What's something you remember that probably won't exist in the near future?

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the retard is torring on the roux.
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I took a walk today and for some reason I remember as a kid it wouldn't be uncommon to find money on the ground, nothing big but every now and then you'd stumble over a dollar, though with things trending towards digital, I doubt as many kids experience this today and none of them will experience it in the future. It felt strange as I remember it was always exciting when it happened and it made me nostalgic but also a bit mournful.

What kind of things do you remember enjoying when you were younger that just aren't a thing anymore or won't be in the near future?
 
Malls.

I started following the whole dead mall and retail apocalypse thing in the mid to late 2010's. I didn't know how bad it was with the malls. I figured some of them took a hit after the late 2000's "Great Recession". I thought things would bounce back they just never did. Then I started following the dead mall stuff and I saw all the malls the got taken out after the recession. People blamed online shopping but that only accounted for a small percentage of overall retail sales. At one point it was as low as 5-6%. The highest I saw pre Covid was 8%. After Covid though I heard 16%. That still leaves a lot of room for physical brick and mortar retail. I haven't heard any new numbers lately though and I would like to see if everything opening back up after the Covid hysteria has caused the online shopping percentage to go back down. It could also possibly increase. I imagine it would with the price of gas going up and people less likely to drive. But honestly around me I don't see anyone going anywhere anyway. They come home from work and the cars just sit there.
One big problem with malls, IMO, is that they’re losing their variety of store types. Pretty much every mall used to have chain stores that sold books, music, electronics, toys… now a lot of those chains are gone, and nothing’s come in to fill that niche. Some of this, like record stores and electronics stores, is due to technology, but also during and after the Great Recession, a lot of them either went under or got bought out by other chains that only operate larger storefronts in shopping plazas. There's only so far you can get with nothing but clothes, cellphone providers, and a Bath & Body Works.

You'd think that would just leave more space for locally-owned independent shops, but the problem with that is renting space in the mall can be a pain in the ass. The mall generally dictates when you have to be open, which means that you have to be paying staff to be there on days and times when you know they're going to be standing around bored and aren’t going to get any traffic. Not to mention I assume the rent paradoxically gets higher with more empty storefronts that still need to be heated/cooled. I can see how for a lot of people, it would be more worth it to just go for the space in the shopping plaza or some weird little storefront downtown, because you'll have more control over things.

Kind of a shame because malls are one of those things that, in theory, should be extremely successful.

The whole area of shitty myspace, angelfire etc websites, with crappy coding, tons of flashing gifs yadda yadda.
Yes, they looked like absolute ass in most cases but they were pretty unique and charming in their very own way.
To piggyback off of this, the whole notion that an individual with no professional training could create their own website rather than upload content to a corporately-owner-and-moderated platform. I think we're almost there.

It's kind of crazy how quickly websites have followed the technology trajectory of cars and other electronics where it's gone from something your average joe might tinker with on the weekend, to something that has so much added complexity that most people take one look at it and nope right out.

Anyway, to answer the main question here: Movie theatres.
 
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One big problem with malls, IMO, is that they’re losing their variety of store types. Pretty much every mall used to have chain stores that sold books, music, electronics, toys… now a lot of those chains are gone, and nothing’s come in to fill that niche. Some of this, like record stores and electronics stores, is due to technology, but also during and after the Great Recession, a lot of them either went under or got bought out by other chains that only operate larger storefronts in shopping plazas. There's only so far you can get with nothing but clothes, cellphone providers, and a Bath & Body Works.

You'd think that would just leave more space for locally-owned independent shops, but the problem with that is renting space in the mall can be a pain in the ass. The mall generally dictates when you have to be open, which means that you have to be paying staff to be there on days and times when you know they're going to be standing around bored and aren’t going to get any traffic. Not to mention I assume the rent paradoxically gets higher with more empty storefronts that still need to be heated/cooled. I can see how for a lot of people, it would be more worth it to just go for the space in the shopping plaza or some weird little storefront downtown, because you'll have more control over things.

Kind of a shame because malls are one of those things that, in theory, should be extremely successful.


To piggyback off of this, the whole notion that an individual with no professional training could create their own website rather than upload content to a corporately-owner-and-moderated platform. I think we're almost there.

It's kind of crazy how quickly websites have followed the technology trajectory of cars and other electronics where it's gone from something your average joe might tinker with on the weekend, to something that has so much added complexity that most people take one look at it and nope right out.

Anyway, to answer the main question here: Movie theatres.
Malls just remind me of that mega autist Billy Coore that used to gush over some mall in NC or something other
 
One big problem with malls, IMO, is that they’re losing their variety of store types. Pretty much every mall used to have chain stores that sold books, music, electronics, toys… now a lot of those chains are gone, and nothing’s come in to fill that niche
I think you're right that many of them lost variety but there has been a lot of interesting stuff going on in some malls as they adapt. I've heard of some malls taking old anchor mega lots and turning them into things like indoor flee markets so you have a bunch of small lots sold to individuals at a cheap rate for short term leases so you can avoid CAM charges and other bullshit. They actually looks really cool, and I think if they figure out how to give good modular security so people can leave things set up but grated off it can be a more long term micro stand situation.

Some malls are doing great as well, but the whole point is to bring in foot traffic, and part of the cost is that marketing. Things like grocery stores are becoming more popular, as well as mini theme park type things that are basically expensive arcades, think escape rooms and things like water features or more immersive virtual reality experiences. Really if malls can overcome some of their bullshit management issues, they can see a comeback. Not in the same way we know them from the 90's and early 2000's but I think there's a lot of value to concentration of stuff, as long as you're not overcharging, which should change as the foot traffic is no longer as valuable as it used to be, so some of the cost for space should change.
 
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