|
GPTribefan posted:If this is where I think it is, the whole area needs rejuvenated. When I was a kid, it was vibrant and flourishing - the only things left in the whole section of town now are a few fast food places, a strip joint, and a bank branch. It will be sad to see the mall torn down, as it was such a big part of my childhood, but something has to be done with all that wasted land. Affordable housing.
|
# ? Jan 6, 2017 23:38 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 06:17 |
|
Our local mall has a food court with 1 eatery lol. And somehow our Sears is still staying open there. They must own the spot because there's a Target in the same mall that is always busy and Sears never has anyone in it
|
# ? Jan 6, 2017 23:40 |
|
Automatic Slim posted:Affordable housing. They'd probably rather have a dead mall filled with squatters
|
# ? Jan 6, 2017 23:40 |
|
Grand Prize Winner posted:They'd probably rather have a dead mall filled with squatters That is highly affordable!
|
# ? Jan 6, 2017 23:43 |
|
bongwizzard posted:That is highly affordable! This was the place where someone died on the roof trying to get the last remnants of copper wire from the building. They refused to tear the place down or even sell it - would be a perfect area for low-cost housing if they can ever get their poo poo together. Meanwhile, slightly to the north, another mall gets its death rattle. Macy's left last year and now the Sears is closing. Only 1 anchor left and it already lost a restaurant, all the businesses on the 4 street perimeter, and a bunch of tenants inside. The place has 2 years tops
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 01:27 |
|
A short article on JNCO. They say it's coming back but goddamn, I don't know about that. Also apparently they marketed JNCO as a "suburban" brand and didn't want to sell to stores that sold FUBU. drat, if that's not obvious.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 07:51 |
|
[quote="frakeaing HAMSTER DANCE" post=""46805426"] Our local mall has a food court with 1 eatery lol. And somehow our Sears is still staying open there. They must own the spot because there's a Target in the same mall that is always busy and Sears never has anyone in it [/quote] Our local dying mall has two. A Wendys that I think gets by on selling lunches to people working at the remaining stores, and a fancy popcorn place. Generic pizza and Chinese food places shut down but the popcorn remains. Someone must be laundering money through it or something, because it not only never had customers, it rarely ever has staff.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 08:33 |
|
Bean posted:A short article on JNCO. They say it's coming back but goddamn, I don't know about that. I'm genuinely surprised that JNCO still exists. As far as fashion trends go that was easily one of the dumbest. It also didn't last very long. Like, hey...let's all buy enormous pants that make it hard to walk! I do so love to repeatedly trip and fall on my face just walking to the next room.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 08:49 |
|
JNCO jeans holy poo poo takes me back
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 13:18 |
|
Speaking of dead malls, the mall I went to as a teenager in north Kansas City was recently torn down (the mall I went to as a child was Meadows Mall in Las Vegas---have no idea of how it's doing today). When it closed completely in 2014 it was pretty dead anyway, with only a few stores open (including the couldn't-be-killed wig shop that must have been there for forty years). Anyway, it made the news not too long ago as being the creepiest abandoned mall when a guy made a video exploring it. It's so weird to see it so abandoned as I remember when it was flourishing. But Target opened across the street, and then Wal-Mart about a mile or two away and the entire area started to die. There was a movie theater in the mall that closed, and two movie theaters in the area closed up when the big AMC Barry Woods theater opened. The strip mall that the Target is in isn't doing too well either, as near Wal-Mart a new outdoor mall, Zona Rosa, opened and another Target opened not too far from there. When I moved the area in 1996 there wasn't much around but it has really exploded in the 20 years since. That concludes the history of this sad area of Barry Road in Kansas City. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9u9WJ3YktOk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i55FflaNZSg
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 15:52 |
|
The Limited just announced it was going out of business. Closing 150 stores. I'm surprised it's still around. I guess it's one of those places that you just sorta of glaze over when you're walking through the mall. I figured it had gone the way of The Structure years ago. Mall retail fashion is becoming a loving mass grave.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 16:36 |
|
Krispy Kareem posted:The Limited just announced it was going out of business. Closing 150 stores. I had no idea they were even in biz. That's some good marketing!
