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A Day at the Mall: Back When Shopping Was Fun
Illinois Review ^ | May 20, 2020 A.D. | John F Di Leo

Posted on 05/20/2020 1:52:59 PM PDT by jfd1776

For at least two hundred years, one of the goals of the retail industry has been to make shopping fun – to make a trip to the general store, or the downtown retail district, or the indoor mall an enjoyable, even entertaining experience.

Stores are designed with an eye to bright colors and comfortable surroundings. Malls have been built with stages in the wings, so they could bring in high school choirs for Christmas caroling, or personal appearances by pop stars or children’s TV performers. Department stores like Nordstrom’s, and grocery stores like Mariano’s spend the money for both a fine piano and a live pianist to entertain the shoppers as they go by.

None of these measures really add anything to the value of that pair of earrings or cufflinks, that candelabra or easy chair, that case of wine or bag of groceries for which you came.

But these various forms of decoration and entertainment work together to draw you to that store or mall in the first place, and then to inspire you to stay and shop some more. And the longer and more frequently you’re there because you’re comfortable, the more you’ll buy. A win-win, for both the store itself and the economy at large.

The Hammering of Retail

Now let’s think about what has happened to the process of shopping in recent years.

After centuries of efforts to make shopping easier, more fun, more entertaining, there’s been a sudden transformation in the other direction.

Some of it is based on crime. Due to destructive leftist policies in our big cities, both downtowns and suburban malls have become dangerous, scaring customers away, often permanently, doing unimaginable damage to the retail sector.

The computerization of the purchasing process, which should have made shopping easier, has also made it more dangerous, as hackers put shoppers in fear of identity theft and the destruction of personal credit ratings through fraudulent purchases.

And the internet, while introducing ease for the homebound and the busy, has done even more damage in a way, by removing the critical, tangible step of comparing products in person, leaving people at risk for regretting decision after decision, because, that online purchase didn’t turn out to be as good as the picture onscreen.

Worse, while hurting the consumer directly by the increased odds of online purchases turning out different than expected, the transition to internet commerce has done untold damage to the brick-and-mortar stores on which our economy was based.

We don’t just need our malls for shopping… we need them because they are a source of so much that we cannot get elsewhere. Retail is a good career for those who go into management, it’s a decent second job for those who don’t, and it’s a critical first job for almost everyone else. How many of our resumes start off with a high school or college part time job, either after school or during summers and holidays, as a clerk at the local department store or grocery, or at the mall’s pet food or electronics store?

For most American youths, it’s our first experience with showing up on time, working with the public, handling money, showing that we’re responsible with property, with money, with our assigned duties.

But retail has been taking a beating for years, and this crucial part of our lives – the start of so many of our careers – has been slowly ebbing away, no longer an option for more and more of our children and grandchildren. What will be our kids’ first jobs, when this plethora of options are gone?

And now, the world of shopping has taken yet another hit, this one totally a 2020 phenomenon.

The Joy of Shopping

The 2020 pandemic caused by the CCP Virus – or, more precisely, the response to it – has done more damage than most of us acknowledge.

In addition to the obvious health crisis – thousands sickened by the virus, countless others getting sick every day with other things, but leaving issues undiagnosed for months because of the focus on the virus… and the massive economic pain – millions unemployed, countless businesses closed, pensions and retirement savings gone… the very concept of shopping itself, the basis of our economy, has been transformed.

We are now expected to wear a mask everywhere.

You can’t breathe normally, and if you wear glasses, they fog up so you can barely see. They put arrows on the floor so that you go one way down the aisles; they have supervisors to remind you not to dawdle and ponder your purchases. Since there others in line outside, taking your time to contemplate options is no longer fair.

As a result, you can rush in, uncomfortably locate what you know you need, and then check out and get out, as quickly as possible. The joy of shopping has been stolen from us.

From generations of effort to encourage people to take their time in the store, possibly to be attracted by another display, another shelf, another product line… now there’s no time for such distractions. That carefully crafted endcap, the carefully dressed mannequins, the point-of-sale impulse purchases, are now gone. There’s no time; there’s a line outside!

Some of this will change back; it isn’t all permanent. But with the effort of so many who shape both public policy and consumer opinion to change our way of shopping, some parts of this transformation will definitely stick.

While the jury is still out on whether the “social distancing” concept helps or hurts in the fight against seasonal viruses, there is no doubt how much it hurts the economy. Will we see those high school choirs and personal appearances return to our malls this fall? Will we see shoppers freely encouraged to take their time in the stores again, free to be attracted by other products that weren’t on their shopping lists? We need to. It’s imperative.

It’s not just a matter of reopening the factories and stores. It’s also about returning to the way it was: the successful, exciting, joyful experience of being surrounded by crowds of fellow buyers, spending the day downtown, going from store to mall, then to restaurant for lunch, then back to shopping in the afternoon and maybe the theater after dinner.

