• U7826391786239@lemmy.zip
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    10 days ago

    blockbuster = 1) be excited going to blockbuster for an awesome movie; 2) spend 45 minutes looking for an awesome movie; 3) getting fed up and settling for something that doesn’t look quite as stupid as everything else

  • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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    10 days ago

    Everything to do with nostalgia over Blockbuster is just comical. It was such a shit home movie rental store. The place was the McDonalds of video stores…

    • MoonMelon@lemmy.ml
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      10 days ago

      I just remember it being really expensive. I think it was $4 to rent? Plus the looming potential late fees. Whatever it was, at the time it seemed like a fortune. So you couldn’t really fuck around and rent “Mansquito 2: Womansquito” just for laughs because it really was a huge ripoff when a movie sucked, or was damaged, or something. Also the popular movies were never in stock. They would put hundreds of empty boxes on the shelves to make it seem like it was there, but the actual tapes were always gone.

      • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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        10 days ago

        To continue your analogy, the place didn’t have the Mansquitos, it was nothing but the tent pole movies.

        The mom and pop shops that Blockbuster drove out of business had all the unusual and hard to find stuff.

        • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          I was mad when they got rid of our local Video Zone. That place had the best ridiculous horror movies. Blockbuster had only the most middle of the road bullshit.

    • zikzak025@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      This was my experience. There was a local video rental place we used to go to that later sold out to Blockbuster, and everything just got far worse when they did.

    • Soulg@ani.social
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      10 days ago

      I loved blockbuster but I was definitely a child who probably didn’t know better

    • ecvanalog@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      The entire appeal of McDonald’s is being predictable. It’s mediocre but you know what you’re getting and it’s appealing to a lot of people. In that way, Blockbuster being McDonald’s is true — but also explains why it’s preferable to streaming in some ways. They had a limited selection but that selection didn’t change and you knew pretty reliably what kind of movies they would be carrying.

  • F/15/Cali@threads.net@sh.itjust.works
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    10 days ago

    Recommendations used to be better. There was a sweet spot for a few years where Netflix had everything and I could talk to the rental clerk about what we were watching, and I miss that. But video stores were too pricy to miss

    • Kühlschrank@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Blockbuster had gotten so monopolistic and predatory by the time Netflix was mailing DVDs that I was thrilled to end my membership with them.

  • MeatPilot@sh.itjust.works
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    10 days ago

    Blockbuster was meh. I missed my local movie rental joint that was next to a Chinese take-out.

    Used to be a ritual every other Friday for the spouse and I to order food than walk around the video store well we waited. We used to walk past the weird obscure tapes and come up with fake silly stories about what they were about and look at the goofy covers. Most times we’d rent something unexpectedly good, typically not from the new releases. I never really watch TV sitcoms, so I consumed most of my media this way. The magic was that multi-million dollar media companies didn’t pick what was available on their stream. The selection at the video store was more eclectic and not some sterile selection of just money makers. So I got to see some really good, not so popular, films.

    Also they still had VHS when Blockbuster converted DVD and fairly sure they bought all the old VHS tapes from that conversion. DVDs were still fairly new, so I only had a VCR. Yes, I rewound the tapes.

    • affenlehrer@feddit.org
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      10 days ago

      I don’t know if it’s different in the US but in Germany the local movie rental joints were usually split into a family and an adult section. I was always interested in horror and violent movies but to get to them you also had to go through all the really nasty porn movie shelves with the weird old dudes browsing them. I mean I like porn as well but these stores had really disgusting stuff…

        • affenlehrer@feddit.org
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          10 days ago

          While your country seems very tense with nudity and alcohol, Germany was very tense with violence and weapons.

          Eg there were usually special German versions of video games where blood and gore are removed. E.g. the special forces in Half Life are robots in the German version. The pedestrians in Carmageddon are also robots. I believe BioShock has certain animations removed. Wolfenstein has the Nazi symbols removed and at computer markets they only showed the Christmas edition where you fought against snowmen.

          Movies also exist in a German cut where e.g. RoboCop has like 15 minutes removed.

          Many movies where also “forbidden” and could not be advertised and I believe only sold if explicitly asked for by a customer.

          The whole situation has relaxed lately, I believe shortly after it was easy to obtain international version via the Internet.

  • SlothMama@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    The ex Blockbuster employee in me hates the barcode on here.

    It’s a rental so it should start with 33 not 39

    It has no copy number either, would likely be 001, 101, or 601.

