I'm used to MSM portraying suburban shopping malls as soul-sucking places for boring people who don't know how hopeless they are, but when a shopping mall dies, they don't say, good, these places were always a blight on American small-town life, they bemoan the loss, as if whatever happens in Trump's America must be bad. The challenge is just to figure out how to say why it's bad. Today's story — "First, this town lost its Macy’s. Then Sears. Now, all eyes were on J.C. Penney" — strains to make WaPo readers feel for this town's aching loss. It begins:
HERMITAGE, Pa. — Barbara Cake had made the sale. A man was hovering near the gold bracelets at the J.C. Penney jewelry counter when she said, “Hi, sir, how are you?” Before long, he was swiping his credit card for both a bracelet and a pair of diamond earrings for his wife. But Barbara wasn’t done.The internet would not have an in-the-flesh lady named Cake to lure the man into buying bad diamond jewelry for his wife. The internet would not have Cake creepily flirt with the man by telling him he could tell his wife that other women want him. The internet would not bitch about presents it's not getting from its husband. The internet would just show us other things that customers who looked at this thing also looked at and comments by people who bought it telling us what they actually think of it. The internet wouldn't burden us with a "flimsy paper" receipt and lean in and murmur about it.
“If she doesn’t like these,” she told the customer, “then tell her you know a lot of ladies who would.”
“I just want my husband to buy me a watch,” she continued. “She should be truly happy with these.”
Barbara ripped the receipt from the register, pointed at the flimsy paper and, in a tone that sounded as if she were revealing a sworn secret, she delivered her favorite line.
“Just wait till you see what you saved.”
There were four days until Christmas, and this customer had decided against shopping online to come to a real store and talk to real people. To Barbara, that meant she had to provide something he couldn’t get from clicking buttons on a computer. Could the Internet assure the customer that he was making the right choice? Could it praise him for being a thoughtful husband? Could it make sure that he was getting the best possible deal?
Oh, but these deplorable people need a mall for human contact. A "hovering" man needs a real-life woman massaging him with sexual innuendo if he is to accomplish what for him is the formidable task of buying a Christmas present for his wife.
43 comments:
The nations high school news papers should be full of good news.
The WaPo is depressed because they genuinely thought Trump would be gone by now. And have come to the realization that he is here to stay.
The internet would not have an in-the-flesh lady named Cake to lure the man into buying bad diamond jewelry for his wife. The internet would not have Cake creepily flirt with the man by telling him he could tell his wife that other women want him. The internet would not bitch about presents it's not getting from its husband.
Oh just give the internet time. If that's what it takes to suck the remaining $20 out of the electronic wallets of the world's people, you can bet that same $20 the internet will evolve to do just that.
Reminds me I need to order face lotion from Amazon.
John Kobylt of John and Ken on KFI said long ago that brick and mortar stores deserved to die owing to rude and inattentive staff.
Today's story — "First, this town lost its Macy’s. Then Sears. Now, all eyes were on J.C. Penney" — strains to make WaPo readers feel for this town's aching loss.
They told the reporters to get out into the field and find out what it's like to live as a deplorable. This kind of thing was bound to be their first attempt.
Shop at JC Penney? Check.
Next up, eat at Waffle House.
And where did retail juggernaut Cake do her Christmas shopping?
"She had saved up enough to buy her 8- and 10-year-old granddaughters iPads, which she had purchased online with discounts."
It's bizarre how this works. We all become Luddites sooner or later.
Kroger has credit card readers that convert embedded chips into malfunctioning chips.
The chips do, as advertised, reduce credit card fraud. The card doesn't charge anything for anybody.
A shopping mall closes, and it is "Trump Derangement Syndrome." Ann Althouse's Trump Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome rages on.
Lots to think about in this post. Trump truly occupies a lot of people's minds, turning some of them into Eeyore: this is probably going to turn out badly, in one way or another. Retail is constantly changing, and this is always somewhat "disruptive," especially for staff; but it seems to be all about fine-tuning a business model in order to give consumers (closer to) exactly what they want. Intellectuals who don't run any comparable business can only whine that this all proves consumers are pathetic sheep who are being manipulated.
The internet would not have an in-the-flesh lady named Cake to lure the man into buying bad diamond jewelry for his wife. The internet would not have Cake creepily flirt with the man by telling him he could tell his wife that other women want him. The internet would not bitch about presents it's not getting from its husband.
