Ron Rich wrote: Wonder why Gibson insisted that the Jukebox div. be closed-
Well, if the rest of the market is anything like NYC I can understand why.
Places that earned 360+/wk for me in 1998 are less than a third of that today, and the trend -may- only recently have stabilized.
Even the 'net jukes have clearly peaked. I've seen several removed in my neighborhood on the upper east side of Manhattan.
My old retro systems are also down substantially. Pert of that is due to economy, part due to not having any recent music and part to the fact that aural-only entertainment has given way to mobile video.
Even the Ipod is somewhat passe. For teh last 3-4 years I've been seeing people viewing video on personal devices in my locations. You can D/L any vid on Youtube and most of the other sites, so why pay for music at-all. Even radio listening is declining, "cumes" are way off with those under 35, who wants to put up with a limited, burned out playlist and commercials when you can have exactly what you want -free.
It is not a pretty scene. If you are retired from the industry, consider yourself lucky.
As I've been saying to my locations " this was a hobby that turned into a business, and back into a hobby".
Rob