Friday, February 10, 2017

Requiem for a Video Vision (Pinned Post)



I spent a good percentage of my teens and twenties in video stores.  The former age range had me on one side of the counter, pursuing the new releases and captivated by the possibilities that lied beneath the lurid box art with a devotion most of my peers relegated to sports or music.  I was more than willing to make the leap to the other side of the counter as soon as I could, and I did so my senior year in high school, landing a job at Blockbuster Video.  

This would prove to be the most corporate of my video store gigs – a job featuring sanctioned work attire, a hefty manual, and a corporation known well to the world of cinephiles as an enemy due to their reluctance to carry films that weren’t “family-friendly” enough to contain their branding.  I was anxious to leave, and I soon did, spending the next dozen or so years working for various video rental establishments in which I didn’t have to wear a light-blue, long-sleeved golf shirt every time I checked into a shift.

To varying degrees, I have fond memories of all of my video store experiences, but my favorite store experience has always been working for Video Visions, located in the now-departed Prospect Mall on Milwaukee’s east side.  For those who weren’t in Milwaukee at the time, the Prospect Mall, which closed in 2006 and has since been replaced entirely by the Overlook apartments, was a bizarre cavalcade of businesses, including a few doctor’s offices, a movie theater, a book store (sometimes two), a couple of restaurants… and the greatest video store known to man.  Or at least to Milwaukee man.



Video Visions was the epitome of a ramshackle establishment that expended to fit the space as the business grew without any real regard for a grand plan.  Originally opened in 1982 as one storefront in the mall, the business had grown to three by the time I was hired in 1995, and the décor was a mishmash of styles and shelf types, with VHS tapes behind the counter towards the front and Laserdiscs and special orders in a separate, often-closed, room with a separate counter in the back.  (A 1984 photograph taken by an unnamed photographer at Wisconsin Step magazine speaks to their original layout – and even their availability of adult titles.)   

The organization of the store was, at best, questionable, with the VHS boxes not arranged in any order beyond genre, and even then, meaning nothing, as a title’s availability was only registered by the existence of a 3x5 card that represented the inventory number.  (These cards were often misfiled and frequently just vanished.)  The whole store hadn’t been fully dusted in years, and weekly vacuuming of the shag carpeting using an ancient model seemed to kick up more dust than was actually cleaned.  In short, it was a place that fit in perfectly with the pastiche of commerce that the Prospect Mall provided.

And I loved it.  As a video store that had been open since 1982, working at Video Visions was like being a part of video store history, as the owner, Jim Howard, never got rid of anything.  The depth of catalog was unimpeachable in the area, and easily surpassed the number of options afforded to current users of most streaming services.  The co-workers were fantastic, and bonding over the trials and tribulations of the customers and the store, coupled with the fact that Video Visions was essentially the resource for video on the east side of Milwaukee, made it a pleasure to come into work every shift.  Even if the pay was terrible.  And the place was a mess.  And some of the clients were kind of creepy.

Video Visions shut down in 2003, and Jim passed away in 2009, but I’ll always remember my time behind the counter of Video Visions.  I’ve worked at plenty of video stores, dealing with formats from Beta to Blu-ray, but Video Visions will always be the dingy retail establishment closest to my heart.