Let's not pretend this is anything other than the low-dollar version of what happens at high end stores. Sasha, impeccably dressed in Armani, would love to show the well-heeled man a new Jaguar for his wife at Christmas.
And if you don't think she'll tell him how lucky his wife must be, and how she'd love a man to buy her a Jaguar for Christmas, you're kidding yourself.
"Chuck said...
A shopping mall closes, and it is "Trump Derangement Syndrome." Ann Althouse's Trump Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome rages on."
You can't spell Chuck without Cuck.
Ann Althouse's Trump Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome rages on.
Ann, people are attacking me!
Ann, I'm attacking you!
Which is it?
So the WaPo author attacks the WaPo owner, Bezos, who is a large factor in the death of traditional retail?
Hmmmm.
"Chuck said...
A shopping mall closes, and it is "Trump Derangement Syndrome." Ann Althouse's Trump Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome rages on."
Cuck's Trump Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome"rages on."
Titty twisting is just around the corner.
Local jewelry stores used to advertise in the WaPo until they figured out few read the WaPo. WaPo lost market cap until Bezos picked it up for a song and a lobbying device.
Blogger Kevin said...
Ann Althouse's Trump Derangement Syndrome Derangement Syndrome rages on.
Ann, people are attacking me!
Ann, I'm attacking you!
Which is it?
Attack away, sport. Look below; there aren't any commenting "instructions" anymore.
Anyway; note what I did and didn't do. I commented on the post, and one of its tags. I didn't call Althouse any names, and I didn't make up any false allegations about her. If the only personal attack (!?) on me through these comments pages had been so mild, you never would have heard about it from me.
And Chuck's "People Who Don't Hate Trump" Derangement rages on.
The Nattering Nabobs of Negativism are back. Maybe they never left. But now that a Republican is in the White House....
Am I the only one who sees the irony (or is it hypocrisy) in this article appearing in a paper owned by the Beezus? He could buy the whole mall with couch change and make it a homeless shelter.
The Post shouldn’t have to go far to find a soulless mall — Tysons Corners, just inches outside the Washington Beltway is as large and as impersonal as you can get.
Good one MadMan.
But the Washington Post is such an easy target. Really, why bother. It's like attacking the St. Louis Browns (who most people aren't old enough to remember).
The WaPo is the house organ for the Democrat party. The MSM's go-to for prepared narrative.
Of course everything is a downer. If Hillary were prez, we'd be reading delightful headlines of how her shit doesn't stink. We'd be NOT reading about all the money flowing into Clinton this and Clinton Inc and Clinton associates and Clinton Journalist coffer, and Clinton that.
As for Malls - yeah - the older bricks are dying. There are 2 malls in CO that are thriving. Or at least the parking lot is thriving. They may be soul-less places for losers, but after visiting one a few weeks ago - I was delighted. I loved seeing all the people out - it reminded me of Christmas past. It helps when the architecture is pleasing.
My quote of the year is a description of the business model for the MSM: “The problem, of course, is that the places that have obsessively run those stories for the past year aren’t really news outfits—not anymore. They are in the aromatherapy business.” — Lee Smith
Wapoo gotta poop. It's what they do.
The part that is sad for me is that Sears, with a forward looking CEO, could have been Amazon.
I worked for them a while in college and realized how screwed up their inventory process was.
Just about the same time Amazon started selling books, Sears close their catalog order division.
They had the infrastructure and customers were used to ordering from the catalog.
All it took was putting those two together and seeing how the internet would work like the catalog,
Didn’t the guy who owns the WaPo kill that mall? Doesn’t he rate a mention?
Shopping malls are a huge boon to humanity. They re-create the town square where the old one has become obsolete or unusable. My favorite is the lower-middle class Serramonte mall in Daly City/Colma, where there was always something happening, and it really was (less so now) a center of community. The joke goes that the first three words out of a Pinoy kid are "Mommy, Daddy, Serramonte".
You could even (don't know if its still so, with the lack of clergy), hear Mass on Sunday at the mall.
