News > The Top Ten Lies Blockbuster Video Tells Their Customers

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Written by Anthony Burch

I worked for Blockbuster Video for the better part of six months. I was used at several different stores as a shift manager, and had to deal with many, many different kinds of customers. While the job was criminally easy at times, I came to despise the job, the corporation, and the customers who gave it money.

As a way of exorcising the demons in my video rental past, I now present my completely unbiased and totally honest list of the ten biggest lies Blockbuster Video tells their customers.

10. “Sorry, I can’t do that”

 

If you tell a Blockbuster employee to credit something off your account, or change your payment method after he’s already confirmed it, or one of any number of irritating special requests one could possibly make to an employee, he will more than likely tell you that he is sorry, but the computer system will not allow him to do that.

This is untrue.

While Blockbuster still uses a Point of Sale computer system that is literally more than twenty years old (abbreviated, appropriately enough, to “P.O.S.”), it still allows the average BB clerk to do pretty much anything that could conceivably need to be done. The reason for his refusal to comply with your request is relatively simple: he is personally angry at your stupidity  or dishonesty (keeping a videogame out for six days, then coming back and demanding a refund because it didn’t have an instruction manual) and feels it should not be positively reinforced.

No matter what your problem is, the average BB clerk can, technically, solve it – but the more complicated it is, the less he or she will actually want to. Hypothetically, refusing a customer any sort of service would be a no-no in the world of customer service, but given that an average BB computer looks like some sort of hacker workstation to the average citizen (blue screens, no mice, keys that make a satisfyingly loud noise when they are punched) , the Blockbuster employee is easily able to blame everything he can’t or won’t do on the computer system. Hopefully, the average consumer will not realize the full extend of what the POS system can do, and will have no choice but to accept the employee’s assertion that it is the computer, and not the employee, that is being unhelpful – which leads us straight into number 9.

 

9. “The computers lock down five minutes before closing time – we can’t do anything about it”

 

I heard this lie from the coolest manager I ever worked with – a guy with a vanity license plate reading “WOOKIEE” and a son with the middle name “Vader.” He hated customers even more than I did, and he used the above lie as a foolproof way of ending the night early. It is, of course, total bullshit, but it’s a damned good lie.

Promising that the computers will automatically lock down sounds absurd enough to be true, and technical enough to dissuade the unwashed masses from questioning it further. Also, the customers are forced to action: if you don’t hurry the fuck up and find a movie that will fit whatever mood you’re in at 1:00 in the morning, the system will shut down and you won’t get anything. The customers leave faster, the store closes earlier (thus preventing possible last-minute robberies), and the staff get to go home sooner. This lie, all things considered, contributes to a win-win-win situation.

 

8. “Sorry, the restroom is broken”

 

Seriously, it’s not. The restroom is unhygienic, disused, and probably caked in several layers of bodily fluids, but it is still technically functional. The reason BB staff lock their restrooms and tell customers the plumbing is broken is because the restroom is the one place in the entire store where the staff cannot see you.

As a result of this fact, restrooms are the perfect place to steal shit: during my time at Blockbuster, thieves often grabbed DVDs or videogame hardware, stuffed them into their pants, and entered the bathroom. Inside, they literally had all the time they wanted to remove the numerous security strips and magnetic locks affixed to every piece of merchandise.

One female customer in particular took her baby into the restroom with her and removed the packaging for an Xbox 360 controller, a new DVD copy of Gridiron Gang, and a copy of InStyle before stuffing all three items into her purse. Everyone working the shift that night obviously knew what the woman had done, but we were powerless to stop her thanks to lie number seven:

 

7. “Theft is bad”

 

Like many other corporate chains (Target and Wal-mart come to mind), Blockbuster must appear to despise shoplifting in all its shapes and forms, whilst doing pretty much nothing to stop it.

If you stuff eighteen DVDs, a Grand Theft Auto strategy guide, and a box of Red Vines into a backpack and walk out, congratulations – you’ve just committed the perfect crime. Even if the metal detector by the door goes off on your way out, you’re fine. Even if the security camera catches your face, you’re fine. Even if DVDs are literally poking out of your dungarees at the feet and waist, and even if every step you make is punctuated by the loud, repeated clapping of plastic case against plastic case, and even if an employee personally comes up to you and asks to see all the items you are carrying, once you leave the store you’ll still spend the rest of your arrest-free night watching your stolen copy of Red Dawn.

