You won't believe this San Francisco video store comeback
Okay so, in a city where everything becomes a tech startup or a fancy coffee shop, then a dispensary, and then just an empty storefront with a "for lease" sign, someone is trying to bring back a video rental store. Seriously. Colin Hutton's Video Wave is making an old format work, and honestly, this feels like an anomaly that only San Francisco could produce. I mean, we're talking physical media, folks. In North Beach, no less, a neighborhood that's seen more literary movements and counterculture revolutions than Blockbuster ever had movies.
Hutton, who used to be a librarian, is leaning into that experience, comparing managing a huge video inventory to running a library. It makes sense, right? Like City Lights, but for movies. It's a throwback, hella nostalgic, especially when you think about how many of us spent our Friday nights trying to figure out if that one copy of *Pulp Fiction* was finally in. This isn't just a business; it’s a living museum, a defiance of the algorithm, and a wild reminder of how much the City clings to its weird, wonderful past.
### Why This Matters for San Francisco
* **Defying the Odds:** In a city known for its rapid tech evolution, a video store is a radical act of preservation. * **Community Hub:** Could this become a new kind of gathering spot, like old-school record stores were for music lovers? * **Cultural Preservation:** It’s a nod to San Francisco's history of independent thought and local businesses, fighting against homogenization.
This little video store, tucked away in North Beach, is a reminder that even as the city changes around us, there are still people here who believe in the tangible, the personal, the slightly eccentric. That's the City, fam — fog, hills, and all.
Vivian Leung, MiTL Sports Desk.
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