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 18:55 |
|
bean_shadow posted:Speaking of dead malls, the mall I went to as a teenager in north Kansas City was recently torn down (the mall I went to as a child was Meadows Mall in Las Vegas---have no idea of how it's doing today). When it closed completely in 2014 it was pretty dead anyway, with only a few stores open (including the couldn't-be-killed wig shop that must have been there for forty years). Anyway, it made the news not too long ago as being the creepiest abandoned mall when a guy made a video exploring it. It's so weird to see it so abandoned as I remember when it was flourishing. But Target opened across the street, and then Wal-Mart about a mile or two away and the entire area started to die. There was a movie theater in the mall that closed, and two movie theaters in the area closed up when the big AMC Barry Woods theater opened. The strip mall that the Target is in isn't doing too well either, as near Wal-Mart a new outdoor mall, Zona Rosa, opened and another Target opened not too far from there. When I moved the area in 1996 there wasn't much around but it has really exploded in the 20 years since. Don't the homeless break in constantly to get out of the cold? I would.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 18:58 |
|
bean_shadow posted:Speaking of dead malls, the mall I went to as a teenager in north Kansas City was recently torn down (the mall I went to as a child was Meadows Mall in Las Vegas---have no idea of how it's doing today). When it closed completely in 2014 it was pretty dead anyway, with only a few stores open (including the couldn't-be-killed wig shop that must have been there for forty years). Anyway, it made the news not too long ago as being the creepiest abandoned mall when a guy made a video exploring it. It's so weird to see it so abandoned as I remember when it was flourishing. But Target opened across the street, and then Wal-Mart about a mile or two away and the entire area started to die. There was a movie theater in the mall that closed, and two movie theaters in the area closed up when the big AMC Barry Woods theater opened. The strip mall that the Target is in isn't doing too well either, as near Wal-Mart a new outdoor mall, Zona Rosa, opened and another Target opened not too far from there. When I moved the area in 1996 there wasn't much around but it has really exploded in the 20 years since. Meadows Mall is hanging in there. Which surprises me because that was considered the "ghetto mall" when I was a teenager in the late 90's. Edit: though the further decline of the area and it being anchored by Sears and JC Penney don't bode well for it: http://m.reviewjournal.com/business/retail/meadows-mall-endures-odd-mall-out CubanMissile has a new favorite as of 19:11 on Jan 7, 2017 |
# ? Jan 7, 2017 18:59 |
|
Honestly I'm surprised all of those single store brands for clothing haven't collapsed faster in the Internet age
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 18:59 |
|
I am still shocked by the sheer number of malls in America. There was only one near me in the UK and that was a lot further than just nipping down to the shops and had nothing else in it. I can't believe teenagers/ young adults used to hang out in them. We usually just went to a park and got smashed on cheap booze.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 19:43 |
|
Krispy Kareem posted:The Limited just announced it was going out of business. Closing 150 stores. Wow, I haven't thought of The Limited since my sister worked there right out of high school in 1988. Did not know they were still in business. Also hadn't thought about Structure in years since an old family acquaintance got me some clothes from there for Christmas circa 1997. I had to go Structure to exchange for 2x, which was impossible because they only sold clothing for tiny elf men and not men like me who are built like Chief Bromden from One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. I think I got a gift card instead that I never used. Now Sears sells Structure clothing
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 19:49 |
I worked at The Limited about 6 or 7 years ago as a part-time manager. Easily one of the dumbest companies I've ever worked for with some of the worst policies towards both their staff and their customers. I had a GM who didn't know how to convert time to decimals; for example, if someone had worked 8 hours and 30 minutes one day and 7 hours and 45 mins another, she would add it up mid-week by punching 8.3 + 7.45 into her calculator, so surprise! Payroll was always hosed up. Her solution? Secretly clock everyone out early on the last day of the workweek so no one got paid for their last few hours of work. One of the other assistant managers complained to HR about her, and their response was pretty much That, along with their draconian return policy (no return without valid government ID even with a receipt, only five returns allowed per person per month), requiring managers to sell loving magazine subscriptions at the register, and telling the 18 year old sales associates who made minimum wage and were scheduled for four hours a week that signing up for the store credit card (only 24.99% APR!) was "mandatory"...
