You all rock. Thanks for watching. Let me know if you want to hire Megaforce for your birthday party. Stay tuned for merch... Catch up on the full Expedition Log Series! Support the Expedition Log on Patreon, if you like! - www.patreon.com/salvatoreamadeo Second Channel! - kzbin.info Join the discussion on Discord! discord.gg/g4tKbpu My Website: www.salvatoreamadeo.com Facebook Page! - facebook.com/QuiteStudios/ ExLog Series Playlist - kzbin.info/aero/PLeveLKZSrsW5yrdr5vZa1-7oq_g-EuzZt Twitter - twitter.com/salvatoreamadeo Instagram - instagram.com/salvatoreamadeo Subscribe to and follow everyone on the DMOD Seal: Faded Commerce - kzbin.info RetailPocalypse - kzbin.info The Vintage Spaces Channel - kzbin.info Unicomm Productions - kzbin.info Ace's Adventures - kzbin.info/door/YfArGrC66A-vdS45DS7Qrg Jonrev's Flickr - www.flickr.com/photos/7323354@N05/ Jonrev's Site - jonrev.com/ The Caldor Rainbow - thecaldorrainbow.blogspot.com/ The Neon Explorer instagram.com/theneonexplorer Rustbelt Expeditions instagram.com/rustbeltexpeditions
@jrebecca01954 жыл бұрын
That movie received a 3.8/10 on IMDB. 🤣
@googleblows40164 жыл бұрын
We can't underestimate the impact of self-destructive trade policy. Pointing out the toxic business practices is astute, but it's not the entire picture. As an MBA, I would suggest that malls aren't really providing the same 'product' as a China-direct drop shipper, even when the malls _were_ essentially filled with the same variety of goods. You're correct about online shopping. Malls are providing an experience, and people _would_ have continued to put money into that experience, if a huge chunk of that demo hadn't been shifted out of their livelihood. In any case, due to legislation, circumstances are about to change again. Businesses like Amazon more or less function as, among other things, enormous drop-shippers for CCP-controlled manufacturers and warehouses. Our trade policies enabled that activity, and that business continues despite the human rights atrocities. Once upon a time, these practices were illegal (see: "illegal steel dumping"). Bureaucrats then turned their heads and American communities perished as a result: for every d--d mall, there's a d--d community surrounding it, with a d--d factory (or factories). This was in favor of abusive communist tyrants and "low prices always" on items that fall apart during their first use. That time appears to be coming to an end.
@googleblows40164 жыл бұрын
36:50 Your positive outlook is refreshing. I believe things are going to make a turn for the better: soon and fast.
@craiggillett59854 жыл бұрын
I think I paid to see that mega force video with my best friend !
@ajmihalko7164 жыл бұрын
Can you still go inside? Today ?
@randomcommenterfromdownund89494 жыл бұрын
"Once malls finally open up... go pay your local mall a visit... sit in the conversation pits and make a memory... and just feel the space." ... "Malls are temporary, just like mostly everything in this world. At some point, we have to let go, and that's OK. But the memories we have of the things that touched our lives are what we should keep most sacred. Go enjoy the things you care about, when it becomes safe to do so, because ultimately everything becomes a grey ghost." Great sentiments, Sal. You're talking (mostly) to an audience of people who LIKE MALLS, and it's good to remind us that on the other side of the pandemic we will (hopefully) be able to go enjoy them again, and that we shouldn't squander the opportunity because this could be as good as it gets, and our local mall might end up on your ExLog list sooner or later. You hit the nail on the head with your description of small local malls being the ones parents liked because they could quickly go in, get what they needed, and leave, vs. the larger ones. Of course, as a tween and teen (and later), I always preferred the larger ones, as there was more to do and more to see! What I've been doing during quarantine. Taking tech classes and watching heritage seminars online. Ordering myself a new computer for the first time since 2012. Renewing old acquaintances via email. Budgeting. LOTS of budgeting, as my team was laid off a couple weeks before COVID-19 hit. Organising things at home a bit, enabling me to find things I haven't seen in 5+ years!
@sal4 жыл бұрын
Hasn’t it been nice to get the house in order while locked in? Glad you’re staying super productive...thanks for the kind words, and the support!
@jqueen13804 жыл бұрын
Loved this! So well said.
@30roundz4 жыл бұрын
I think folks like us watching this video, like old malls because of a sense of nostalgia and the funny thing is I think nostalgic people appreciate nostalgia because deep down we know these little things dont last and pass without notice sometimes...
