Newark, NJ – Blockbuster still holds a powerful grip on nostalgia for New Jersey residents over 45, beating out bookstores, video rental rivals, and classic department stores as the brand people most want to see return. A new MarketBeat survey of 3,014 respondents found the once-dominant movie rental chain ranked first among discontinued retailers that people miss most, reflecting a broader craving for experiences that felt slower, more social, and less transactional.
The survey highlights how older consumers increasingly associate vanished chains with routines and personal connection rather than just shopping. From movie nights to bookstore browsing, respondents pointed to brands that turned ordinary errands into rituals many feel modern retail no longer offers.
Nostalgia Centers on Experience, Not Convenience
Blockbuster claimed the top spot largely because of the experience surrounding it. Friday-night trips to rent movies became a weekly tradition for many families, where choosing a film often took longer than watching it.

The chain’s blue-and-yellow storefronts, walls lined with VHS tapes and DVDs, and the race to grab the last available new release created a kind of anticipation streaming services rarely replicate. For many respondents, the appeal wasn’t just access to entertainment — it was the shared experience of discovering something together.
Waldenbooks ranked second, remembered less as a retail giant and more as a dependable stop during mall trips across New Jersey. Respondents described the chain as approachable and familiar, offering enough variety to make casual browsing rewarding without feeling overwhelming.
Borders followed in third place, with many participants recalling the bookstore as a destination where people could spend hours reading, wandering, or simply sitting quietly. Unlike today’s faster online shopping habits, Borders represented unstructured time and discovery.
Hollywood Video landed fourth, earning praise for its unpredictability and underdog appeal. Customers often visited when competitors ran out of titles, leading to unexpected movie picks and spontaneous discoveries that became part of the experience.
Woolworth rounded out the top five. The longtime department store chain stood out for blending shopping, dining, and everyday errands into one trip. Respondents remembered the lunch counters and slower pace as symbols of a more personal style of retail.
Key Points
• Blockbuster ranked as the most-missed discontinued brand among surveyed New Jersey residents over 45
• Waldenbooks, Borders, Hollywood Video, and Woolworth completed the top five
• Survey respondents said they miss the experience and routine attached to the stores, not just the products
Why These Brands Still Matter
The survey points to a broader shift in how consumers view retail and entertainment. Many of the chains that ranked highest offered spaces where people lingered rather than rushed through transactions.
“What this data shows is that the connection people have to these brands goes beyond what they sold,” said Matt Paulson, founder of MarketBeat. “Many of these stores turned everyday errands into actual experiences, whether that was picking out a movie, browsing without time pressure, or shopping with family.”
Paulson said the findings suggest many consumers now recognize how much modern retail has prioritized speed and efficiency over atmosphere and interaction.
“As retail has become faster and more transactional, that sense of occasion has started to disappear, and people are realizing they miss it,” he added.
The timing also reflects a growing nostalgia economy across the United States, where older brands, retro products, and revival campaigns continue gaining attention. Streaming services dominate entertainment, but the emotional attachment to physical browsing and shared decision-making remains strong among older consumers.
A Different Kind of Shopping Memory
Part of the appeal behind these chains may come from how they fit into daily routines before smartphones and online shopping transformed consumer habits.
Blockbuster trips often involved entire families debating movie choices together. Borders encouraged customers to spend hours exploring books and music without pressure to leave. Woolworth blended retail with dining in ways that made errands feel social instead of rushed.
Even Hollywood Video’s smaller footprint created a sense of unpredictability that respondents still remember fondly.
The survey did not indicate whether respondents believed any of the brands could realistically return in large-scale form. Instead, the results focused on emotional attachment and cultural memory.
Several once-defunct brands have attempted revivals in recent years through online relaunches, pop-up experiences, or nostalgia-themed marketing campaigns. While few regain their former dominance, many continue attracting loyal audiences tied to memories of how those stores once fit into everyday life.
MarketBeat’s survey specifically targeted adults aged 45 and older, a demographic old enough to have firsthand memories of these chains during their peak years in the 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s.
The survey results suggest that for many New Jersey residents, the stores they miss most were never just about renting movies or buying books. They represented routines, shared time, and experiences that felt harder to replace as shopping moved online.
The infographic accompanying the survey visually ranked the top five brands and summarized the emotional connection respondents expressed toward each chain.