Robot Chicken
Seriously?
MVC is one of the few places that allows you to listen before you buy. You can't do that in many places
Starry said:I'll get onto that tomorrow morning!
Seriously. I find it really sad.
Obviously the use of the internet illegal downloads and play.com/amazon etc have had an impact on shop sales, then places like iTunes/Napster, then of course Tesco/Asda selling really cheap takes the chunk of people who still buy in stores.
We've lost Unwins recently, now MVC. Soon we'll just have one big-jumbo store for everything and no individual shops left.
Downloaded Penguin said:MVC is one of the few places that allows you to listen before you buy. You can't do that in many places
Richard Whiteley said:MVC and individual shop? what ARE you on about?
southstandandy said:I'm not surprised - you had to spend £100 to get the equivalent of £2.50 off a future purchase, when if you bought 1 DVD on-line from somewhere like Play.com or CD-Wow you'd save at least that instantly. It's sad to see shops go under, but it's hard not to buy on-line when you can save £3-£5 on every DVD and a similar amount on most CD's.
But I think you'll find in MVC's case it was total and utter mis-management that f***ed them in the end.Starry said:I'll get onto that tomorrow morning!
Seriously. I find it really sad.
Obviously the use of the internet illegal downloads and play.com/amazon etc have had an impact on shop sales, then places like iTunes/Napster, then of course Tesco/Asda selling really cheap takes the chunk of people who still buy in stores.
We've lost Unwins recently, now MVC. Soon we'll just have one big-jumbo store for everything and no individual shops left.
XooX said:Deffo go for the take a CD and hand over the £10 voucher then walk out.
Can't be classed as theft as you have made payment in good faith using a valid voucher and have no intention to steal the item. If they are still trading an selling then they cant possibly question it. If they choose to contest the validity of the payment then it would be a civil matter for them to pursue through the courts. If they were stupid enough to call the police then I suggest you wait for the police to attend and then hand over your name and address to the store and tell them to pursue it as a civil matter. Chances of them doing so are nought to zero.
Trust me I'm a copper!I would tell them to poke it and treat as a civil dispute if i was called to attend the job.
Jello said:Sounds like a load of hassle for the sake of a tenner.
Starry said:
Gwylan - I didn't realise there had been such surveys. I know that I have d/l albums from iTunes for like £7.99 which is cheaper than in a shop and if I didn't have iTunes I would have spent more and bought the actual CD in a shop. I just assumed that was the same all over.
I try not to buy everything in one supermarket. I buy all my meat from a butchers, our fruit and veg comes from an independant green grocers. I just go to Sainsburys for the rest. It's sad that by the time my kids grow up there'll probably be a Jumbo Sainsburys or Asda or Tesco with everything and you'll have no choice but to go there.
Unwins are going because they've been bought by some asset stripping shysters, who are more interested in making money out of the profitable bits of the organisation than they are about turnig round the loss making parts of the group like Unwins.Bluejuice said:What's really worrying is the lack of competition we have left on the high streets. It is only a matter of time before Virgin buys HMV or vice versa, or one simply goes bust, because there isn't room for the both of them anymore.
Likewise with the Unwins situation. Unwins was the only high street offy left that wasn't part of the Thresher group. Now they're gone you have no choice but to buy your booze from Thresher/First Quench if you're not buying from the supermarket.
This is a monopoly and it's all too common on Britain's high streets today
Gwylan said:What the surveys found is that people who used to download for free would often go on to buy a CD if they liked the track.