@randomcommenterfromdownund89494 жыл бұрын
@@30roundz I also like old malls just because I STILL LIKE MALLS in general. I've regularly hung out in mall food courts or coffee shops in 5 states in two countries, since the 1980s. It's where I got my first taste of freedom as an 11 year old hanging out at the arcade by the fountain with a Hot Sam's pretzel without Mom whilst she went clothes shopping. Where I got to try out "adulting", being dropped off at the mall for 3-4 hours at a time as a 12-13 year old, to see a Disney movie, play at the arcade, and just see what is new at the mall. Where I learned about genericism of mall fashion when my teacher and I both wore the same wrap skirt from Stuart's one day in high school. Where I learned that in retail, there are more than 4 seasons. Where I can go be around fancier architecture/furniture/plants/fountains than I'd ever be able to afford at home. Where I'd learn about sale cycles and almost definitely be there THE day that anything I'd liked when window-shopping went on sale. Where I'd hang after work to be around people whilst reading tech magazines, and could save a bit of $$ using the mall's heating/aircon, and drink unlimited Chik-fil-A iced tea for $1.09. Where I'd later take my laptop and debug code or write submissions objecting to heritage-related development, and drink still more iced tea, although in Australia it's not unlimited and not $1.09 - but the aircon and heating is great because my apartment here doesn't even HAVE aircon, nor does it have central heating. What I do at malls has changed over the years, but I still prefer enclosed malls to any other shopping experience.
@30roundz4 жыл бұрын
@@randomcommenterfromdownund8949 very thoughtful recollection. Thanks! Side note, can you can you imagine an 11 year old left alone in these days?
@Decade8Media4 жыл бұрын
It breaks my heart to see any mall demolished. it's as if with every brick that is shattered, a memory is destroyed.
@sal4 жыл бұрын
It’s one of the saddest things to see...
@geekygirl25964 жыл бұрын
Yes
@jakobrodoski16283 жыл бұрын
I spent alot of time in this mall and know alot of history about it some is dark and some isn't. My friend used to work there and I used to hang out with him while he was working and for all the paranormal believers this whole property had alot of activity being it was built on an old oil refinery that blew up in the early 1900s
@jamino60643 жыл бұрын
@@jakobrodoski1628 ba. .v.
@Mallafterlife Жыл бұрын
@@jakobrodoski1628 it’s haunted!!??
@chriswhite70943 жыл бұрын
Hey I know this’ll end up falling on deaf ears but I want to say I’m glad you did this mall I grew up in Warren pa actually less than 4 miles away from the mall I remember when I was a kid (around 5-8 years old) I remember going to the mall with fondness and going to Kmart with my mom to go grocery shopping and always trying to convince her to get me some pizza from napolis or to go to EB Games. I remember taking pictures with Santa and the Easter bunny and throwing countless coins into the fountains to wish for toys from Santa. I remember buying our artificial Christmas tree (which we still use) from Big Lots. As I got older it seemed to die with age till it was just Bon Ton where my brothers and I would get last minute Christmas presents for my mom. I remember asking my mom when I was 12 why the stores were closing and she told me about how the owners kept raising the prices on rent. They raised them so much that the stores either moved to Warren Commons down by Walmart (like GameStop, RadioShack, and Kay did before the first two ended up closing for good) or closing in general it’s a tough thing to see the place where you have memories from when you were a child die but that happens
@sal3 жыл бұрын
Beautiful memories. Napolis is delicious, too. Thanks for sharing!
@LeighDeitrick14 жыл бұрын
Great video! I hate seeing the dead plants. 😣
@lonelyshrimpart4 жыл бұрын
Your videos are so calming, I love them. The calm atmosphere helps a lot with my anxiety 😊 I can’t wait for the border to reopen so I can go visit my parents and go spend an hour or two eating pretzels and drinking coffee in the quiet little mall across the street from them On a different note, bon-ton closing feels so weird to me. I never liked the store but my great grandma used to work there decades ago?? And so that was her store of choice and she’d always bring me and my mom shopping there and we could never get her to stop cleaning up displays or putting clothes back on their proper racks. So even though I never liked it there, knowing I’ll never get to see gramma picking up after other customers and chatting with the older cashiers who’ve seen her doing this for years. It’s a weird feeling indeed.
@Lonrafael4 жыл бұрын
Sal, I felt like I was right there with you. Thoroughly enjoyed it, excellent as always!
@Nuggs19804 жыл бұрын
Excellence. You help us to remember our childhood. Walking through the malls, the music, the sounds of shoppers, stores open everywhere and struggling to carry all of our bags plus an orange julius. The highlight was the arcades and carousel, hard to find anymore. Sears used to have the best snack bar with popcorn and coconut bon bons. Mervyns had the greatest variety of clothes and shoes and Arthur's toys was just so much fun! Miss those days😊
@randomcommenterfromdownund89494 жыл бұрын
Funny, but you said "Sears" and "snack bar", and I IMMEDIATELY smelled popcorn. Then I clicked "Read more" and you *mentioned the popcorn*! Now the weird bit for me is that my Sears that had a snack bar wasn't in a mall. It was by itself downtown. The snack bar was down in the basement tool area. As one went down the polished-wooden-railing'd stairs, one would see the "fallout shelter" sign (this was the late 1960s). Yes, apparently our Sears basement was a fallout shelter. (!) At the bottom of the stairs.... POPCORN!!!