As for presents for the wife - well, I don't know about the rest of the fellows, but this is a terrifying conundrum for me, anyway, four times a year - birthday, Christmas, Valentines, anniversary. Rack the brain, rack Amazon and ebay and malls (yes), and various odd specialty shops (no, not that kind you perverts). Very stressful.
The only reason to ever shop at Sears was Craftsman tools and Kenmore appliances.
I always thought Craftsman were the best tools in the world. Sears Industrial was our preferred tool supplier when I ran an industrial maintenance department. I still have and use regularly a set of combination wrenches and most of a 3/8 socket set that my dad gave me for Christmas in 1957. Mainly so I would not use his Craftsman tools.
Guarantee was absolute too. I once took back a wrench that had been hammered almost double. I was embarrassed to do it but they exchanged it in the store with no questions asked.
Sadly, about 20 years ago they changed suppliers and went to hell.
Not sad to see Sears go. It's a natural cycle
BTW: Anyone remember A&P Supermarkets? At one time they sold something like 60% of all groceries sold in the US. I think they have 20 stores left.
John Henry
Blogger Big Mike said...
The Post shouldn’t have to go far to find a soulless mall — Tysons Corners, just inches outside the Washington Beltway is as large and as impersonal as you can get.
I'm so old that I can remember, when attending Marshall High (class of 66) we used to sneak out to the 7-11 at Tyson's Corners. It was the only thing there.
There was woods nearby that kids went squirrel plinking in after school. Yes, they brought their guns to school. Kept them in their lockers and worked on them in shop class.
(Grampa, what's "shop class"?)
John Henry
Blogger Michael K said...
The part that is sad for me is that Sears, with a forward looking CEO, could have been Amazon.
Michael,
Anybody could have been Amazon. Sears, with it's huge succcess at catalog sales would have been a natural.
No doubt someone suggested that they move online and was told "Just a fad and it will cannabalize our profitable store and catalog businesses."
As did someone at Blockbuster when offered a chance to buy the struggling Netflix
Or the SF newspaper when offered a chance to buy Craig's list for $50,000
Or Ben Franklin stores when their most successful franchisee had an idea for a new kind of store.
And hundreds of other examples.
The US is littered with former businesses that would not adapt.
Jeff Bezos had no money when he started Amazon, only an idea.
That's really all you need.
Along with a LOT of hard work.
John Henry
I miss Marshall Field's at Water Tower in Chicago:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxGkcC1VrhU
A bit nipply here in middle Tennessee this morning as well!
Target is another company that coulda-shoulda been Amazon.
An article in Bloomberg is forecasting that Amazon will buy them in 2018.
Seems like a logical fit.
You go, Bezos
I love Amazon.
John Henry
"Bush Derangement Syndrome" was of course a thing. See, e.g., Sheehan, Cindy, et al.
Then there was "Obama Derangement Syndrome." Rarely describe via that term but ironically typified by "Birtherism." See, e.g., Trump, Donald.
I of course acknowledge the existence of some level of "Trump Derangement," mostly in the same quarters as Bush Derangement Dyndrome. But since the Obama-Deranged Trump is so deserving of so much criticism at so many levels and on so many issues, "Trump Derangement Syndrome" ought to be used sparingly and carefully. It isn't TDS to criticize Trump.
An article in Bloomberg is forecasting that Amazon will buy them in 2018.
I wonder how that interacts with the notion of HQ2 going to the Twin Cities.
Good Lord, John Henry, that really is old! I got assigned to the Pentagon out of basic training in ‘69 it seemed to me that the Tyson’s Corner Mall was already there. I recollect shopping there before my tour of duty ended in January ‘71. I do remember cornfields behind the nearby Holiday Inn later in the 1970s — now it’s high-rise office buildings.
How are doing down in Puerto Rico? I hear that recovery is slow.
" It isn't TDS to criticize Trump."
It is when that is all you do.
Which is why I found your comment above funny.
How about that Trump. Calling out the Iranian theocracy. See. He can do good things.
Has Chuckles figured out who stole the strawberries yet?
How are doing down in Puerto Rico? I hear that recovery is slow.
One of the problems in P.R., especially with the electrical grid, is that FEMA regulations only allow you to repair the existing systems. Through neglect and corruption, things were so bad in P.R. before the hurricane, the best option would have been to scrap everything and build new...but the regulations won't let them.
I hear trump has a duplicate key to the wardroom icebox.
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