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Blockbuster

created by GreySoul

(place) by GreySoul (5.1 y) (print)   ?   I like it! Thu Oct 26 2000 at 1:49:51

The worlds leading renter of movies, DVDs, and video games.
Known for their always up to date supply of hit movies, Blockbuster is where almost anyone would go to get almost any movie they would want to see. While Blockbuster doesnt stock every movie known to man, like Hollywood Video, they almost always have what you're looking for in stock, if they carry it.

Blockbuster rents hit movies, classics, and not-so classics, as well as video games for most popular modern game console systems, as well as VCRs and some game consoles.

They currently have over 6000 stores around the world. Based on a franchise system, each store more or less makes its own rules as long as they stay within the corporate guidlelines setforth by the parent corporation, Blockbuster Inc.

The folling information was gleemed from www.blockbuster.com:
World Headquarters
Blockbuster Inc.
1201 Elm Street
Dallas, Texas 75270
214-854-3000

Blockbuster operates a store within a ten-minute drive of virtually every major U.S. neighborhood.

Each Blockbuster store carries approximately 10,000 to 14,000 videos.


(idea) by piq (5.1 d) (print)   ?   I like it! Mon Dec 04 2000 at 7:27:20

Little known facts:

  • The serial number is indicative of the store number (digits three through five) and the number of the tape (last three numbers.) The tape 339282581389004 is the fourth tape of whatever movie at store 92825.
  • Late fees do not carry from one store to another. If you have a balance in the downtown store, rent at the one up the street. Unless you owe a large sum of money, it'll slide.
  • The cameras only cover the counter, the breakroom and the door to the bathroom in any given store.

(thing) by nexxus (3 y) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Mon Dec 11 2000 at 19:34:37

Blockbuster, Inc. has a corporate policy of not carrying certain movies they have deemed to be controversial, such as the Last Temptation of Christ, Man Bites Dog, Crash, Kids, Faces of Death, Bad Lieutenant and Happiness.*

There had been reports of Blockbuster doing its own internal censorship which are apparently false. Instead, like Wal-Mart, they pressure film companies to release "clean" entertainment and refuse to stock things that aren't in line with their political agenda.

The censorship in question here isn't the same as government-ordered censorship, but it's censorship all the same. America prides itself on free speech and freedom of the press, so it becomes an interesting ethical dilemma -- none of us has the right to tell Blockbuster what they can or cannot do, but because of Blockbuster's market penetration, they're able to decide (particularly in rural areas) what videos people can and cannot rent.

*Happiness is the only one of these films I've personally tried to get. It sparked a conversation with a friend who is a Blockbuster manager, who confirmed the corporate policy of not carrying certain films. The others come from the friend and multiple reports on the net -- msg me if you've been able to find any of these films at your local franchise.


Another notable fact: Blockbuster's definition of new release? Within the past year.

(idea) by madvid (11.1 mon) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Tue Feb 20 2001 at 14:54:27

Apart from being a major movie rental chain (see writeups above), the word blockbuster has three other meanings;

The earliest use of the word comes from World War II, and was used to describe a large aerial bomb, large enough to lay an entire city block to waste.

Additionally, a blockbuster can mean a real estate agent who sells a house a house in a "white neighborhood" to an unwanted minority, such as a african-american family, thus "busting" the block. As above, the symbolic meaning is that the block is destroyed, as the value of the houses in the neighborhood are expected to fall. This usage of the word is not more or less extinct.

The third and by far most popular sense is something that is large, important or popular, such as a movie, a play, a piece of music or a book.


(idea) by Lots42 (7 y) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Sat Apr 21 2001 at 9:24:12

Little Known Current Facts:
1) -Some- times the late fees do not carry over. Sometimes they do. If you owe ten bucks at store 12, you can take your card over to store 34. However, if you've never been to store 34, half the time the info that comes down the line to store 34 will show that yes, you do have ten dollars in late fees and you're gonna have to take care of it now before you can rent.
2) Tapes, for the most part, do not sit inside of the drop box for hours/days on end. There simply is not. Enough. Room.
3) Yes, they do have a bathroom in the store but they are probably denying you access because many customers do not know how to handle themselves in public restrooms.
4) Sufficently knowledgable (sp?) Blockbuster employees know everything about you. They are virtual gods.
5) That huge piece of paper you filled out when you created your account? Part of the agreement is that you, yes you, are responsible for any late fees.
6) You must physically state that other people are allowed to rent on your account. Giving the card to Little Ashley and letter her and friends rent every Tom Hanks movie ever will just result in anger if Ashley is not allowed to rent on the account by virtue of her name not being on there.
7) The employees know you. They remember the faces of the ones that say they won't be coming back. They remember the faces of the jerks. In some cases, they remember the NAMES of the jerks. I have. I haven't done anything illegal but by golly, any future employee who accesses the account will see that a Major Jerkface was.
8) Sometimes one register goes down while the others don't. That's why they can't open another one. (At least in some cases).
9) Customers *do* move tapes to other locations of the store. So the computer says that 'Willy Wonka And The Choclate Factory' is in but since it's not behind the cover box...well...somebody moved it. It could easily be in Foreign Films, under the 'B' new releases or heck, just out and out stolen.
10) That return at noon thing? That's an EXTRA twelve hours.
11) It doesn't matter if you rent it at 10:00 am or 10:00 pm. The day you rent is counted as the first day.