@Nuggs19804 жыл бұрын
@@randomcommenterfromdownund8949 yes, ours was downstairs in the tool dept too! That's awesome
@morriganwitch4 жыл бұрын
Thank you Sal always enjoy a view of American culture you show us here in the U.K. . Due to health I’m in cocooning . You give me an access into the outside albeit vicariously . Thank you xxx
@craiggillett59854 жыл бұрын
It’s through Sals videos I’ve realised the New Zealand and Australia are definitely closer to the American culture and way of life than the UK......
@morriganwitch4 жыл бұрын
Craig Gillett do you think it’s the climate or geographical space ? Xxx
@angelm26553 жыл бұрын
As kids we never thought the familiar and comfortable things we experienced would change.
@Rahshu4 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't have thought to use "The Blue Danube" as the music for such a video, but it worked well! I think it helped capture that sense of dignity in the passing you were trying to describe. Well done.
@donrobertson46114 жыл бұрын
These videos are perfect for this coronavirus stay-at-home time in history: Hauntingly evocative of the heyday of the malls that we all experienced That piped-in mall music that seemed so normal then sounds eerie and grotesque now. The research and back story really make these videos legit. In the future they could certainly be used in business- or anthropology- classes. It was interesting to hear the theory that Amazon & online shopping didn't kill the malls. Megaforce had me laughing and cringing at the same time, especially the expressions on the faces when that flying motorcycle flew into to cargo plane.The wings on the cycle were moronically un-aerodynamic! All 'sponsor segments' are surreal.
@laditee88674 жыл бұрын
I love your videos, they have gotten me through this rough time of boredom. I'm a home body anyway so, it's not that bad. I appreciate all you have done to entertain me in my short time as a follower. I still have a lot of catching up to do. You absolutely have to do self-care, it's so important for the mind, body, and spirit. As an essential worker, self-care is a vital part of my life. Do what you love but still stay safe and mindful. Thanks again for your time and effort.
@laraoneal72843 жыл бұрын
These malls and certain stores are truly a big part of CULTURE. These things are important. Ty Sal.
@EquityCall4 жыл бұрын
Its amazing that when these malls were built there was such an optimism and excitement as every brick was laid. That often followed with a time of bustling commerce, social activity and profitability. Then time ran out. Renovations were too little and too late, followed by outright neglect. Stores left, the gates came down never to be lifted again. Finally the wrecking ball, to make way for a new chapter. Perhaps one that could be brighter and make new memories. The one sad truth remains though, that things will never be the same...
@EmelieKerek4 жыл бұрын
Oh my goodness, how did I miss this? You did my childhood mall! Thank you, I'm excited to watch this!
@annabbott19634 жыл бұрын
My son (he's 6) and I really miss the mall right now (Tysons Corner). He loved sitting in Tesla's and playing with Legos. He also loved eating a slice of pizza at the food court. Today we drove thru Chick-Fil-A and he ate a cookie, it was his first time out of our neighborhood in about 2 months. Our poor kids!
@cjnoldner85264 жыл бұрын
Love your channel please don't ever stop what you do means a lot to so many people.
@gregs10213 жыл бұрын
Holy shit man. I grew up in Warren and went to this mall all the time. Great work on the video! It was nice to see the mall again!
@TownieGirl19744 жыл бұрын
I so look forward to these videos every Friday. Thank you Sal for uploading these for us every Saturday.
@shaynewhite45454 жыл бұрын
The mall i grew up with country side clearwater florida is still going strong since 1975 the largest mall in the state of Florida at one time
@markdening95494 жыл бұрын
Love your series Sal. In the 90s I was a lone security gaurd at night in a Westfeild mall in Australia, I was so bored I used to get wasted and wander though the mall exploring its hidden places and staring at the architecture, once I thought I saw a mannequin blink its eye.Its bizarre to be the only person in a mall (in a good way) So I share your love of malls and their atmosphere, hard to put into words....thanks Sal
@davidm3maniac2014 жыл бұрын
Dont blame you i would have done the same. Lol
@yelvy4 жыл бұрын
thank you for grinding out the weekly content sal, its honestly my favourite part of the week when you upload a new log. the visual aesthetic of your videos and the reverb you add to the songs you choose are perfect and i love it so much. thank you for keeping us entertained in lockdown
@TheWhitneyuk4 жыл бұрын
As always- perfection! Please don’t forget us when you become famous! ❤️
@nordicdraw4 жыл бұрын
Explosions, Lycra, bad wigs, flying motorcycles and good guys always win, yeah Baby, go Mega Force. Warren definitely was in the time warp of the 70s. I can relate to the local mall of my youth which was very similar to Warren. Totally agree with you and a great observation of how manageable smaller Grey Ghosts were. That green/yellow hallway looked like an interrogation space, very creepy. You did another Knockout Production, really loved it. Great job Sal, be safe.!