Blockbuster employees are trained not to stop, accuse, or pursue criminals, no matter what. This is partially for legal reasons (if a Blockbuster employee accuses a thief of stealing as per company policy and the thief shoots him, Blockbuster can be held accountable), but partially because Blockbuster doesn’t want to waste its time getting in battles with every two-bit pickpocket in the US. In the same way that videogame companies tend not to crack down on pirates, so too does Blockbuster ignore theft. Literally the only situation in which a Blockbuster employee can take any action against a thief is if the thief confesses to attempting to steal something. The BB theft response system quite literally punishes honesty – if someone admits to having stolen something, the employee is to immediately call the police and wait with the thief until their arrival, at which point said thief will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

Yeah, that’ll fucking teach him to fess up and apologize.

 

6. “Sorry, we don’t have that movie – I’ll call the other store and check if they have it”

 

There’s nobody on the other line, dude. Yeah, you saw me look up the phone number for another store, and you probably watched me dial some numbers, but I actually just called my cell phone. You might think I’m talking to another Blockbuster employee over at 19th Avenue and Union Hills, but I’m just speaking over the sound of my voicemail message, making occasional pauses to heighten the realism before disappointedly sighing, hanging up, and pronouncing, “Nah, I guess they don’t have it. Sorry.”

If you'd asked for a better movie I probably would have really checked, but you didn't, so I didn't.

 

5. “Yeah, we’re big movie buffs”

 

While under the employ of the Blockbuster Corporation, I worked at no less than six different stores in the greater Phoenix area. And in all my time, I did not run into a single store manager who had seen any of the following movies:

-City of God

-Fight Club

-The Wild Bunch

-Gone with the Wind

-Citizen Kane

-Casablanca

-THE FUCKING GODFATHER

On my first day, my store manager asked me what my favorite movie was. After responding, “Blade Runner” and watching her nod in faux-understanding, I asked her what her favorite movie was. She replied, “Rumor Has It.”

In retrospect, I should have quit right there.

When I later asked her why she hadn’t seen any movies of historical or artistic significance, she used these exact words:

“Gas station attendants don’t need to know how to work an oilrig, do they?”

No, but they do need to know the goddamned difference between unleaded and diesel. Jesus.

 

4. “No, I won’t write down stuff you say to me and then repost it on the Internet”

 

"Did you like Terminator 3?" –An employee
"Uh, maybe if I'd never seen Terminator 1 or 2."  -Me
"What? You didn't–"
"You're talking about comparing a decent action movie to two of the best action movies ever made."
"What's my favorite action movie? That's a good question, I've never thought about that."
"…I didn't ask–"
"Probably Blade 2.”
"…"

"Is it possible to understand Road House 2 even if I haven't seen the original?" –A customer

"–Are you from Pakistan?"- 50 year old, balding customer with glasses and a pedo-smile
"I–what?" -Me
"Your ethnicity, are you from Pakistan?"
"Uh, sort of.”
"Oh, I thought so. You ever thought about modelling?"
"…What."
"You've got a real face for it."
"I–"
"–Yeah, my son in law does it. Makes a pretty good living off it. You've got a face for it, I can tell you."
"Uh, if you need anything else, let me–"
"–And you don't have to be gay to do it, either."
"IFYOUNEEDANYTHINGELSEJUSTLETMEKNOW"

"Is this Final Fantasy Seven? The one with the V, and the two lines?" –An employee

 

3. “There are no late fees”

 

Perhaps the biggest marketing move in Blockbuster’s history has been the so-called abolishment of late fees. While, technically, there is no longer a service charge referred to as a “late fee” at any Blockbuster store on the planet, there are plenty of other small fees and price changes to make up for it.

Firstly, rentals themselves are now more expensive than ever: in Arizona, a movie rental costs 5 bucks, and a game rental costs 9. In states like California or New York, I assume some sort of first-born bartering system is used.

Secondly, there is a late fee if you keep a movie a week past its suggested due date: the $1.25 charge is referred to as a “restocking fee,” but trust me – it’s a late fee. There is nothing in the process of returning a movie from the night drop to the store shelves that costs even the smallest amount of money; if the $1.25 is truly financing “restocking,” I have to wonder where that money is going. I sure as hell didn’t see any of it.

Thirdly, the tradeoff with late fees if that if you keep a movie for a month past its suggested due date, you have to buy it. This is probably the most reasonable aspect of the no late fees policy, and is therefore the one frequently argued against by deadbeats who refuse to return copies of Fast and the Furious 2 within a reasonable period of time.

