Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Blockbuster, colloquially known as the Last Blockbuster, is a video rental store in Bend, Oregon. In 2018, it became the last Blockbuster store in the United States, and in 2019, it became the world's last remaining retail store using the Blockbuster brand.
Blockbuster Video – sold to Dish Network in 2011; [126] all company-owned stores were closed January 12, 2014, but 1 franchise store remains open in Bend, Oregon. [127] Bookstop; Borders Books – filed for bankruptcy in 2011; [128] some locations purchased by Books-A-Million; borders.com website acquired by Barnes & Noble Booksellers
Family Video announced that it would close its remaining video rental store locations on January 5, 2021. [124] Forever 21 filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late September 2019 due to the company's large amount of debt. It announced that it would close to close up to 178 of its 850 American stores and most of its stores in Europe and Asia.
Blockbuster Video, the panda of the retail world, lost yet another location, bringing the remaining total to eight.
The last Blockbuster video rental store skipped the $7 million price tag for a Super Bowl ad, and instead posted a video online that’s arguably gotten a better response than a TV spot would have.
From the looks of it, Blockbuster's (BBI) days as an independent video rental chain are numbered. The company recently announced plans to shutter 150 stores and conceded it might have to file for ...
Hollywood Video with attached Game Crazy location in Springboro, Ohio in 2009. Movie Gallery, Inc. (former NASDAQ ticker symbol MOVI [1]) was the second largest movie and game rental company in the United States and Canada, behind Blockbuster Video. The company rented and sold Blu-ray Discs, DVDs, VHS tapes, and video games.
The El Paso locations will re-open on April 2nd for an everything-must-go clearance sale. Border Entertainment plans to still operate stores in Texas and Alaska, and it's estimated that around 50 ...