@JohnKelly24 жыл бұрын
Speaking of TARP, when the feds loaned JPMorgan Chase $29 billion to acquire Bear Stearns, the Federal Reserve was given Bear Stearns portfolio. The only real asset was Crossroads Mall in Oklahoma City, which was already dying. So a dead mall in Oklahoma City was the collateral for a $29 billion dollar loan. It's still there and very closed.
@thepoweroftruth36242 жыл бұрын
Keep making these videos. They are the best on you tube by far.
@Nunofurdambiznez4 жыл бұрын
dude.. this is one of the VERY BEST dead mall videos on the entire You Tube! You did an awesome job filming and putting this together with some fabulous narration, that was both a history lesson as well as much needed entertainment during this stupid lockdown! GREAT JOB!!!!
@colinmale33314 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your weekly uploads Sal, Such a good start to my Saturday mornings. Awesome as always. Stay safe from the UK.
@Babrook914 жыл бұрын
Sal, thanks for all your work on creating these. As this pandemic plods on your videos have been a very welcome respite reminding me of the world that (i've been told, at least) still exists outside of my house.
@dawnmcgregor25704 жыл бұрын
Thank you for another fun adventure. The Megaforce ad was hilarious 😂 made my day I needed a good laugh. Keep up your awesome 😎 vids ❤️ from 🇬🇧 ❤️❤️💋💋
@TheRedDevil_NC4 жыл бұрын
Love your videos. The scenes and storyline make you stand out. Keep it up!!
@iseespots60144 жыл бұрын
my local mall open in 1969 and it still has a lot of vintage planter and a fountain in it from that time. My mom and my grandmother use to take me there for close shopping at the JC Penny's or the Belk, I also remember gone to the sears with my dad all the time for tools/car battery. Sadly the mall is all but empty now with no anchors at all only a dollar store, bed bath and beyond and a great American cookie place is left is left inside
@SentaiAce4 жыл бұрын
Once again, thank you Sal! I love your videos.
@krisfrazier81594 жыл бұрын
I miss this mall so much. Aladians castle and napolias pizza was an absolutely perfect way to spend a day lol. Thanks for this nostalgic video.
@veevalli98184 жыл бұрын
As a 32 year old millennial, i love the old stickers on the electrical boards. Love your stuff Sal! Come to Los Angeles!
@ThisIsTheRealMe24 жыл бұрын
Love your videos Sal! I am from and live in central/south Jersey and a bit older then you and when I was a kid the malls were staples for sure. Deptford, Echelon (Voorhees Town Center) were our hot spots, there would be cars lined up full of kids getting dropped off on a Friday night. Good times!
@craiggillett59854 жыл бұрын
We must be a similar age, I’m from New Zealand and I remember the same from our growing up. The mall was the center of our universe. No cell phones, internet, MTV had just started...... good times for sure......
@ericnielsen73354 жыл бұрын
Sal, you say that is not Amazon that killed the malls. I agree, it was us, our parents and grandparents that killed the malls and American business in general. We sent our business off-shore. We wanted to buy the cheapest junk available instead of Canadian or American made product. When things get back to normal are you still going to buy off shore cheap junk or will you look at labels and try to buy to buy American made product?
@allen_p4 жыл бұрын
The Grey Ghost in a graying rural community. Yet, with Covid-19 being more prevalent in densely packed urban areas there are advantages to living in a more spacious rural area that the young may consider. I saw your San Jacinto Mall visit Thursday night and it really hit home as I went there during high school and college.
@vissi873 жыл бұрын
I find it so interesting to see the amount of these dead malls in the US, and the way you speak of going to malls in such a nostalgic way. I live in Australia, our malls here are actually so busy it's ridiculous. Full of kids hanging out, families, people seeing movies, grabbing food in the food court. I don't see them closing any time soon. Some days especially weekends it's hard to find a carpark, or a table in the food court. Obviously depending where you are and which city you are in but generally most people still go to shopping malls to shop, eat, socialise etc etc.
@west_nebraska_dude45274 жыл бұрын
Another excellent ExLog! As always, your attention to detail and knowledge of these malls is amazing. Thanks for giving us an escape from the pandemic for even a little while. It's always unfortunate to see the downward spiral of the societal institutions known as Malls, but your astute observations pay homage to their place in our history. As a non-mall related side note, here are a couple of my observations. First: It's nice to see in your sponsor movie (Megaforce) that the actor from Xanadu (Michael Beck) had other mega-movies 😜 ... of course there was also "The Warriors" (1979) where he leads a gang from Coney Island. Second: It is sad as I watch this in November of 2020, that your intro referenced the decline of Covid in May, and then the behavior of people since then resulted in a massive explosion of cases in 6 months. Hopefully we will get our act together to change the course of this disaster before even more of the fabric of our society is destroyed.