    • MinnesotaGoddam@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Same, but I check out a lot of video games. It’s the same feel. I know it’s that I miss the pre-9/11 world. I don’t care. The library crowd is funny enough the dispensary crowd and the coffee shop crowd we all just kinda have the same haunts.

      Huh, I should ask the dispo if they mind me busking while I sell tamales out front (I could go through a few hundred bucks of tamales real fast. Not like that I’m a shitty salesman I’m just hungry)

    • Vespair@lemmy.zip
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      9 days ago

      Imo having film nerd employees to talk to and ask recommendations from was half the appeal of video stores. Yes, even Blockbuster.

  • wrinkledoo@sh.itjust.works
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    9 days ago

    Getting out of the house in a time before I could drive, get some candy, one of the big hit movies, 2-3 of the old release movies.

    Not paying for any of it.(This is the part where being a kid matters)

    Actually physically interacting with stuff instead of just flipping on netflix.

    We lost something as a species.

    • four@lemmy.zip
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      10 days ago

      Is this AI? I don’t see any obvious signs and there is a “signature” in the bottom left corner of the box with name “Doctor Photograph”, who seems to be the guy doing a lot of fake products: https://www.instagram.com/doctorphotograph/

      Unless AI learned to copy that too. I don’t have Instagram so I couldn’t check if he posted this particular image, though.

      • Stamets@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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        10 days ago

        No. It isn’t.

        This is the original image posted in 2022. AI was straight up not capable of this at that time. There is literally NOTHING about this photo that suggests AI other than the different text. People on Lemmy are turning into Facebook Grandparents but in reverse. People on Facebook can’t tell something is AI but people on here can’t tell what is real. I’ve had posts removed that I could prove were not AI as they were taken from multiple angles and were dated well before AI were capable of certain things but nah. Gotta be removed because the mod felt like they were AI.

        It’s gone past ridiculous and has cycled into pathetic.

        • dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de
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          10 days ago

          It’s the “It’s photoshopped, I can tell by the pixels” all over again but even more obnoxious this time. Sometimes I feel like people falsely accusing artists of using AI has done more damage to some than AI copying their work.

        • NecroParagon@midwest.social
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          10 days ago

          I saw someone comment on a short of a seal being rescued from plastic by Ocean Conservation Namibia that it was AI and that shit pissed me off so much. I’ve been following them for several years and they’ve done so much good work.

          So many dumbasses now just saying anything and everything is AI without doing a modicum of research.

  • danc4498@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    If you miss blockbuster, you probably weren’t old enough to pay for it. Or you were super responsible and never had to pay fees.

  • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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    10 days ago

    The latter for me. I remember thinking as a kid that things would just keep getting better. That the best time to be a kid was always the future. Now I’m glad I was a kid when I was and I wish kids today had it better than they do. I’m sure that’s at least 50% old guy viewpoint but I really think some lines have been crossed that truly make childhood in the 2020s harder than it used to be.

  • ecvanalog@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    I miss video stores, for sure. Blockbuster itself wasn’t great but it was so omnipresent in our lives that it has become shorthand for “video stores” the way Band-Aids are shorthand for adhesive medical strips. Often, when people reminisce about “Blockbuster,” it isn’t really about Blockbuster itself but just the culture of the rental store as it existed back then.

  • lordnikon@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Also you can still do the video rental store experience but even better where it doesn’t cost anything buy visiting your local library. Most libraries have lots of DVDs for checkout.

  • boogiebored@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Imagine having the time and energy to drive over to a building, park, mosey on in and wander around looking at what you might want to spend another 3 hours engaging with.

    • BanMe@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      We didn’t have endless-scroll dopamine machines in our pockets so we had to go out in the world and seek it out. Boredom bred creativity. It really was a better time in a lot of ways.

  • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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    10 days ago

    I do miss renting games, but in hindsight those games often kind of sucked specifically because they were still on the arcade model of difficulty 🤷‍♂️

    • frog_brawler@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Wait, what? The video game rentals had a set level of difficulty that couldn’t be changed in the menu or something?

      • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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        9 days ago

        No, the difficulty of games of that era was just a function of necessity.

        Not only did you have hardware limitations, games were deliberately designed to take longer that a typical rental period to beat, the goal being to get kids to either rent it again or have their parents buy it.

        So while an arcade game is designed to eat quarters, the console games of the 80’s and 90’s were designed not to be fun so much as they were designed to be too difficult to beat in a weekend.

        That’s one thing when it’s a game like Donkey Kong Country, it’s another thing when a platformer is designed to cause a bunch of deaths and game overs with required leaps of faith or whatever.