(thing) by Purvis (3.9 y) (print)   ?   1 C! I like it! Fri May 04 2001 at 14:59:04

At one time there was such a thing as 'mom and pop' video stores, especially in urban neighborhoods and smaller markets. Blockbuster's corporate strategy was and is to go into an area and open up way too many stores - saturating an area with them to the point that no other operations can compete, even to the point where individual Blockbusters aren't necessarily profitable - then to close many of the Blockbuster locations once competitors are driven into bankruptcy by this tactic. Viola - they have monopoly over a market.

The name Viacom chose for their video store chain is quite telling, for they are indeed Block Busting. I wonder if they chose the name with this in mind.

This tactic has also been employed by Starbucks. Pity isn't it, that these huge corporations have the resources to go deep into debt for a while to open up enough locations to saturate areas and drive out local operations, then close down the extra stores and be immensely profitable due to their newfound monopoly status, all the while leaving empty storefronts in their wake. But hey, it's all fair in a 'free market.'


(thing) by Billy (1.9 d) (print)   ?   I like it! Fri Jun 29 2001 at 2:22:42

Blockbuster is also a sports term for a trade that involves star players and/or a large amount of players and draft picks.

Every sport has had its share of blockbuster trades. An example would be the 1989 NFL (American football) trade that sent star running back Herschel Walker from the Dallas Cowboys to the Minnesota Vikings. In return, the Cowboys got 5 players, a draft pick, and six conditional draft picks.

Other sports have had similar types of deals.

Blockbuster trades often drastically alter the makeup of one or more teams and create intense reactions from fans of all teams involved. Afterall, they often involve a team's star player or multiple players for whom a team's supporters are used to cheering.


(place) by mimewars (1.4 y) (print)   ?   I like it! Thu Jul 19 2001 at 18:57:41

It may not be true, that Blockbuster engages in internal censorship. Then again, it may be. Scanning their library of VHS movies, you will run into several movies that have the words "rated version" after the title ("Angel Heart - Rated Version"). Regardless of who did the actual censorship, these are the censored movies.

In addition, it should be noted that there are two categories of Blockbuster stores: corporate, and privately owned franchises. The private franchises retain the Blockbuster name and color scheme, but have fewer rules to obey. There is a Blockbuster somewhere in Rhode Island, for example, that carries uncensored, soft-core porn.


(idea) by lsisus (48.7 min) (print)   ?   I like it! Thu Dec 05 2002 at 1:29:02

For general information, Blockbuster is no longer allowed to use the term late fee as it can be considered harrasment. All employees are required to refer to fees garnered due to laxness in returning as Extended Viewing Fees, or EVFs. They are also not allowed to let people into the bathrooms because bathrooms are the one place where there ae no cameras. Unless someone is caught on tape stealing they can't be prosecuted. This makes it so that if someone goes into a bathroom with 10 tapes and comes out with only a bulging jacket, Blockbuster can't do a thing about it.

Also as a side note, if one does not pay their EVFs after an extended period of time they are sent a note. The bad thing about this system is that the letters are sent from the corporate headquartersin Dallas, Texas. This is bad becuase one can pay their EVFs and then get sent a note a week later from Blockbuster demanding money.

There is also a problem with people putting items into the drop box that just do not belong there. for example, I have had to clean up a half of a peanutbutter and fudge pie from the drop box. Whip cream on movie covers makes for a sticky mess. We have also had a dead fish, several joints and my favorite, a lit cigarette. Luckily the only thing that burned was the drop box itself.


printable version
chaos

Man Bites Dog Happiness customer : nutty nut girl Faces of Death
Blockbusters Block busting charge-off Angel Heart
The Last Temptation of Christ Hollywood Video Crash Bad Lieutenant
Radio Shack Kids Ding Dong, The Witch is Dead! Hollywood
Movie grosses adjusted for ticket price inflation The 25 brightest stars of the night sky Christian Coalition Susan Fletcher
The thin line between art and child pornography Life on the Jones Farm Viacom September 23, 2020
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