@EmelieKerek4 жыл бұрын
What a great video!! It's very sad to see the state of the mall....I have a lot of fond memories of the place. One I remember most clearly is sitting on the benches with my best friend, playing a GBA game we bought at the EB Games while we waited for my mom to finish getting her nails done at a salon. And getting discounts at BonTon because my friend used to work there. I used to frequent the Bath and Body Works as well. I got my ears pierced at a little stand outside the Claire's...I had forgotten how large the mall was, as for a good 15 years, only the wing with the BonTon and Label Shopper were easily accessible. Thank you for sharing this, it means a lot to me to revisit these memories!
@jenniferloving90544 жыл бұрын
Thank you for continuing to make these videos. Watching them have helped me stay sane. I'm not able to donate right now, but still, thanks. Also that Megaforce trailer was awesome! 80's action movies were so cool!
@sal4 жыл бұрын
Your viewership is more than enough to motivate me to keep going :)
@jenniferloving90544 жыл бұрын
@@sal Thank you.
@AnthonyMenegoni4 жыл бұрын
Funding for that fountain ran dry.... puns....
@mazzycollins98564 жыл бұрын
16:17 Wow the sound of that gate going up took me right back to my mall store manager days! Keeping from losing my mind by building a miniature post-apocalyptic abandoned house during quarantine. Love your thoughts on the need to enjoy the things we love while we have them. Made me think of that old Kansas song, Dust In The Wind. Another great video, thanks again!
@TownieGirl19744 жыл бұрын
One of these days I'm going to see a movie that I love be one of the "sponsors" for Sal's videos. When that inevitably happens, I don't know if I'll feel ashamed or a sense of immense pride.
@potatolew44954 жыл бұрын
I cannot believe you grew up in Ocean County as I am a Monmouth/ Ocean County resident since 1976. I grew up in Atlantic Highlands and moved to L.B.I. in 2002. Love your channel, keep up the amazing work. Ever feel like reminiscing about the Route 18 mall, Woodbridge, Menlo Park, Route 1 Flea Market let me know as I have many memories.of them as some pictures of the places from the 80's. Stay safe, Happy New Year.
@sirekumasutra70224 жыл бұрын
37:50 Damn that was deep. Didn't think I'd be in tears watching a Sal vid lol. Watching your videos has been helping my mental health working 2 essential jobs. I don't even know what this quarantine everyone talks about lol. On a serious note thank you Sal for doing what you do.
@tamarawurst48904 жыл бұрын
I have fond memories of that mall! It was beautiful. Sorry to see it’s demise like so many others. Ironically I now work beside Monroeville mall. No staying at home for me!
@allen_p4 жыл бұрын
Sorry Sal. I'm in Texas, during the "lockdown or quarantine" I have driven 3 days a week to a National Forest, North of Houston. I spent days many miles from another person enjoying the pinney woods of East Texas.
@jptang17014 жыл бұрын
Any sign of a Sasquatch?
@boomhaueroo87034 жыл бұрын
Or maybe a chupacabra?
@squishy87584 жыл бұрын
I used to live there!! Man I miss it. Especially just driving through all the back roads for hours. Glad to hear you're doing ok in East Texas.
@allen_p4 жыл бұрын
@@jptang1701 I didn't have any beef jerky with me 🤣
@allen_p4 жыл бұрын
@@boomhaueroo8703 It's in South Texas
@craiggillett59854 жыл бұрын
Sal, in New Zealand 🇳🇿 we have eliminated the viris and everything is opening up again -99%back to how things were, however, your recent expeditions have really reminded me of my childhood and youth, a child of the 80s and 90s where the Mall was our focal point, where we met up with friends, hung out, played in the arcades, went to movies...... last weekend I feeling sentimental ( and free to drive 😂) so took a long drive out to the suburbs where I grew up and went to visit the old “Galleria” a big mall back in the day, surrounded by miles and miles of affluent middle class homes with young families. What a sad sight it is now - the families have grown up and moved away, and the mall is definitely in its death throes, superceeded by the massive malls that are only a 30 min drive away. I was quite moved when I think back to what it used to look like, fountains and trees, glass elevators and buzzing 7 days a week. Today it’s a ghost of it’s former splendour, the movie theatres are gone, fountains removed, the trees have been taken out and it’s filled with dollar stores...... and other cheap places where you wander around and wonder who actually buys this crap.... the whole place needed a good clean, it was filthy, with virtually no one shopping. Sad. Keep up the good work, you are capturing a way of life that is quickly disappearing into history, and in the future our grandchildren will look at these clips and wonder what the people were like, how did they live, and what drew them to these monuments of late 20 century consumption. I suggest you consider collecting examples of these malls in their heyday. It would be great for future generations to see not only their fall, but to see snapshots of that golden era of retail.
