When I go to Argos these days, I do not necessarily want to go to Sainsbury's as well, even if I was reminded too many times that good food still costs less than Tesco, and that I am being invited to live life for a lot less. I really miss the "old school" Argos superstores in our High Streets and shopping centres - twice a year, going to get the 300-page catalogue (a light-coloured cover for spring and summer, and a dark-coloured cover for autumn and winter), taking it home and having a browse at everything from Elizabeth Duke jewellery and Sun Pearl garden furniture at the start of the book to the pre-Chad Valley toys and games at the end of the book, a la the And Finally... on News at Ten. And then they shopped publishing what eventually became the 1,700 page catalogue in 2020, not because of coronavirus but because of the internet we assume, but at least they still do the Christmas catalogue and end of season flyers from time to time.
Nottingham's first Argos opened in 1976 three years after the first ones had opened, (in the same shopping centre that had a Sainsbury's there, ironically enough), with a second "Superstore" branch in 1991. The first one closed in 2018 (but then again, the shopping centre it was in has been closed for a while anyway); and the second one had closed at the start of this year to move into a Sainsbury's store a mile and a half away. I am not a really Sainsbury's customer (for I have a Tesco Clubcard in my wallet, not to mention an Iceland one as well), and so I have been concerned that Argos moving into Sainsbury's would put me and others off shopping there. Nottingham City Centre no longer has a branch of Argos in NG1-land for the first time in 47 years and I feel that it really is the end of an era.
Since the actual catalogues had stopped being published, I really miss the laminated pages of the catalogue (which I assumed they did to make the book look as it had more pages than usual such as over 1,000 of them in order to make the catalogue exciting). This was in the days of just the "300 pages per-catalogue" era of the 1980s and not the later over one and a half thousand pages era, 1990s onwards. And of course the Customer Selection Form inside the book (a blank piece of paper will do, surely?) and a lovely Bookie pen-sized writing implement, (later a pencil), to write it down with. The seven digit (three digit prefix at the beginning) item numbers copied from the main book and written down onto the form. Five minutes later, a Julie Peasgood-alike voiceover invites us via the store: "Item number 387, to your collection point, please". It was like that in the 2000s in any case.
My personal opinion is that Argos stores should still remain independent in our High Streets and shopping centres (even if Sainsbury's do own them these days). If it ain't broke, then don't mess around with it. I would hate it if Boots or any other retailer would be a "shop within a shop" - besides, if I was a visitor to that town or city and trying to find out where the nearest branch of that store is, then I could easily have overlooked it and have wasted my time. I prefer the Argos stores to be stand-alone shops as that was the way they were supposed to be when the late Richard Tompkins founded them over half a century ago - what would have they been called had Tompkins not been on holiday in the Greek city of Argos at the time, and came up with the idea directly translated from the old Green Shield Stamps format? Cash instead of stamps, and it took until 1972 to come up with the idea...
I do have some great memories of shopping at Argos - in 1995 I saw a couple of girls who were in my class at school just happened to be shopping in there when I was there (hence the "old school" part that I was talking about), nearly a couple of years after I had left school. In the weeks before Christmas I used to have so much fun with Christmas shopping and buy things for the nephews such as the "real thing" Sir Killalot toy from Robot Wars in 2001 - it seemed that I got the wrong item and had to return it the following day. My final visit to Argos before they closed down before Christmas was to get some C60 cassette tapes (remember them?) for some Radio 4 recording over Christmas and New Year. And some debacle with a box that just happened to be ripped when I had tried to open it to test the product out so that I could know whether it would be working properly or was compatible with what I had home, which it was was not on both counts - I even contacted the CEO at the time.
What was their mid to late 1980s slogan? - "It's so easy". Well, it would have been "so easy" had they not hidden them inside Sainsbury's stores. "It's so annoying" should be their slogan now.
Nottingham's first Argos opened in 1976 three years after the first ones had opened, (in the same shopping centre that had a Sainsbury's there, ironically enough), with a second "Superstore" branch in 1991. The first one closed in 2018 (but then again, the shopping centre it was in has been closed for a while anyway); and the second one had closed at the start of this year to move into a Sainsbury's store a mile and a half away. I am not a really Sainsbury's customer (for I have a Tesco Clubcard in my wallet, not to mention an Iceland one as well), and so I have been concerned that Argos moving into Sainsbury's would put me and others off shopping there. Nottingham City Centre no longer has a branch of Argos in NG1-land for the first time in 47 years and I feel that it really is the end of an era.
Since the actual catalogues had stopped being published, I really miss the laminated pages of the catalogue (which I assumed they did to make the book look as it had more pages than usual such as over 1,000 of them in order to make the catalogue exciting). This was in the days of just the "300 pages per-catalogue" era of the 1980s and not the later over one and a half thousand pages era, 1990s onwards. And of course the Customer Selection Form inside the book (a blank piece of paper will do, surely?) and a lovely Bookie pen-sized writing implement, (later a pencil), to write it down with. The seven digit (three digit prefix at the beginning) item numbers copied from the main book and written down onto the form. Five minutes later, a Julie Peasgood-alike voiceover invites us via the store: "Item number 387, to your collection point, please". It was like that in the 2000s in any case.
My personal opinion is that Argos stores should still remain independent in our High Streets and shopping centres (even if Sainsbury's do own them these days). If it ain't broke, then don't mess around with it. I would hate it if Boots or any other retailer would be a "shop within a shop" - besides, if I was a visitor to that town or city and trying to find out where the nearest branch of that store is, then I could easily have overlooked it and have wasted my time. I prefer the Argos stores to be stand-alone shops as that was the way they were supposed to be when the late Richard Tompkins founded them over half a century ago - what would have they been called had Tompkins not been on holiday in the Greek city of Argos at the time, and came up with the idea directly translated from the old Green Shield Stamps format? Cash instead of stamps, and it took until 1972 to come up with the idea...
I do have some great memories of shopping at Argos - in 1995 I saw a couple of girls who were in my class at school just happened to be shopping in there when I was there (hence the "old school" part that I was talking about), nearly a couple of years after I had left school. In the weeks before Christmas I used to have so much fun with Christmas shopping and buy things for the nephews such as the "real thing" Sir Killalot toy from Robot Wars in 2001 - it seemed that I got the wrong item and had to return it the following day. My final visit to Argos before they closed down before Christmas was to get some C60 cassette tapes (remember them?) for some Radio 4 recording over Christmas and New Year. And some debacle with a box that just happened to be ripped when I had tried to open it to test the product out so that I could know whether it would be working properly or was compatible with what I had home, which it was was not on both counts - I even contacted the CEO at the time.
What was their mid to late 1980s slogan? - "It's so easy". Well, it would have been "so easy" had they not hidden them inside Sainsbury's stores. "It's so annoying" should be their slogan now.
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