video King put out and, as
I mentioned, they kept Nekromantik
and friends readily available. The
modern day stuff just isn't appealing
and I think part of that is the
setting.
I mean, who was Mrs. Barnaby? Why
was she surrounded by trash and
porn all day long? In the winter,
why did we never see her breath?
And, what were these films about?
Who made them? Were they all insane?
You're not going to think this in
the Blockbuster where they offer
you 400 copies of the latest release
with Lindsay Lohan or Rob Schneider.
And, although the old employees
could be surly, they had some stake
in the place themselves. Go to a
Blockbuster or somewhere like Best
Buy and all the employees are in
their twenties or younger and could,
sincerely, not give a crap. You
always feel like they've got the
wrong people in the movie sections.
"Yeah, I'm normally in office supplies.
I'm working movies today because
Bob is out." The people in the old
video stores seemed to actually
like movies. Maybe they didn't like
you but if they could answer your
questions what did it matter? I've
had employees at Best Buy stand
right in front of a movie and tell
me they don't have it or they've
never heard of it. That sucks.
Maybe it's impossible to describe
the thrill of the old video stores.
It's like trying to describe the
innocent romantic excitement of
a roller skating party. You need
to have been to one. Are there still
musky-wonderful video stores out
there? I believe so. But, they're
all selling their VHS stock. So,
now is the time. Get out there.
Maybe you'll find something no one's
ever heard of. Good luck. Make me
a copy.
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