Call & Times

‘ Why are you still here?’: Inside the last Blockbuste­r left in America

- ALEX HORTON

A man parked his motorcycle on the sidewalk Saturday morning, ruining the aesthetic of the last remaining Blockbuste­r in the continenta­l United States.

“You can’t park there,” general manager Sandi Harding told the man as he walked into the store in Bend, Oregon. “People are trying to take pictures.”

The man paused for a beat. There was confusion in his response. “Trying to take pictures?” Somehow he had missed the past decade, when Blockbuste­r the video rental

behemoth became Blockbuste­r the fallen victim of modernity.

In 2004, at the company’s peak, 9,000 Blockbuste­r outlets studded city blocks and suburban strip malls nationwide, a one-time indelible fixture of the family movie night. But soon after, Netflix, Redbox and the cold march of digital progress eroded the customer base at each store.

Thousands of Blockbuste­r stores were closed through July 2018, leaving only three: two in Alaska, and Harding’s store in Bend.

“Every day, even before this, people would drive by and see the ‘Open’ sign and say, ‘Oh my gosh. How are you still here? Why are you still here?’” Harding told The Washington Post in a Saturday phone interview as her store buzzed with activity, including the arrival of the oblivious motorcycli­st.

Now gawkers and tourists stop in Bend and line up to take photos in front of the store.

There is, in a literal sense, nothing else quite like it in the lower 48.

And after Sunday, when the stores in Anchorage and Fairbanks close for the last time, the location on NE Revere Avenue will be the sole Blockbuste­r in the entire country.

Harding has been with the company for 14 years and joined the Bend location on Revere in May 2005. She insisted that nothing big changed. Customer service keeps people coming back, and new titles, such as NBC’s current show “The Good Place,” are available for rent.

Even the IBM computers are running the same floppy disks from the 1990s, she said, shocking the younger employees.

“No one can hack these computers, so that’s a good thing,” she said.

But Harding conceded that the Internet and streaming services forever changed the way people consume entertainm­ent, describing a “curve” from when Redbox and Netflix began to deliver more options.

It has been quite the fall from movie rental primacy. In 1989, a Blockbuste­r store opened every 17 hours, The Post’s Samantha Schmidt reported last year. But in the late 2000s, it seemed stores closed at that same pace.

Just a handful survived in the last few years after Dish Network bought the company in 2011 and dismantled remaining locations.

And yet, some stores persevered. Harding said many of her customers have been loyal for years.

Others come in for the nostalgic stroll between aisles, picking feverishly through the inventory to find an obscure film. And snagging the last copy of a new and popular release provides a small thrill you cannot get from a download button.

It was no coincidenc­e that two of the remaining three Blockbuste­r stores were in Alaska. As Schmidt reported, an older population, long and dark winters and unusually high Internet usage fees conspired for the rental store business model to thrive there as it died elsewhere.

For a time, anyway. The stores in Alaska announced their closures on Thursday.

“[I]t is sad to say goodbye to our dedicated customers. We have thought of you as family for the past 28 years,” Kevin Daymude, the general manager of Blockbuste­r Alaska, said on Facebook. In a follow-up video on the page, two people dressed in black place a candle in a store parking space.

While some might view Blockbuste­r’s fate as comeuppanc­e - a big chain that displaced small, family-owned stores only to be de- stroyed by innovation - Harding sees her store as a mainstay of the Bend community.

Ken and Debbie Tisher are local owners, she said, and they pay a licensing fee to Dish Network to use the name. It is the local video store for many in Bend, and now, the entire country.

And once in while, the Blockbuste­r is a godsend.

When Gene Wilder died in 2016, mourners took to Netflix and other streaming services to watch films like “Blazing Saddles,” “Young Frankenste­in” and “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.”

No luck. Customers flooded the store and called to ask if Harding’s store had them in stock. Of course, Harding told them.

The directions are simple when you can’t find a film anywhere else. Just head west on Revere, past the Redbox on 3rd Street, to find exactly what you need.

 ?? Sandi Harding ?? This Blockbuste­r store in Bend, Oregon, is the last store in the chain still open in the United States.
Sandi Harding This Blockbuste­r store in Bend, Oregon, is the last store in the chain still open in the United States.

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