Millions of us have spent two months in which each purchase was a stand-alone transaction. We have sat at our computers and ordered from the grocery store, either choosing delivery or driving there for curbside pickup. If we don’t go back to the normal way soon, this drudgery will become normal for us, and that would sound a death knell for this economy.

Retail stores – and the manufacturers that supply them, and the employees who work in them – all depend on people shopping for other things, and stopping to check out a new shop just because it interested them. Both indoor and outdoor malls facilitate this. Going from Sears to Penney’s at Woodfield, or from Macy’s to the Bass Pro Shops at Gurnee Mills, requires walking past dozens of smaller stores, each of which might catch your eye, each of which might become your new favorite – but for that to happen, you have to be drawn in that first time.

This problem really didn’t start with this pandemic. It started years ago, when city politicians decided to befriend the drug gangs and let them take over the shopping districts… when confiscatory taxation drove up the prices… when a host of destructive policies drove manufacturing to foreign shores so that we no longer see the local “made in USA” products on our shelves that make a shopper excited to buy a local product and keep his neighbors employed. And it started when we began listening to politicians like Senator Bernie Sanders, who so hate the concept of “consumption” that they ridicule the availability of different brands of deodorant.

If this were just the beginning of an assault on retail, it wouldn’t be so terrifying. Two months of bad habits wouldn’t reverse two hundred years of advances.

But we’ve had years and years of assaults on the retail sector… and this latest could well be the final nail in the coffin, not only for the companies that can never reopen, but also for most of the ones that do… because the world in which they reopen may be a hostile one to the effervescent, productive retail life that America so truly needs.

As President Calvin Coolidge reminded us so often, “the business of America is business.” We need to be proud of that fact; we need to take delight in being a part of the wonderful engine of American prosperity.

We don’t just need to shop again; we need to enjoy life again.

Copyright 2020 John F. Di Leo

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based trade compliance trainer, writer and actor. He’s not only been a shopper himself, he’s been one of those high school kids, singing at the Yorktown or Fox Valley Mall at Christmas time, advertising the school play, caroling at Christmastime, invigorating the shoppers to get them to stick around and keep on shopping, never dreaming that such a basic part of Americana might one day be jeopardized.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Miscellaneous; Politics
KEYWORDS: covid19; recession; retail; shoppingmalls
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1 posted on 05/20/2020 1:52:59 PM PDT by jfd1776
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To: jfd1776

thugs and gangs started to take down many malls

malls with bus lines and attached theaters suffered the most from this


2 posted on 05/20/2020 1:55:44 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (Gone Galt; Not Averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: jfd1776

I miss the disease coated handrails everywhere.


3 posted on 05/20/2020 1:55:45 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: jfd1776

Our shopping has not changed except for those lines outside the stores


4 posted on 05/20/2020 1:58:47 PM PDT by butlerweave
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To: jfd1776

Your FReeper handle (and the copyright) makes it seem as if you are the writer. Thanks for posting it here. I would hope this could be shared more widely because it deserves to be seen. I hope I’m in before humblegunner, saying thanks.


5 posted on 05/20/2020 2:03:00 PM PDT by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches anything.)
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To: jfd1776

I was just at the local Stop and Shop

The picked over shelves, the lack of eye contact, the general lack of interaction. It was a thoroughly communist block shopping experience. BTW, this is in Massachusetts.


6 posted on 05/20/2020 2:03:34 PM PDT by glorgau
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To: jfd1776

Shopping will still be popular where it is safe, fun and convenient.

What is nicer than taking the family shopping, getting something to eat, seeing friends, seeing the sights, trying on new things and having fun?

Thugs running around there? Nope.
Hard or expensive parking? Nope.
Dirty or poorly run stores? Nope.
Etc.


7 posted on 05/20/2020 2:04:05 PM PDT by 2banana (My common ground with islamic terrorists - they want to die for allah and we want to kill them.)
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To: jfd1776

8 posted on 05/20/2020 2:04:19 PM PDT by Libloather (Why do climate change hoax deniers live in mansions on the beach?)
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To: jfd1776
The computerization of the purchasing process


9 posted on 05/20/2020 2:12:37 PM PDT by HonkyTonkMan
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To: jfd1776; flaglady47
This guy needs to take another look-see around his world. The malls are closing one-by-one, or there's just a few small mall stores hangin' in there......the anchors are gone or going into bankruptcy....Macys, Sears, JC Pennys, oy veh.

With on-line or telephone ordering and delivery of just about everything to peeples' doors and giants like Amazon putting retailer after retailer out of business...what's to worry or even fret about "malls".

All of them will soon become like the dinosaurs of the past, or they'll become sites for condos.

