BY LEE PFEIFFER
Writing in the Washington Post, Sonny Bunch mourns the loss of Blockbuster Video and similar "box stores" that were reviled in their day for driving smaller businesses into oblivion. True, the mom and pop video rental stores begat Blockbuster, which dominated neighborhoods by presenting thousands of videos for rental. No small corner video shop could compete. Then streaming services rendered Blockbuster obsolete, just as Amazon did the same to local, independent book stores. But Bunch makes a poignant case to look back on the box store era with some degree of nostalgia. He points out that without browsing aisles of videos and books, consumers are largely unaware of interesting titles that are available. Gone is the day of the "impulse buy". He also extols the sheer pleasure of walking down aisles packed with titles of interest and perusing whether you should take one home. It's the nature of public sentiment to long for eras that have passed. Yes, streaming is here to stay...but I wouldn't rule out a comeback for neighborhood video stores. Remember, vinyl was deemed to be dead when the CD was introduced and the CD was deemed to be dead when streaming music entered the picture. Instead, vinyl is enjoying the kind of success it hasn't seen since the 1970s and Wal-Marts and Target stores still have racks packed with thousands of CDs. Click here to read the article.