Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 1 | Page 75

Shopping as an Entertainment Experience 71 needs for many members of the urban middle and upper-middle-class. Just as today, the museum/gallery gift store is the inversion of this equation; the department store offered those who entered through its doors the chance to experience a variety of entertainment offerings. Marvin Traub, the former chairman of Bloomindales, consciously set out to make Bloomingdales an entertainment mecca. Buyers, merchandisers, and sponsors all worked together to produce themed “extravaganzas” such as “India: The Ultimate Fantasy” and “China: Heralding the Dawn of a New Era” (Traub xiv). Like many great merchandise impresarios, the films he saw and theatres he frequented as a young man influenced Traub. He transformed his memories into stages of consumption. Traub felt that entertainment was a “great education for being a merchant.” In order to recapture the exciting feelings inspired by his visits to the great movie palaces, he created that environment in Bloomingdales. “To feel that same sense of wonder today,” he writes, “you no longer go to Times Square; instead, you go shopping” (Traub 12, 13). The Mall The notion of going to the mall as a way to pursue entertainment built upon layers of leisure, which expanded in every way and form after the second World War. By the 1970s, the mall was a seminal feature of the suburban wilderness, a key pinpoint in the edge cities that sprouted up in regions just outside urban centers. With no downtown core and inadequate strip stores, the mall, as defined by Victor Gruen, became a focal point for a variety of different activities. The mall was designed to mimic or recreate the city or the town, complete with a main thoroughfare, side streets, gathering places, fountains, and central meeting areas (Betsky 126). Like Walter Benjamin’s stroller in the arcades, one could casually walk through or down these new urban “arcades” to see and to be seen. This would quickly take the place of the urban window shopper. The mall also quickly became the surrogate public gathering place. The mall today is where people gather daily, not just in inclement weather. The mall provides close parking for mothers with small children and encourages seniors to come “walk the mall” in the early morning hours. Many community activities, such as fundraising, now take place in malls (Betsky 126). The mall is where people now go to spend time; teenagers often hang out there instead of cruising the strip (Crawford 15). As Margaret Crawford ha 2FWF