As a teenager, my friend Tonya worked in the local video store and visiting her was an important stop in our route of eveningtide juvenile delinquency. There was an unwritten rule that if you wanted a movie poster that was currently displayed, all you had to do was ask and it became yours once its cycle on the wall was complete. That seemed really amazing, even glamorous, to me.
As a mother, video stores were a big deal to us for awhile, too --- I remember our oldest daughter, toddling, pacing off the four yards of Anchorman cases and reciting, "Papa. Papa. Papa. Papa," to each Will Ferrell mustachioed face. (I've never seen the movie but that still amuses me, Ron Burgundy is the name, no?) The clerk at our more recent haunt would exuberantly pass out terrible "free" candy, every single time.

Having to brave the elements and bump into humanity at the video store was a chore, but in some ways it was a grounding ritual. It was a simple way to anticipate coziness.
NB: Maybe I can finally get my hands on a copy of Arachnophobia...
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