|
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 20:23 |
|
Josef bugman posted:I am still shocked by the sheer number of malls in America. There was only one near me in the UK and that was a lot further than just nipping down to the shops and had nothing else in it. I can't believe teenagers/ young adults used to hang out in them. We usually just went to a park and got smashed on cheap booze. That's what the mall was for, only instead of trees and swing sets there were fountains and food courts.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 20:26 |
|
pastor of muppets posted:I worked at The Limited about 6 or 7 years ago as a part-time manager. Easily one of the dumbest companies I've ever worked for with some of the worst policies towards both their staff and their customers. I had a GM who didn't know how to convert time to decimals; for example, if someone had worked 8 hours and 30 minutes one day and 7 hours and 45 mins another, she would add it up mid-week by punching 8.3 + 7.45 into her calculator, so surprise! Payroll was always hosed up. Her solution? Secretly clock everyone out early on the last day of the workweek so no one got paid for their last few hours of work. One of the other assistant managers complained to HR about her, and their response was pretty much If this is real and you can prove it a lawyer can make you and themselves very very rich.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 20:29 |
I really wish I had documented that poo poo. All I can say is that I was young and just trying to get by and finish college and thought the best I could do was pull these girls aside and make sure they knew that the no one could require them to sign up for anything. e: The payroll stuff at the very least we could have made a very strong case to a labor law attorney, but again, it was reported to HR (who did nothing) and never actually escalated beyond that. I tried at the very least to make sure everyone's time was corrected if I was the manager who happened to be scheduled the day that the final payroll report was to be submitted each week. pastor of muppets has a new favorite as of 20:40 on Jan 7, 2017 |
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 20:34 |
|
Josef bugman posted:I am still shocked by the sheer number of malls in America. There was only one near me in the UK and that was a lot further than just nipping down to the shops and had nothing else in it. I can't believe teenagers/ young adults used to hang out in them. We usually just went to a park and got smashed on cheap booze. That and we love huge, strictly separated commercial areas instead of having clusters of local shops dotted all over the place. Malls make a lot more sense in that context.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 20:39 |
|
Watch Fast Times at Ridgemont High for what American malls were like in their heyday in the 1980s.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 20:47 |
|
They still make people have to get credit card sign ups to work their jobs at places like Sears
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 21:04 |
|
FlamingLiberal posted:They still make people have to get credit card sign ups to work their jobs at places like Sears Signing up customers as a requirement is poo poo, but (slightly) less poo poo than forcing the cashiers themselves to sign up as well, I'd think?
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 21:08 |
|
Ok I may have misread that
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 21:12 |
|
Solice Kirsk posted:If this is real and you can prove it a lawyer can make you and themselves very very rich. Probably not now that the company is going out of business. I like how they went about it. The company filed some paperwork in November associated with mass layoffs and then had 80% off sales during the holidays with no returns allowed. Kind of an unspoken liquidation. There's zero chance anyone associated with the company had any illusions about what was happening. Better than the usual method of announcing the closings and then selling all their inventory to a 3rd party who discounts it 10% and calls it a firesale. Our permanent-temporary-wife's-cousin-of-a-houseguest has been slowly working her way up at Express (shift lead, up for assistant manager). I feel bad for her since she's investing all this time in a lovely retail job that will probably disappear in a couple of years and she'll never move out. 2016 was the year people started being comfortable buying clothes online since both Kohl's and Macy's had lovely sales.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 21:14 |
|
How? That can't be legal. The credit card for employees stuff I mean.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 21:14 |
Solice Kirsk posted:How? That can't be legal. The credit card for employees stuff I mean. I'm sure it wasn't an official policy in that you weren't allowed to work there unless you signed up for the CC (I definitely did not), but the corporate culture of "how can they sell the brand if they don't live it??" coupled with the strong push for store managers to get high credit card sign-up numbers meant that a lot of this was allowed to happen at the store level without anyone batting an eye. I still remember sitting in on weekly conference calls with the DM and the rest of the MODs in the district and there being discussion of ways to bolster credit card signups and the first thing the DM said was to start with the employees themselves. I actually had to mute the call one time to stifle my laughter when some one brought up that their employees were questioning how they were expected to promote predatory credit policies at the height of the recession and the DM being SHOCKED that anyone would think that.