@mannyrichtofen43544 жыл бұрын
Nostalgic, depressing, thought provoking ... all at the same time.
@markdening95494 жыл бұрын
This Mall is one of the most incredible malls you have filmed, Its amazing how the beautiful brown tiles and old planters escaped renovation or change, love it, I could easily sit there for hours and stare at it all, hard to explain if you dont get it
@amberdamber74 жыл бұрын
PUZZLE BEAR SCARED THE S**T OUT OF ME
@kuroneko27884 жыл бұрын
same!
@galechicago3254 жыл бұрын
During “these challenging times we all find ourselves in,” I’ve been staying kinda sane by driving my car once a week on empty Southern California freeways. I also drive around the vacant parking lot of South Coast Plaza. This is my mall, always bustling, gross sales revenues of $1.5 Billion, or $555/sq ft. But I love it so much now, seeing the behemoth just floating there without a single car in the lot. Your videos and my empty SCP are huge comforts to me somehow. Peaceful and rational.
@geekygirl25964 жыл бұрын
This mall was to area kids like the Thunderbird mall was for me. There was a mega mall that was closer, but my grandmother lived by thunderbird and we used to take her shopping whenever we visited since she did not drive. So, I have many fond memories of the thunderbird mall. It was just 1(very wide) hallway long, and you could see most of the mall from the entrance. The 3 main tenants were Kmart, Herbert's, and jc pennies. Kmart is now split between a tractor supply, an Aldies, and a Harbor Freight. Herbergers is now Hobby Lobby (I avoid this place now) and penny's is a Dunhams.
@danefilander63064 жыл бұрын
Very interesting video you have put together Sal thanks for sharing it with us and i hope to see more of your awsome videos please stay safe.
@CJ-rf9jm4 жыл бұрын
I remember that early 80's movie. there was a video game based on it that was just as bad. BTW, I do like the weekly videos. This mall like a lotta others you've shown remind me of malls I've been to when I was younger. I still like going to malls for things, even just to hang out a bit n see whats new.
@jeee10744 жыл бұрын
I am glad that these malls are being properly documented. I have not been to any Northeastern State besides North Carolina in my lifetime. I can at least contribute to the Patreons of a handful of creators including your channel. For me, things are business as usual during this economic crisis. I am blessed to have an essential job that has been going. Texas is almost fully open for business as of this upcoming Friday. Fingers crossed that a treatment for the sickness happens soon.
@michaellester6839 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Warren in the 80s . My favorite part was radio shack and the record store. Kmart was cool and I bought a 1carat diamond ring at Kay jewelers. Many fond memories of the mall.
@debbiekerr39894 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed this video very much. Thank you for sharing this.
@30roundz4 жыл бұрын
Warren mall is one mall I always wanted to see...wish I had. This is the first I have heard of it's unfortunate fate.
@mariebelladonna4372 жыл бұрын
I see some of that vintage 70s-80s dark aesthetic you were talking about, in your most recent videos. The dark floor tile. The dark brick planters/sitting areas. ETA: Also the streetlamp style lighting.
@fexo7004 жыл бұрын
Another great Video Sal! thank you A fitting Nickname for a Mall that is just a Ghost Now! I kept remembering that Yellow Tile around the Plant Box..takes me back to The look of the Malls long ago. and the Wonderful Skylight for Sun upon these plants. These sitting areas were always nice to sit for a bit. You make me laugh with "The Stink Eye" comment. Yes This Mall was Open for Pizza, Nails And The Bon Ton...so sad at the end. That bathroom and refrigerator, I found myself plugging my nose with you lol. As always you zoom in on The Great Decay and Spider Web catchings of beetles and dragon flies and the End to The Grey Ghost..a scene quite fitting. Take care hanging in there Sal. Looking forward to ExLog 60!
@mariebelladonna4372 жыл бұрын
3:22 that's Edward Mulhare! He played Devon Miles on Knight Rider-one of my all time favorite shows! 😊 In fact, I think this was the role he played right before he started Knight Rider. Cool! 😊
@davemartin37214 жыл бұрын
Wow I lived In Jersey Too In Farmingdale and went to both malls you talked about !
