Opinion What it means when movie theaters in Black neigborhoods close - "Segregation is real. Racial fears are real."

What it means when movie theaters in Black neigborhoods close
Chicago Sun-Times (archive.ph)
By Alden Loury
2024-12-07 11:30:01GMT

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ShowPlace Icon Theater at 1011 S. Delano Ct. in the South Loop. AMC recently purchased the theater with plans to reopen it. Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

A decade ago, when my oldest daughter was preparing for the road test to get her driver’s license, I took her to the parking lot of an abandoned movie theater at 62nd Street and Western Avenue. It was a familiar scene for her. When she was a small child, we’d go to see movies there until it closed in 2007.

My middle daughter hopes to get her driver’s license soon. On several occasions over the past year, I’ve given her driving lessons in the parking lot of the old Cinema 8 Lansing theater on Torrance Avenue in south suburban Lansing. We’d catch an occasional movie there, before it closed in 2020.

Next year, I’ll probably do some laps with my youngest daughter — who’s taking driver’s education classes now as a high school sophomore — in the parking lot of the old Cinema Chatham theater, which closed earlier this year. Located on 87th Street just off the Dan Ryan Expressway, the Chatham theater is the one I’ve frequented the most over the past 25 years. Losing it was a real gut punch.

Notice the pattern.

With no other drivers or pedestrians around, these lonely, forgotten multiplexes are great for young drivers to get comfortable behind the wheel. But they would also be great for their intended purpose: to watch movies.

Sadly, few theaters in Black spaces in the Chicago area survive for very long. I’ve been to all of them at one time or another, and practically all of them have met the same fate.

The most popular movie theater of my youth was attached to the old Evergreen Plaza shopping mall just outside the city at 95th Street and Western Avenue in suburban Evergreen Park. While the village was mostly white, the patrons of the theater and the mall — affectionately known in those days as “Ever Black” Plaza — were mostly Black. The theater was closed in the late 1990s.

Lincoln Mall Cinema in south suburban Matteson closed in 2001. The River Oaks theater locations in south suburban Calumet City were all closed by 2006. And the 10-screen theater on Roosevelt Road in North Lawndale on Chicago’s West Side was closed for good in 2018.

Limited economic power — or intentional disinvestment?
Some might view the demise of these theaters as evidence of the limited economic power of Black residents. But they’re wrong. I’d argue that it’s segregation and disinvestment that kills business in Black communities.

For decades, with neighborhoods and schools in and around Chicago, as the presence of Black residents and Black students have increased, others have fled. The same holds true for movie theaters, malls and restaurants — as the numbers of Black patrons increase, other groups simply stop coming.

It’s the reason why the Walmart on 95th Street in mostly white Evergreen Park and the Red Lobster a few miles west in majority-white Oak Lawn are largely patronized by Black folks.

Over the past 30 years, as the south suburbs became increasingly Black, the regional malls there suffered mightily. While Black residents embraced Lincoln Mall and River Oaks, others moved and took their dollars to the Orland Square Mall and other shopping destinations. Lincoln Mall was demolished, and River Oaks is barely hanging on.

Meanwhile, Black communities in the city and suburbs struggle to retain existing businesses and to attract investment. Some of the nation’s strongest brands — Walmart, CVS, Target, Walgreens and Whole Foods — have closed locations in Black neighborhoods.

AMC Theatres last month announced that it was reopening the shuttered ShowPlace Icon theater in the South Loop. An AMC official said the company has made it a priority to identify “popular and well-performing theaters in areas where we believe moviegoers are underserved.”

No place is more underserved than Black Chicago, but it all makes sense. Why should retailers locate in areas where no one outside those areas wants to live, dine, shop or send their kids to school?

Segregation is real. Racial fears are real. And their economic impact is almost entirely felt by the group being shunned. For Asian, Latino and white residents in metro Chicago, their highest segregation measurements are with Black residents, according to research from Brown University.

Across America, Black neighborhoods are the least likely to grow. Census data show just 35% of majority-Black census tracts nationwide increased in population from 1990 to 2020, compared to 63%, 69% and 73% of Latino, Asian and white census tracts, respectively. Things were much worse in Cook County, where just 11% of Black census tracts increased in population during that time.

Last month, Inner City Entertainment — the Black-owned company that opened the theaters in Chatham, North Lawndale and at 62nd and Western back in 1997 — won zoning approvals for an entertainment center at 71st Street and Jeffery Boulevard in South Shore. The venue will include a Creole restaurant, an eight-lane bowling alley and a seven-screen, dine-in cinema. It is planned to open in 2026, and I plan to be there as often as I can. It sounds like a wonderful place, but if Black South Side residents don’t show up, it might not survive.

Alden Loury is data projects editor for WBEZ and writes a column for the Sun-Times.
 
For decades, with neighborhoods and schools in and around Chicago, as the presence of Black residents and Black students have increased, others have fled.

How dare those whitoid cave beasts move away from Chicago's vibrant schools and businesses for safer, more functional communities!