Leni

10 posted on 05/20/2020 2:13:52 PM PDT by MinuteGal (MAGA !!! MAGA !!! MAGA !!!)
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To: jfd1776

I don’t know where you all are out there... in all this for the past 2 months... or more.... but this is no longer fun.. it’s messed up my ability to know what day it is and what week it is.... I can’t just run to the store ‘cause it might not even be open... and do they have any stock on shelves... Now it IS better... but normal???? NO... masks still, YES! people standing and walking with 6 feet between.... it’s just weird and I want it over!!
Can’t get serviced things done...not enough workers to take care of people... I need a new dishwasher and don’t know if they are delivering and do they have workers to hook up and take away the old... nothing is the same, so can’t count on “they usually do”... this is not usual and hasn’t been for a long time..

I still don’t have my car oil changed... again, don’t know if they have the repairmen in to do it ...and check the AC and etc...

I fill my days with “cleaning things that have waited on me for a while”.... and sewing a lot... but no need to clean up spic and span... no one coming by.. the mail still goes and the bills have to be paid on time “as usual”... but nothing else is usual...and I’m real tired of no routine...no schedule...
No... I’ve lived a long time ... and there has been NOTHING like this in all those years... there has been no time when nothing made sense and hard tellin’ when it will make sense again... I just know this is not good for my expectations...not good for the health of the nation and not healthy for the economy and jobs that people are out of! it’s double hard on folks who are not working.. kids home..patlence short... worried a lot...

Let’s get life back to a norm.... again.... Please!


11 posted on 05/20/2020 2:15:31 PM PDT by frnewsjunkie
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To: Secret Agent Man

When the inner city black youths showed up it was the end of the malls., I just dont want to end up hanging out with a bunch of kids with zero self control or respect, and they were almost entirely blacks causing the most mayhem , shop lifting, fighting and yelling at each other from acroos the mall. You want a mall to succeed, make it a whites only mall and watch it take off. now, make a black only mall and see what happens..


12 posted on 05/20/2020 2:18:34 PM PDT by Ikeon (Nothing happens in politics "by chance" . covid -19 is a drill.)
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To: outofsalt

Hello, outofsalt!

Yes indeed, I’m the writer... good guess...

Thanks very much for the compliment; glad you liked it!

And yes, I included the link to my column in Illinois Review, so if you’d like to share the link elsewhere, I’d be honored and grateful!

Thanks!
JFD


13 posted on 05/20/2020 2:19:42 PM PDT by jfd1776 (John F. Di Leo, Illinois Review Columnist)
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To: jfd1776

Mainly had to tag along with my mom and sisters back in the 80s. Sooooooooooooo boring.

Mostly hung out at the Radio Shack or Walden Books.


14 posted on 05/20/2020 2:20:31 PM PDT by VanDeKoik
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To: jfd1776
Gee. I sure do miss going to the Mall

Black Friday Crowd Rushing Into Urban Outfitters GIF | Gfycat

Yes I do.

15 posted on 05/20/2020 2:24:08 PM PDT by Responsibility2nd (Click my screen name for an analysis on how HIllary wins next November.)
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To: MinuteGal

You are correct MinuteGal. After a couple visits to SunValley Mall in Concord (CA) circa 68. I had had my fill of frenzied shopping while playing dodgeball. In the 50 years since I can count on one arthritic hand the few times I have repeated the Mall experience. Don’t know whether SunValley still exists but many of the others I have lived near over the years have died and been rebuilt to specifically avoid them becoming crime centers.


16 posted on 05/20/2020 2:25:36 PM PDT by CARTOUCHE (Quarantine the sick and free the rest of us from this media inspired bondage.)
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To: Libloather

There had to be a bar in that mall so you’re almost spot on.
Most department stores have the men’s clothing section right at the entrance; usually an exterior entrance as men do prefer to get in and out without wandering. Men are hunters who want to make the kill and get back to the cave. Women are gatherers who prefer to stroll about and see what’s available and fresh.


17 posted on 05/20/2020 2:32:01 PM PDT by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches anything.)
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To: jfd1776

I did enjoy your article and I will share it. I remember the open air shopping centers of my youth that became malls with HVAC and music and smells of food or perfume. I think malls will persist in the north and south because harsh weather will invite folks to come inside.


18 posted on 05/20/2020 2:37:04 PM PDT by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches anything.)
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To: jfd1776

Shopping is a pain in the ass. For me that is literal- I’m disabled from a back issue. Grocery shopping only became tolerable again after I finally broke down and started using the electric carts.(pride,dont’cha know). For most other things it’s Amazon. But even before that I disliked shopping.

CC


19 posted on 05/20/2020 2:37:18 PM PDT by Celtic Conservative (My cats are more amusing than 200 channels worth of TV)
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To: frnewsjunkie

“I still don’t have my car oil changed...”

Finally got mine done yesterday. They offered to disinfect it for $29. I’m the only one who rides in my truck. I don’t think I’ll get the China virus from myself. Now, if could just get a haircut.


20 posted on 05/20/2020 3:13:09 PM PDT by suthener
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