@scottuncfan4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for everything you do for us. I've been playing video games it seems to help
@Mom2my4blessings12 күн бұрын
Growing up going to The Ocean County Mall myself, there used to be 2-3 turtles kids could climb on scattered throughout the mall. I was pretty young, maybe 3-6 years old. I was born in 1976. I remember having a Kmart where I grew up that had a cafe. I bought everything from there and ate there many times. I actually got to the point where I felt embarrassed being seen at Kmart 😂. What I wouldn’t give to go back to that time. I love the 70’s-80’s vibe of this mall. Too bad it’s gone now.
@zerocooler74 жыл бұрын
Hey, I grew up in New Jersey, and the Ocean County Mall was my local mall too. I visited it many times through the 1980s, 90s, and 00s. But as time went on, I found fewer and fewer reasons to go there. The stores I liked closed down. The arcade there is long gone, and the fountains were removed. I have not been there in years now, and I sometimes find myself thinking of how it used to be.
@burendasan4 жыл бұрын
Great video and great words of wisdom! It brought to mind the Salisbury Mall (in Salisbury MD) which was relatively small but perfect for a kid/preteen like me in the early 90s (but a murder did occur there unfortunately!). Aesthetically, it also didn’t change that much from when it first opened. Unfortunately it was demolished in 2007. You would have loved this mall. Oh, and when you opened that fridge, I was like, 🤢 😆
@mallsandmoore4 жыл бұрын
Also Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure with the Metrocenter Mall in Phoenix standing in as the San Dimas Mall
@Elmo187824 жыл бұрын
Hey Sal. We have a couple down here in Tampa if you want to come down to check them out. One is East Lake Towne Square or what it's referred to as now as Netpark Business Center. The business center is the actual mall, but all stores have been replaced by certain companies (I work in the Terminix call center inside). There's also University Mall located near the University of South Florida. The anchor is a movie theatre called Studio Movie Grill where you get full service dining while watching movies. There's other big name stores there, but Sears, JC Penney, and Burlington have all been shut down.
@BoratWanksta4 жыл бұрын
Looks like the mall directory at about 15:00 has NOT been updated at all, since maybe like sometime in the 1990s? Had to have been long ago when that directory was last updated with current stores shown, seeing places like Cellular One listed! BTW, I LOVED seeing those musician/band stickers you found in the rear of the former The Wall music store, which later became the flea market! And go figure I suppose Kohan would do something shady like argue in court for a higher assessment value, then sell Warren Mall off again.
@Sabrina794 жыл бұрын
I enjoy all of your videos, Sal! This one was awesome as always - except toward the end because those bugs and that spider really grossed me out, LOL! But seriously, your videos and Ace's videos have been a great history lesson for me. I can't wait for the Garden State Plaza reopens here in NJ because I'm gonna go give it some love! I hope that maybe you and Ace and I can hang out sometime and talk about malls! 👍📸✏📺😎 together
@rpsmith29904 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed this video, as I always have, even, or perhaps especially when you came down to my area and covered one of our malls (Military Circle). This time, as you discussed the idea of Grey Ghosts, and things that have come and gone, I have to ask if your choice of music at the end was tied into this. To some people of a certain age, The Blue Danube brings up 2001: a space odyssey. More specifically, it brings up the part of the movie with Dr. Floyd's trip to the moon. Call it a early branding attempt, but the sense was that Pan American, the airline whose name was on the shuttle, would lead us into space, just as it pioneered routes to the Caribbean, South America, and across both the Atlantic and Pacific (the latter the more famous achievement). It, of course, didn't turn out that way, no one who followed Trippe was able to fill his shoes, ultimately leading to Pan Am's demise. It's terribly off track, but that is what came to mind with this.
@matthewgray97524 жыл бұрын
I was born in 92 and during the 90's-early 2000's that mall used to be packed. The dealership across the parking lot had vehicles in it and there were also boats and ATV's as well in it for display. Also, the Bonton and K-mart locations are still empty.
@alexsummy75094 жыл бұрын
Love that shot at 13:15. My life hasn't been as affected as most people's since I am an essential worker and my favorite activity is hiking which means that I have been forced to drive a little farther and find new trails. If you live in 757 and you're looking for a place to social distance check out York River State Park in Williamsburg. I can't wait to do serious travelling once this is all over. I'm planning a trip to Columbia once this is all over.
@alexsummy75094 жыл бұрын
*Colombia
@Antman38204 жыл бұрын
You mentioned Ocean County Mall.... Lots of construction going on out there. When we goto the mall, we go to Freehold Mall.
@andreassoderholm38703 жыл бұрын
A city can look like its static and that's it's never changes but if you look on it over time you can see that the city is very dynamic and constantly changes faces.
@j.sayler63304 жыл бұрын
A funny bit of trivia: the Warren, Pa. climate includes many snowy days, on average about 3 snowfalls a week during the winter. One particularly snowy December, there was measurable snow on 28 out of 31 days. Typically in any year, the snow would get ahead of the mall's plowing, so the parking lots would simply be white, packed snow. No one could see the parking lines, so people would just do their best to make rows--and the parking rows would become humorously crooked, narrow, and irregular.
