Wednesday, July 06, 2005

I missed an important anniversary recently-the 25th anniversary of The Blues Brothers Movie. Which I have never seen. I say that and people are shocked and amazed, like I'm missing out on something truly wonderful. Perhaps I am but so far I'm not feeling the loss.

A reporter from the Chicago Sun Times went to the Dixie Square Mall in Harvey, IL which is where the movie's shopping mall sequence was filmed. Harvey was already something of a dump and the mall had been closed for a year when the movie set up shop. The article had all sorts of cool info in it, for instance the extras kept stealing stuff from the sets.
The Dixie Square Mall is still standing and, as you might imagine, is fairly horrifying inside. The story mentioned offhandedly that the mall is beloved by enthusiasts of dead malls.
Dead malls???
"I calmly and politely told them I was working on a website devoted to the decline of retail ventures in suburbia" notes one dead mall enthusiast, writing on deadmalls.com about the cops who wanted to know why he pulled into the parking lot of the Dixie Square Mall. He has lots of pictures and is excited to find some original signage in a Sears.
The site has a map of the U.S. which takes you to dead mall info throughout this great nation. Good to know that 100 Oaks which I remember as a shitty mall in Nashville as evolved into a shitty big-box retailer. And our friends to the North aren't left out either...The Galleria in London, Ontario gets a mention.
Deadmalls.com is not the only game in town. Casino Death Watch, while much less stylish than deadmalls is pretty much what the title suggests. Groceteria looks at supermarkets from the 1920s to the 1970s. And DefunctParks.com talks about amusement parks that aren't here anymore.
I checked out the Defunct Parks site to read about Riverview, an amusement park that used to be on the north side of the city (and which now is, ta da, a strip mall.) Open from 1904 to 1967, I've seen it in documentaries and heard about it with some misty nostalgia.
Laura Flamm, writing in what was apparently an A.P. History paper published on the site, paints a less rosy picture.
One of the midway games that started out as a "Dunk the Bozo the Clown" game in which contestants threw balls at a target that would release a man into a tank of water turned into "Dunk the Nig**r" during the 1940’s.
African American men were hired to sit in the tanks and taunt white passersby, who often would throw the balls at the African American in the tank rather than at the target. The title of the game was later changed to the more politically correct "African Dip" and was eventually closed by Schmidt in the late 1950’s after much pressure from the NAACP.
The game left a lasting effect, as well. It allowed ethnically diverse Chicagoans to define themselves as "white" and to develop a sense of racial solidarity that "obscured the particulars of their own ethnic backgrounds." This development served to further segregate the city.
Fights sprang up more frequently at Riverview after this, and by the 1960’s Riverview required its own police force.
"African Dip"?