|
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 21:26 |
|
Solice Kirsk posted:How? That can't be legal. The credit card for employees stuff I mean. if you think corporate culture in the US gives a flying gently caress about what's legal when it comes to labor practices. They'll pay pennies on the dollar in fines, and find someone else to replace any workers that complain in days.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 23:03 |
|
Need more whistle blowers. I wish I worked somewhere that was that corrupt. The most I can say is that my commissions are getting cut "to benefit the clients" even though none of the fees or programs designed to fine them are being rescinded.
|
# ? Jan 7, 2017 23:15 |
|
I can't imagine that kind of behavior lasting very long with audio/video recorders in everyone's pocket. Of course, then the business just claims it was rogue low-level managers acting on their own. You also need to know how to tape record conversations. We had a manager at my job who tried recording his boss' yelling and verbal abuse. About halfway through the meeting his recorder filled up its storage and started autoplaying everything it had just recorded. A re-org announced the following week had one less managerial position.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 01:18 |
|
If you work at Saks you have to get the credit card or you don't get any employee discounts. You have to charge your purchase to the Saks card or the register won't give you your discount.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 01:24 |
|
i work for a lovely discount retailer and i've seen so much heinous poo poo it doesn't matter to me anymore. this is a company that's paid record osha fines and continues to do the same poo poo, it just (like every other company as alluded to earlier in the thread) scapegoats store management for its own problems. regional and corporate oversight is at best nonexistent and at worst actively deleterious. sadly, this fortune 500 company actually does well and is expanding
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 02:52 |
|
Labor laws can't exist in right to work states. They can always be like "Cool, don't sign up for the card" and then remove you from the schedule the next week because they don't like your eye color.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 03:44 |
|
i was told to fire an employee and to "just tell him he was seasonal and temporary" and he isn't seasonal or temporary. we hire temporary people at christmas but this guy was put in as a regular employee. do i fire him and gently caress him over and risk getting sued or do i do the right thing and let him keep working and risk the ire of my moron childish boss? never a good answer, here in retail hell, FL
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 03:50 |
|
Retail and Florida.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 04:05 |
|
zh1 posted:i was told to fire an employee and to "just tell him he was seasonal and temporary" and he isn't seasonal or temporary. we hire temporary people at christmas but this guy was put in as a regular employee. do i fire him and gently caress him over and risk getting sued or do i do the right thing and let him keep working and risk the ire of my moron childish boss? never a good answer, here in retail hell, FL Florida goon here. You don't need a reason to fire somebody, as long as it's not for racially or other protected class reasons.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 04:44 |
|
zh1 posted:i was told to fire an employee and to "just tell him he was seasonal and temporary" and he isn't seasonal or temporary. we hire temporary people at christmas but this guy was put in as a regular employee. do i fire him and gently caress him over and risk getting sued or do i do the right thing and let him keep working and risk the ire of my moron childish boss? never a good answer, here in retail hell, FL whiteyfats posted:Florida goon here. You don't need a reason to fire somebody, as long as it's not for racially or other protected class reasons. I think most of the US is "right to work" these days, which is code for "right to shitcan you for no reason at any time so you don't qualify for unemployment." So don't worry about getting sued. Do worry about you getting fired, then him too if you disobey your lovely overlord boss.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 06:13 |
|
|
# ? Jun 5, 2024 06:17 |
|
13Pandora13 posted:I think most of the US is "right to work" these days, which is code for "right to shitcan you for no reason at any time so you don't qualify for unemployment." So don't worry about getting sued. Do worry about you getting fired, then him too if you disobey your lovely overlord boss. No it isn't, shitbrains.
|
# ? Jan 8, 2017 07:28 |