 

2. “Blockbuster Online is better than Netflix”

 

Every Blockbuster Online mailer counts as a coupon for a free instore rental. It’s a pretty good deal, admittedly, but the problem is that it’s a wholly temporary one: while Blockbuster Online’s current monthly fee is pretty much on par with Netflix’s, it won’t stay like that for long.

Blockbuster Online was created solely to steal Netflix’s online rental idea and drive them out of business: as such, if/when Netflix is bankrupted by Blockbuster Online’s Bauman-esque ripoff artistry, Blockbuster Online will raise its prices significantly, and probably get rid of the whole “free instore rental” thing. Thanks to the combination of No Late Fees and the Blockbuster Online free rentals, the BB Corporation is losing money – once their main source of competition is gone, they’ll do whatever necessary to get that cash back.

1. “Yeah, that’s a really good movie”

 

If there is only one thing you need to know about Blockbuster, it is this: the movie you are renting, or the movie that was suggested to you by an overweight female clerk who has had two husbands, one child, and half a dozen miscarriages, will not be good.

The fault for this does not completely lie on either employee or customer, but weighs equally on both parties.

As mentioned earlier, Blockbuster employees, for the most part, know next to nothing about movies. As such, their recommendations will be at best useless and at worst harmful: whichever new release has the prettiest cover will likely be the one immediately recommended by the manager on duty.

On the other hand, the vast majority of those who frequent the shelves of Blockbuster Video are slobbering, slack-jawed idiots who harbor no true love for cinema, no desire to probe deep questions about life, and no ability to enjoy something that might require the slightest bit of effort. In one respect, I can understand this: these people have worked hard during their day jobs – why shouldn’t be allowed to relax and escape with some harmless Hollywood entertainment?

The problem arises in what they watch. Relax and escape, yeah, but at the very least adopt some goddamned standards. If you’re looking for a comedy, don’t rent Phat Girlz. If you want a drama, don’t get anything with Ben Affleck. And for the love of God, do not rent something just because it is new.

I literally cannot tell you how many people come to Blockbuster on a daily basis, just so they can rent the new releases. Not because they’re interested in them. Not because they look good. Simply because they are new.

And while they spend their time and money on dreck like Behind Enemy Lines II and The Break-Up, these people literally refuse to anything that:

-Was made before 1995

-Comes from a different country, even an English-speaking one

-Might be mentally or emotionally disturbing

-Has subtitles

-Has voice-over narration (I literally talked to a customer who didn’t like any movie that had voice-over narration: that’s like fucking saying you don’t like movies with a number in the title)

Of course, there are always those precious few customers who actually want something different, but they are extremely rare. And by the time they show up, most Blockbuster employees are already burned out: my first few months on the job, I tried to expand people’s movie vocabulary by exposing them to unusual fare like Oldboy, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, Brick, and so on, but my efforts were all for naught. The things I recommended to customers were either immediately returned to the shelf once I left their field of vision, or watched on a whim and then endlessly complained about (“the pedophilia stuff in Hard Candy was so gross that I had to turn it off after ten minutes”). It literally gets to the point where, as an employee, you don’t want to share good films with customers because, in the words of one of my old co-workers, “they don’t deserve them.”

This attitude snowballs into a general loathing of all Blockbuster customers, and then all consumers, and then all of humanity in general.

Long story short, I was fired from Blockbuster for calling a female customer a “cunt.”

She was totally acting like one, though.

 

 

UPDATE:

To all you commenters and Diggers who thought I was making #2 up as some part of a conspiracy theory, read this letter I was just sent by a Blockbuster manager who otherwise disagreed with most of this article:

"I just wanted to point out that starting today the Total Access program has been totally revamped, chilling similar to the author's ideas. (No store manager had any prior knowledge of this change until today)

There will be three types of Blockbuster Online -

Mailer Only - Can be used for $1.99 in-store rentals

Total Access - Can exchange based on amount of movies (ex. 3-out program = 5 free per month)

Total Access Premium - Unlimited in-store rentals (about five dollors more per month)

To lessen the blow of this absolutely ridiculous change they have introduced a plan of using the mailers to get $5 games, or when you run out of free rentals, each movie will be $1.99 (if you have the mailers with you).  This in turn ends the e-coupon given each month for a free movie or game (which I loved because I was able to get new games free this way).

As an employee of a Blockbuster I am quite hard-pressed at explain this change to my CSRs, though the toughest to explain to will be our regulars already on the online program (they'll get a 90-day grandfather clause).

I sincerely hope that Blockbuster will realize this change is for the worse as they notice huge drops in online activations along with cancellations and go back to the original plan.  Not only is it much too confusing for our customers but will also create many unnecessary credits.

