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haele

(15,360 posts)
17. Laz used to manage a Radio Shack in a little rural strip mall near a military base.
Thu Mar 19, 2026, 12:42 PM
Yesterday

His store actually topped $1 mil one year because he knew what his customers in the region needed; he talked to the local schools and base techs to bag up the bits and pieces repair components they were always running out of. He'd always order lots of a lot of TV and TV hookup (DVD players and gaming console) adapters, metal detectors, electric telescopes, remote sensors and cameras, Ham Radio sets, receivers, scanners, cable, RC kits...
Stuff people couldn't get at Walmart or the local hardware store.
And batteries, lots of batteries and battery chargers.
He saw the writing on the wall in the late 90's corporate started selling computer internet and cell phone services - Sprint, Version, MSN, AOL - for the residuals.
The store didn't get anything, except the salesperson got a $20 commission for the contract. The transaction revenue, including the item package covered under the service contract (the phone or the computer) went to corporate, not the store, making it look as if the store was losing money.

The focus on getting a salesperson to spend time selling a 2 -4 year contract for "a penny cell phone" or "a $150 Windows computer and printer bundle" that provided residual revenue to corporate, instead of selling 5 to 10 other items - RC cars, home theater cables, cartons of batteries, a couple radio repair kits and an HF amplifier was killing smaller franchised stores, and slowly strangling the corporate stores.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

It certainly was a big help to me over the years... hlthe2b Yesterday #1
Lafayette Electronics closed its doors even earlier -- corp. mismanagement. eppur_se_muova Yesterday #2
I miss Lafayette, Mock Electronics, and W&W here in Huntsville. House of Roberts Yesterday #4
I Liked Lafayette Better! BBbats 23 hrs ago #28
Back in those days, you could go in there with a thing you needed to replace, House of Roberts Yesterday #3
take a pic, and mopinko Yesterday #6
My husband still misses that store. He could get components for his various projects. Ritabert Yesterday #5
the ceo in the late 60's mopinko Yesterday #7
Tried to buy a replacement cable to a radio Orrex Yesterday #8
Corporatism proved once again... GiqueCee Yesterday #10
Remember Heathkits? James48 Yesterday #9
Built two Heath Kits in 1969, a radio receiver and an amplifier. PufPuf23 Yesterday #16
Heh. I remember that particular Pacific Stereo well.... 68er 23 hrs ago #27
Amazon needed to have been busted up decades ago Blue Full Moon Yesterday #11
Bozos bagimin Yesterday #13
Remember RadioShack wayback when it had government surplus. Sneederbunk Yesterday #12
I miss it very much. Nobody fixes anything, anymore. Buddyzbuddy Yesterday #14
Find your nearest Repair Cafe, a non-profit which can work on anything from broken zippers Wonder Why Yesterday #18
Thank you Wonder Why, for the information. Buddyzbuddy 21 hrs ago #33
I know because I am one of the volunteers. However, I'm on indefinite hiatus until I have my leg back. Wonder Why 17 hrs ago #36
I'm sorry to hear that. I wish you a faster painless recovery. Buddyzbuddy 14 hrs ago #42
A good friend of mine built a computer from Heathkit Norbert Yesterday #15
Laz used to manage a Radio Shack in a little rural strip mall near a military base. haele Yesterday #17
We purchased our first computer, the TRS 80 from Radio Shackwhen our son was 7 or 8 yrs old. scarletlib Yesterday #19
There are still... 2naSalit Yesterday #20
Change or die SocialDemocrat61 Yesterday #21
Thanks for posting. LudwigPastorius Yesterday #22
The video is AI-generated and narrated, on a channel that's almost completely AI, adding about one AI video highplainsdem 14 hrs ago #41
I worked at a Radio Shack for years hurple Yesterday #23
I take it that the manager did not get to go on the cruise. LiberalArkie 23 hrs ago #26
My son worked at a RadioShack for years. StarryNite Yesterday #24
I had a 'Trash-80' which I liked GenThePerservering 23 hrs ago #25
If I had a time machine I would go back to the 70's and buy up all the vari-loop coils I could get my hands on yaesu 22 hrs ago #29
I miss stores like RadioShack, and this makes me feel a certain way. Mostly nostalgia. Oneironaut 22 hrs ago #30
Their electronic components were expensive. hunter 21 hrs ago #31
A very happy memory is buying a breadboard, some LEDs and other components for my son when he was in elementary school. NNadir 21 hrs ago #32
The same thing that happened to Wolf Brand Texas-Style Chili...capitalism. pecosbob 20 hrs ago #34
Another AI-generated channel. highplainsdem 18 hrs ago #35
I didn't watch the video. I rarely do. hunter 14 hrs ago #39
There are a lot of videos on YouTube about RadioShack. highplainsdem 13 hrs ago #43
It's the tech bro capitalist philosophy -- if people are buying that crap, they will sell it. hunter 10 hrs ago #44
Anyone remember when they gave a 10% discount to shareholders and lots of people, including yours truly, Wonder Why 16 hrs ago #37
The closest fucking thing now to those kits is a little motherfucking robot you can make with a Raspberry Pi at the core SoFlaBro 16 hrs ago #38
I saw a Radio Shack this week, but not in the USA IzzaNuDay 14 hrs ago #40
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