With no other drivers or pedestrians around, these lonely, forgotten multiplexes are great for young drivers to get comfortable behind the wheel.

I thought this article would actually be about the movie theaters, but at least half of it is dedicated to his use of parking lots for teaching his kids how to drive. Don't get me wrong, that's great and all, but why should I care?
 
Any nigger can go to the wypipo theater in the non shit areas of Chicongo. They do not care about the colour of your skin.
 
Exactly. What is this shit? Chains and indie cinemas both have been in major decline due to the double whammy of streaming and the coof. Race has fuck all to do with it.
You expect the urban bughive black to know this? Even if they are smart enough to rise above their fellow pavement apes?

These are the people who think you should be able to sue Target and Wal Mart and force them to stay and rack up millions in losses "serving" your community that routinely vandalizes and shoplifts from these places to the point they literally cannot turn a profit.
 
I remember we were given tickets to some movie by an acquaintance who was a manager for a furniture chain. The furniture chain was one sponsor of the special showing, the local "Urban" radio station was the other. The audience was something like 1/3 black, 1/3 white and 1/3 latino. I can report the stereotype of black people never shutting up is 100% true. It was so loud you couldn't hear the dialog for most of the movie, even the special effects and soundtrack were sometimes drowned out. It was actually kind hilarious by the end, I guess because it was a movie I didn't have a huge interest in seeing in the first place.


You have to respect Tyler Perry. The guy knows his audience, knows roughly its size and knows what movies they want to see and how much he can spend making them to still make money. Hollywood would probably be doing better if more directors and producers adopted his attitude to the business.

Tbf I wish I had that audience for my viewing of the village

I just had to watch the film with a date and didn't even want to kiss her after experiencing how bad that movie was.

Also if you have ever heard a minority dude with a job talk about illegals or hood niggas they make fucking KKK grand wizards sound like bono.
 
Is Scott Adams was right again? :story:

Still, I wonder if movie theaters, Walmart, Target have closed locations in hispanic neighborhoods?
Depends on the breed of spic. But usually, they stay up. Because at least spics have some decency compared to nogs.
 
ShowPlace Icon Theater at 1011 S. Delano Ct. in the South Loop
South Delano Court sounds hilariously ghetto, but when I looked it up on google maps, it appears to be right in the center of downtown. Panning around, it's one of those little shopping villages blocked off from cars and with the usual gentrified iconography.

But most of the shops are "Permanently Closed", except a couple big corporates like Ulta and The Container Store. What mean?

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I always love when these black activists believe that corporations should be obligated to operate at a loss just because "racism".



Absolutely no correlating reason why people don't want to shop in black neighborhoods? Just straight racism.

I'm black, and I don't want to shop in black neighborhoods.
whats funny is the author is in chicago. cant have shit in chicago. even north chicago and the cook counth burbs are getting fucked up now. any theatre closings in the 90s were due to crime, the 2000s the great recession and 2020s covid. no shit no one is going to invest in dril central.
 
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Big Box stores close in black areas of Chicago because of rampant theft and now they say it's racist anytime any business closes in their neighborhoods.
 
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Back when Howard Stern wasn't nuts, he made an honest point with Blacks and movie theatres. Many of them were initially sustainable since Blacks tend to purchase snakes and drink at the lobby, but the damage sustained to the seats and screens wasn't worth it and many failed to sustain a profit since the equipment would have to repeatedly be replaced.

There was a longer clip on Youtube but I didn't archive it in time, oh well.

Edit: Found an older clip off archive.org
 

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Over the past 30 years, as the south suburbs became increasingly Black, the regional malls there suffered mightily. While Black residents embraced Lincoln Mall and River Oaks, others moved and took their dollars to the Orland Square Mall and other shopping destinations. Lincoln Mall was demolished, and River Oaks is barely hanging on.
So as more of one resident moved into an area and another resident moves out, the resident that moved away stops patronizing establishments where they used to live?
 
Still, I wonder if movie theaters, Walmart, Target have closed locations in hispanic neighborhoods?
They have. More because of junkies than Mexicans though.
Even during the LA riots Mexican neighborhoods are less likely to be looted compared to every neighborhood with a large black population.
 
I always love when these black activists believe that corporations should be obligated to operate at a loss just because "racism".



Absolutely no correlating reason why people don't want to shop in black neighborhoods? Just straight racism.

I'm black, and I don't want to shop in black neighborhoods.
It all boils down to Griggs v. Duke Power and the Civil Rights Act that has channeled the belief that differences in outcome can be attributed to discrimination.
 
Don't be silly, Shaniqua, the movie theaters didn't close because of racism they closed to ensure you had an empty parking lot to teach your kids how to drive in.

So you and your homies get together, and every time someone steals, doesn’t matter if it’s Shaniqua or Tyrone, you beat the ever living shit out of them, and let them it’ll be worse if they do it again.
That's literally how the mafia started.
 
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