Every Store Manager I spoke to today were quite angry over the changes because we had to take down all signs relating to Total Access, along with update all our laptops.

Just wanted to send this out to inform all of you my insane amount of frustration today due to the Total Access program."

See? 

 

 

Comments

snowman27 on 08/11/2007 05:00am
you're my hero...by the way Brick was really good
oooohnavyseals on 08/23/2007 1:33pm
I was a shift manager at BBV back in the day too, and its pretty much the same for me except a lot of the employees I worked with actually were movie buffs- but I'm guessing thats because it was in a college town and close to campus. We actually had a notebook where we would write down stories of customers (which of course we kept stashed away from the district manager) and after I left to pursue another job I heard it was passed down to other managers after me.
Best story:
Customer: "Hey whats that Salu movie?"
Employee: "Salu??"
Customer: "Yeah, Salu"
Employee: (types in computer)" I don't see anything, is it a foreign film?"
Customer: "Don't look like it. Theres a whole bunch of em over there on the wall. Gots like a hand and a foot on it..."
Employee: "... with a white cover?"
Customer: "Yep"
Employee: "Sir, thats Saw."


BTW let it be said the fact that they're open on Thanksgiving day and Christmas day is total crap. And I was there for the End of Late Fees deal and its total crap as well, I never liked it.

Down with the man!
joannabk on 09/07/2007 9:05pm
Dude, great article. But. You do not need to bring up women having miscarriages, as I can assure you with all certainty that whether or not a woman has ever had a miscarriage has absolutely zero to do with either her intelligence or her taste in movies. It's just mean, and just mean is not funny.

Just sayin'.
Mirk on 09/20/2007 8:40pm
Joan, it was a masterful literary device meant to compliment just how sad and worthless the kind of person he was describing really is. Anything can be funny if you look at it the right way, choosing to see it as a poor or offense means of portrayal is a personal and short sighted choice ;).
Cinestress on 09/25/2007 03:30am
I work at Blockbuster now (and I've been against Blockbuster from the beginning, but now I hate it even more)... and everything you say is true. I hate working there and I can't wait to quit in a month or so.
Bashh on 11/04/2007 00:15am
I've been working with the company for a year and a half, and though I'm disillusioned, not nearly as bad as you have been. My original store had an employee's only bathroom, so that's why we didn't let the majority of the public use it. Oh wait, we did a lot anyways.

Our new store has a public toilet, oh wait it has to be opened by us though. We let every damned person use it because they have a right to, you're an asshole if you didn't let people use the toilet because it was unmonitored.

I'm not even saying I like the company, the three tiered system for the online is bullshit, especially since they didn't grandfather everyone in the same way, but come the fuck on, you would fake a call to another store? That's utter bullshit itself. I always called other stores because if someone cared that much about Wild Hogs, I was nice enough to do my job to see they got it. The only lie I ever handed out was if I knew I had ONE copy of a hot movie and someone on the phone asked for it. They didn't spend their gas to get here just to realize someone on the phone before them was going to get it.

Telling people your point of sales is going to shut off at five minutes till? Again, I never do that shit. Have I closed four or five minutes early sure as hell, but not by lying.

As for telling people the system can't do that in order to not do a credit for them, well if you really lack the customer service skills to explain why you won't give it to them and have to resort to a cop out, go right the fuck ahead. I tell them my side of the story and if they don't like it they can talk to the store manager or even call to corporate and complain. What's wrong with the company is people like you who don't try to give an honest effort to do your job correctly.

