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We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
On Dec 22, 4:38*pm, Gene wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 10:29:54 -0800 (PST), Jack wrote: On Dec 22, 12:12*pm, wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 01:37:26 -0800, jps wrote: LAREDO, Texas — The final chapter has been written for the lone bookstore on the streets of Laredo. With a population of nearly a quarter-million people, this city could soon be the largest in the nation without a single bookseller. The situation is so grim that schoolchildren have pleaded for a reprieve from next month's planned shutdown of the B. Dalton bookstore. After that, the nearest store will be 150 miles away in San Antonio. I assume the "book stores" can't compete with Walmart. I know around here B&N is having their ass handed to them by Target, Walmart and the public library. I see lots of people milling around but not many actually get into a checkout line. If it wasn't for the coffee they might not be making any money at all. There is also a lot of pressure from the internet Amazon will make it tough for anyone who has rent to pay in a mall. I would never buy a DVD in a store. You can usually get a disk or a book sent to your house cheaper than the best bargain bin deal in a store. Unlike some here, I notice that you caught the lie in that "news" report. *There will be plenty of "booksellers", just no dedicated book stores. *The mouthbreathers among us read it, believed it, and reposted it as the gospel. *Too funny. "Booksellers" could be the grocery store, if you consider National Enquirer fair game. A metropolitan area that big that won't support even one dedicated book store has a cultural and literacy problem. The top 10 least literate cities in the US contain El Paso, Corpus Christi, and San Antonio. A metropolitan area that big that wouldn't support even one dedicated building supply would be seen as a problem. Wal-mart might sell hammers and nails, but that isn't a building supply. In the same way, a "bookseller" is not a dedicated bookstore..... While that's all true enough, there are still some facts left out of the story repeated here. Such as the fact that they were shutting down *all* of the outlet stores (not just the one in Laredo) in favor of the large, complete line stores. The fact that B. Dalton is planning a large store for Laredo in 2011. And the fact that, as was already pointed out, Laredo is 94% Latino. The problem isn't Texas, it's demographics and an extreme case of immigration. Down here in dumb ol' South Carolina, I can just about throw a rock and hit 3 big-box book stores. And they're thriving. |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
jps wrote:
LAREDO, Texas — The final chapter has been written for the lone bookstore on the streets of Laredo. With a population of nearly a quarter-million people, this city could soon be the largest in the nation without a single bookseller. The situation is so grim that schoolchildren have pleaded for a reprieve from next month's planned shutdown of the B. Dalton bookstore. After that, the nearest store will be 150 miles away in San Antonio. Obviously No books or interest in fishing in Texas. Nothing but snakes, I heard you have to mow the grass with a machine gun..... DP_Diddly In the Eastern Sierra/Nevada Mountains in the South end of Northern Nevada |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
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We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:56:10 -0600, Vic Smith
wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:13:31 -0800, jps wrote: You mean a place to hang out? That's not an unfair representation but, if you're into reading, it does require browsing unless you're just there to pick up something specific. I find a lot of folks go there to see what's there. Usually know what you want in a coffee shop. Whenever I'd visit a book store that served coffee, my impression of the people sitting around there reading books for free was - bums. Figured they weren't worth the overhead of the coffee operation, and the business model was flawed. Don't know if that's right, or not. Maybe I'm just a prick and a bad businessman. --Vic We have a B&N 3 miles from the house in an upscale shopping center. It's always teeming with people, sitting, standing browsing. They do good business. |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
On 12/23/09 1:09 PM, jps wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:56:10 -0600, Vic Smith wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:13:31 -0800, wrote: You mean a place to hang out? That's not an unfair representation but, if you're into reading, it does require browsing unless you're just there to pick up something specific. I find a lot of folks go there to see what's there. Usually know what you want in a coffee shop. Whenever I'd visit a book store that served coffee, my impression of the people sitting around there reading books for free was - bums. Figured they weren't worth the overhead of the coffee operation, and the business model was flawed. Don't know if that's right, or not. Maybe I'm just a prick and a bad businessman. --Vic We have a B&N 3 miles from the house in an upscale shopping center. It's always teeming with people, sitting, standing browsing. They do good business. We're not as lucky. We have to drive about 25 miles to Annapolis for a pretty nice, two level Borders book store. The store like yours does a lot of biz...and has a nice coffee shoppe and wi-fi. It's a good place to hang out while my wife shops. I hate shopping. If you are on the store's mailing list, you get coupons that make the prices the same as amazon's. Our local grocery store strip mall has a "christian" book store, a strange operation if you go by what it puts in its display windows...a compendium of christ for the non-thinker. |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
On Dec 23, 1:18*pm, Harry wrote:
On 12/23/09 1:09 PM, jps wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:56:10 -0600, Vic Smith *wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:13:31 -0800, *wrote: You mean a place to hang out? *That's not an unfair representation but, if you're into reading, it does require browsing unless you're just there to pick up something specific. *I find a lot of folks go there to see what's there. *Usually know what you want in a coffee shop. Whenever I'd visit a book store that served coffee, my impression of the people sitting around there reading books for free was - *bums. Figured they weren't worth the overhead of the coffee operation, and the business model was flawed. Don't know if that's right, or not. Maybe I'm just a prick and a bad businessman. --Vic We have a B&N 3 miles from the house in an upscale shopping center. It's always teeming with people, sitting, standing browsing. *They do good business. We're not as lucky. We have to drive about 25 miles to Annapolis for a pretty nice, two level Borders book store. The store like yours does a lot of biz...and has a nice coffee shoppe and wi-fi. It's a good place to hang out while my wife shops. I hate shopping. If you are on the store's mailing list, you get coupons that make the prices the same as amazon's. Our local grocery store strip mall has a "christian" book store, a strange operation if you go by what it puts in its display windows...a compendium of christ for the non-thinker.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I sure you DO hate to shop, you're WAY too fat to walk around for any length without getting winded. |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
Harry wrote:
On 12/23/09 1:09 PM, jps wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:56:10 -0600, Vic Smith wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:13:31 -0800, wrote: You mean a place to hang out? That's not an unfair representation but, if you're into reading, it does require browsing unless you're just there to pick up something specific. I find a lot of folks go there to see what's there. Usually know what you want in a coffee shop. Whenever I'd visit a book store that served coffee, my impression of the people sitting around there reading books for free was - bums. Figured they weren't worth the overhead of the coffee operation, and the business model was flawed. Don't know if that's right, or not. Maybe I'm just a prick and a bad businessman. --Vic We have a B&N 3 miles from the house in an upscale shopping center. It's always teeming with people, sitting, standing browsing. They do good business. We're not as lucky. We have to drive about 25 miles to Annapolis for a pretty nice, two level Borders book store. The store like yours does a lot of biz...and has a nice coffee shoppe and wi-fi. It's a good place to hang out while my wife shops. I hate shopping. If you are on the store's mailing list, you get coupons that make the prices the same as amazon's. Our local grocery store strip mall has a "christian" book store, a strange operation if you go by what it puts in its display windows...a compendium of christ for the non-thinker. 25 miles to the closest book store? That says a lot about wherever it is you live. -- It's flattering to see so many of you turds spoofing me. |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
Loogypicker wrote:
On Dec 23, 1:18 pm, Harry wrote: On 12/23/09 1:09 PM, jps wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 18:56:10 -0600, Vic Smith wrote: On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 15:13:31 -0800, wrote: You mean a place to hang out? That's not an unfair representation but, if you're into reading, it does require browsing unless you're just there to pick up something specific. I find a lot of folks go there to see what's there. Usually know what you want in a coffee shop. Whenever I'd visit a book store that served coffee, my impression of the people sitting around there reading books for free was - bums. Figured they weren't worth the overhead of the coffee operation, and the business model was flawed. Don't know if that's right, or not. Maybe I'm just a prick and a bad businessman. --Vic We have a B&N 3 miles from the house in an upscale shopping center. It's always teeming with people, sitting, standing browsing. They do good business. We're not as lucky. We have to drive about 25 miles to Annapolis for a pretty nice, two level Borders book store. The store like yours does a lot of biz...and has a nice coffee shoppe and wi-fi. It's a good place to hang out while my wife shops. I hate shopping. If you are on the store's mailing list, you get coupons that make the prices the same as amazon's. Our local grocery store strip mall has a "christian" book store, a strange operation if you go by what it puts in its display windows...a compendium of christ for the non-thinker.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I sure you DO hate to shop, you're WAY too fat to walk around for any length without getting winded. His legs chafe against each other when he walks unless he slathers on a bunch of Vaseline. God bless his poor wife for seeing to it that he gets a modicum of exercise |
We don't need no damned books, we're in Texas!
Harry wrote:
On 12/23/09 1:09 PM, jps wrote: We have a B&N 3 miles from the house in an upscale shopping center. It's always teeming with people, sitting, standing browsing. They do good business. We're not as lucky. We have to drive about 25 miles to Annapolis for a pretty nice, two level Borders book store. The store like yours does a lot of biz...and has a nice coffee shoppe and wi-fi. It's a good place to hang out while my wife shops. I hate shopping. If you are on the store's mailing list, you get coupons that make the prices the same as amazon's. Our local grocery store strip mall has a "christian" book store, a strange operation if you go by what it puts in its display windows...a compendium of christ for the non-thinker. Harry, I am your buddy, but it looks like your wife has your fat ass pussy whipped from here to the shopping mall. Tell you want to stay locked up in your basement apartment. |
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