@colinsdad14 жыл бұрын
Megaforce FTW! Scary part? I was 10 years old when that came out.... Back then, couldn't figure out "why the Army guys were dressed in leotards". STILL don't get that. I find your statement about COVID 19 at the beginning very prescient- Malls in general were on Life Support before the pandemic. They're probably doomed (along with a bunch of other businesses) if this pandemic gets worse. It's bad enough here in Massachusetts where the stay at home order was extended till June 1st.... So much for getting back to work. BTW, love the video, as always- are there ANY Ponderosa's open anywhere anymore?? Annnnd yes, I was all about a roll of quarters and a Mall Arcade along with an Orange Julius (which I learned to make later on)! Oh, and I live within a mile of the Connecticut River, so I've been doing alot of fishing and hiking. Also started my own vegetable garden.... Cannot wait to make some homemade Marinara sauce!
@crackerlackingproductions67464 жыл бұрын
I had the Mega Force Atari game!! Thanks for that memory!!
@craiggillett59854 жыл бұрын
ME TOO!!! I forgot until I read your comment! I must have been a huge fan because I distinctly remember going to see Megaforce the movie with my best friend - it May have been the first time I was allowed to go and hang with my friend at the mall without parents supervision!!!!!
@shlomoishtov76174 жыл бұрын
This mall looks nearly identical to another Zamais property about 90 miles south in Clarion PA. The Clarion Mall. Exact same fountains/planters, and benches. Clarion Mall built in 1980. You should visit it.
@angelm26553 жыл бұрын
Breaks my heart seeing these vintage malls destroyed. I so hope they saved those awesome light posts.
@papermason3 жыл бұрын
Your intro reminds of the reel to reel movies in grade school, with the warped muffled music, except for the odd dead fly whipping past.
@tony-ce7qp4 жыл бұрын
thank you...great video!
@airaero54734 жыл бұрын
3 things to say: 1) At first I thought you and Ace both went to the mall at the same time. Turns out it was just a coincidence that you two just focused on the same mall in your uploads. 2) When you entered the Aladdin's Castle, the guy beside the Kmart looked like he was cool with that. He wasn't gonna snitch on you. 3) @24:27 is that the lady and child you were talking about?
@kurtreitema29794 жыл бұрын
Very well put.Another great log
@Kilgore0Trout3 жыл бұрын
This place was sad to visit even 20 some years ago. I went to IUP, and shopped there a few times, it was already a time-capsule back then.
@benjaminvlz4 жыл бұрын
@20:37 GNC (along with Bath & Body Works) are two of the few stores that usually remain open in dead malls, so when GNC of all places is gone, you know that mall is gonna close (and most likely be demolished.)
@phillybobsquires75064 жыл бұрын
Man, I was a projectionist in Philly back in the 80's and actually ran Megaforce! What a campy film but fun! The title track by the group 707 was cool too! Featuring Rocky Horror's own Barry Bostwick!
@kennethmattos15423 жыл бұрын
Grew up in Warren 1959, I'm a Thompson, Morrison,Worly, live in California, I would think that your in North Warren, Heart's content and the Wig Wom, and of course Kinzua dam, my relatives bought land from Cheif Corn planter, have not been back in quite awhile, anyway was looking for the children's home
@messengerguardiansparanorm86064 жыл бұрын
Sal, this is Glennie. That first part (through 6:46) was so DELICIOUSLY HORRIBLE. Thank you.
@alexsummy75094 жыл бұрын
Whoever wrote the screenplay for Megaforce was high as fuck.
@EJBuddy4 жыл бұрын
I’ve been waiting for this one for a long long time, great video Sal.
@Trainy24 жыл бұрын
I've been trying to learn new things during quarantine. Been trying to get better at cooking, bought a HAM radio and been messing around with that, and have been riding my bike a lot.
@nicholasvalentine62732 жыл бұрын
Born and raised in warren. Can confirm it was never updated. Seriosuly. I think those are the same plants and fixtures from 1996... Aladdins castle used to be across from Kmart. Half of the mall has been demolished now. Just cut off. Gone. Open hole into the mall.
@roycegullage54362 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure there was an Aladdin's castle at the mall in Concord NH. Used to go play tekken as a teen in the 90s. Miss the ole days...
@smbrTube2 жыл бұрын
Good stuff. I think 20:56 might have been the old Ponderosa steakhousein the mall in the 1980s.
@TimothyIha4 жыл бұрын
Fantastic!
@lanternlite753 жыл бұрын
This makes me sad. My family lived minutes from this mall in the early 2000's. That was far from it's heyday, but I have fond memories of taking my now adult children there to see Santa and for Harry Potter release parties.