Does the company know what the fuck it's doing? No, but I still take pride in myself and my manner, and yes my job, so I do it as I see fit, and that's not to take shots at the customers that I totally think need to be shot down.
shawneecowan on 09/03/2009 5:19pm
You'd think I were crazy to have worked for this disaster of a company for 8 years, but it didn't start off that bad. The growth of Netflix made them panic and then the end of late fees sent me over the edge. At least I got excellent pay out of it... for awhile. I left them in Aug of '08 and took a $5/hour paycut. It was worth it! No more holidays and weekends! They can take working christmas and shove it up their asses! My boss or boss' boss sure did enjoy their fucking day with their family! And then have the nerve- after opening their presents- call and ask, "How are doing on your sales? Any new sign ups? You need to commit to 5 today." Shove your total access up your ass!!!
Irishmic on 10/04/2009 9:20pm
this might be the greatest article i have ever read. i also got in trouble for dropping the cunt word in front of a female customer. i called another employee a cunt because he didn't do his bloody job and make room for anything in the tv section. he instead spent the previous night talking to his girlfriend on the phone in the back. I didn't get fired for it though, even though my store manager was standing next to me and said customer was right behind me. i just carried on my conversation like nothing happen till i noticed the "i cannot believe you just said that" stare coming from my store manager, at which point i stated i didn't say it that loudly, which obviously wasn't the case because said customer dropped her movies right then and there and walked out. the only thing that saved me is that i could make my store manager laugh, and that i was only the second worst one currently working under him. and netflix is better. i would like to say that in central Pennsylvania, the managers had seen most if not all of the movies you mentioned and a couple of us had a following with the customers and where able to break the trend of them not watching subtitle movies. we even got some to buy battle royale. and as much as i hated that job, the crew i worked were fun. and i miss the annoying customers that we had nicknames for. we had The Pedophile, who always made comments about under 16 girls being hot, even though he was in his forties, and always had an olsen twins movie rented out "for his kids" even though we never saw any kids. then there was the Anti-Price, who was named for the employee that just despised him, but the customer thought he was loved by all. always talked to us like we were the best man at his wedding, he treated his wife like shit, always rented god awful movies and games. then there was harry, who was just repulsive. swore at customers, probably hated us, he would rent games, beat them two days later, then scratch the disc on purpose so he could get a free rental. this lasted until the assistant manager banned him from renting games ever again. he left a note on the account saying that if you rented a game out to him, you would be fired. and he checked it every day he opened.

as for the closing early thing, i worked one christmas day (and all employees had to work two holidays, including managers) with the shift leader who was by far in contention of being in the top ten worst employees in history, he closed the store five hours ahead of schedule. granted we didn't have a customer for the last three hours. all i know is i'm doing returns, and he started closing up all the computers. he said hurry up and put those movies back, we are peacing. "what the fuck are you talking about" was my response. "it's christmas day, i don't feel like being here, i'm closing now. and don't worry, i do this all the time." "what about the alarm times, won't they noticed the alarm being set 5 hours early." "maybe, but i'll take the fall so don't worry." aka i have worse dirt on you or someone else that i will trade for my freedom. good times.
Sarah818 on 08/09/2012 11:59am
Ok look, I currently work at Blockbusters and although I don't always enjoy at times (who enjoys their job all the time?!) some of the crap you've written here is absolute bollocks.

#10 - We can't do that. Not because the computer won't allow it, but because if we start crediting everything off all the time where is the incentive for customers to bring back the films at all? I might as well hand it over the counter and yell "RUN!" if we start doing that. Also we get in a LOT of trouble for crediting things off without a reason. You will get nice employees that will take balances down to a reasonable amount, but we would probably lose our jobs for JUST taking the balance off.

#9 - No the computer doesn't lock down 5 minutes before closing but we tend to get pissed off by customers coming in 5 minutes before we want to leave! We have lives too believe it or not! Honestly the store you used shouldn't have told you that and they were wrong but this doesn't apply to every store.

#8 - The restroom probably isn't broke but there are strict health and safety laws in place which basically say we can't let you use the staff bathroom in case you slip and die. That's not our fault, its a health and safety hopes that you have to jump through in any job.

#7 - Thats completely wrong! of course we can do something about it.. I watched a friend/guy I work with run down the street after someone had nicked something! we can stop you just like we could if you were taking things from anywhere else.

#6 - There is a system in place where we can look up the nearest 10 stores to see if they have it.. we can also call them through an internal phone system so thats no strictly true (maybe you just dealt with some really bad employees)

#5 - We're not ALL big movie buffs but hey, we get the movies for free so most of the time we're watching them! :D

#4 - Never heard of that happening so can't really comment.

#3 - Ok well it doesn't take a genius to work out that we just don't call it that anymore. In the UK the amount it cost was halved and for a while we did have the option of putting the movies out for a longer space of time by paying upfront (they've since got rid of that) They tried getting rid of late fees all together at one stage in the US in the shelves basically emptied!! not so good for business.

#2 - Erm.. well that arguable really, the benefit of using blockbuster online is that when you're waiting for your next movie, you can rent one in store for free. Simples. but i can't really vouch for any of the online services because I don't use them.

#1 - Now that's just down right insulting. It's not about the prettiest cover, generally speaking we'll advise on the ones we liked or we were reviewed as being good. We try to go from personal experience as much as possible but honestly we can't watch every movie in the store.


Look I'm trying not to suck up to them because frankly they've pissed me off more than once, but it does vary from store to store. Some will be great and others will be utter crap.. just like any other big chain.
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