Zunu wrote:Fry's was never big in NYC
I should clarify that my nostalgia for Fry's dates back to 1997-1999, when I moved out to Silicon Valley to join my Engineering friends who had all moved out there a couple years earlier. I was the Liberal Arts oddball in our group, but with the DotCom boom happening out there, my friends told me that even I could get rich working with computers. That's how I became a technical writer.
Anyhow, while we were living out there, we had so many different Fry's locations within driving distance that we could actually say "Let's not go to
that Fry's, let's go to the
good Fry's."
Zunu wrote:but we used to have a comparable place called J&R's Music World that sold CDs, computers, cameras, home appliances, children's toys etc.
Yeah, that was Fry's. Books, magazines, CDs, DVDs, video game consoles (PlayStation versus Sega Saturn versus Nintendo 64), PCs and Macs (including parts to build your own; Mac clones were still a thing, gamely competing against the first iMac), tools, peripherals, software (back when people bought boxed software off the shelf), pretty much any consumer electronics you could imagine (everyone had a PalmPilot), TVs and stereos, electronic keyboards and drum kits, home appliances, hobbyist electronics, scientific toys, office toys and supplies, RC and model kits, Nerf guns, Lego sets, some prepper/camping equipment, seasonal and novelty gifts…
And then of course snacks by the checkout lanes…
Many disparate types of products, but when collected together under one roof, it appealed to a particular type of customer.
You can get all of that stuff from Amazon now, and Amazon's algorithm tries its best to keep you clicking, but it's just not the same.
Zunu wrote:Shopping malls on the whole have completely changed since when I was a little kid. Back then every big mall had a bookstore, and electronics hobby store like Radio Shack, an overpriced gadget store like Brookstone, an arts and crafts type store where they would sell yarn and fabric, a store where you could buy music, and maybe even musical instruments like clarinets and pianos, and so on.
Now I live literally in walking distance of three malls. Not a single bookshop or hobbyist/enthusiast store between them except for a GameStop, I guess. Just clothes, sneakers, jewelry, etc. There's Costco,Target, Best Buy, an Apple Store, etc. Like esm just said, they can be fun to browse. But they aren't really the same as how it was back in the day. They're not the kind of store where the staff themselves are people who work there because they too are enthusiasts.
This.