Douchebags , iPhones & Records Prices
Breez
1,706 Posts
These clown ass fucks on their iPhones price checking vinyl is really beginning piss me off. It seems like every day it's more & more of these idiots hemming up the record stores. And they aren't even discreet about it. Just grabbing a huge stack of vinyl and finding a comfy spot to price check. I mean we all gotta handle our money and get our hustle on but this shit's getting ridiculous. For those Strutters that work in or own a store, how do you feel about this? How do you handle it when this happens?
Comments
But are you just out in the open about it? I mean, I've checked on stuff here & there but not like these dudes are doing. I'm seeing dudes, literally, grabbing 50 records at a time and going to the back corner of the store and checking the whole stack. I just think it can cause prices to sky rocket at certain spots.
People check prices, I have also had people check reviews, listen on youtube, checking for reissues and checking pressing variations.
Nothing wrong with doing some research, and as long as they are not blocking the bins, or wasting my time, no problem.
Not sure why you think it would cause record prices to sky rocket. It forces the seller to keep prices competitive.
I flamed this dude out for c-frenzying once at the shop. He got on WFMU and whined about it that night. Honestly he sounded like a complete bitch and it kind of ruined any negative publicity he was trying to hand out, but It's true that nowadays, with yelp, ebay and a recession, you kinda just have to let that shit slide. Fighting it is futile.
ZING!
Also TIL about
As far as googling/cee-frenzy/popsike, etc. I do it every now and then, but I try to be discreet about that schitt. I guess it's just how things are nowadays.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/13/opinion/amazons-jungle-logic.html
I usually just go to the counter and plunk down like 50-75 records and say "ok, now which ones are actually good and tell me how much they're really worth." I usually score that way and it's way more rewarding than using an iPhone and I still keep my dignity.
But really, if I'm at a shop and I see a record for $25 dollars, and hop on a smartphone and see the same record listed for 15 dollars including shipping on Ebay, I am probably going to opt for the Ebay jawn. I am all for supporting small businesses, especially record dealers still committed to having a store front, but not so much that I am going to pay out the ass for it.
I've done that. Pull an interesting record. Pop the title into youtube and listen for 15-20 seconds. That can easily decide to buy, without me ever tying up the turntable so you serious dudes can get your game on...
I am guilty of being one of these clown ass fucks. Except, I used my Android.
ok
It is something that's tacky to be obvious about, however
For the most part, its pretty easy to tell if something is over-priced.
I also keep a running want list on my phone, which is easy to consult whilst in the stacks.
what do you guys think about their business model in regard to pricing?
good? bad? necessary? stupid?
here's where the quote came from:
http://www.29-95.com/music/story/record-heights-vinyl
It's like a listening station policy.
I think the main problem is that folks who spent years gathering knowledge that gave them the upper hand in record buying are pissed that this knowledge is now available for free to any dumbass who can afford an I-Phone.
Ungoogleable is the new frontier.
i would have to say yes. what are the odds that the records they didnt want to buy get put back in the right spot?
slim to none i'd say.
Yes...this is happening
I talked to that guy briefly before the store opened and thought 'this store will suck. I get to haggle on every single record? Great!' But I haven't been by to it see yet. So I'm reserving my judgement.
i went by there and poked around a lil bit, almost everything is overpriced.
Any raers or just overpriced commons?
this is what real estate agents are currently experiencing. the 'information incongruity' gap becoming null due to easily accessible information via technology.
c'est le future.