Shopping, Scoping S trollung Life Shopping malls have replaced the town square as the center of many American cities. Shopping itself has become the activity that brings people together. The stores here are pretty clean. The air's fresh. There's plenty of parking. People here are inventing their own system of beliefs. They're creating it, doing it, selling it. Making it up as they go along. -David Byrne's True Stories, 1986 In the film True Stories, Byrne, avante-garde artist/composer and lead singer for the rock group Talking Heads, paces through an imaginary town in Texas and nervously decries the state of American civilization. Underneath his indictment of a televi- sion-watching, fast food-eating, mall- going society is the suspicion that shopping malls represent a purposeful amnesia of culture, tradition, heritage - all the things that used to make up America. But if the person that Time maga- zine once labeled "Rock's Renais- sance Man" is right, if shopping malls have indeed become the center of our cities, then maybe it's time to make the trip down State Street-by car,by commuter bus, or, for the strong, by foot- to our local mall, Briarwood, a fixture on the Tree Town landscape for 16 years. Visit Briarwood on virtually any day, especially weekends, and wit- ness a tremendous, bustling cross- section of the population. And don't think for a minute that shoppers are all there to actually make a purchase. There's hardly anybody left today who believes shopping is a purely practical endeavor, anyone who thinks "I need a pair of socks. I'll go to the store, buy a pair, and be back be- fore halftime's over." Nobody believes you need a rea- son to shop. "Shopping"is an all- encompassing term for an entire process: finding someone to go with you, deciding what to wear, locating a place to p a r k , look- ing at magazines, trying on shoes, get- ting something to eat, meeting some friends, maybe even catching the lat- est movie. "Shopping is my life," proclaimed Sara Bulloch, 15, of Tillsenberg, Canada between bites of her M&M cookie, purchased at a mall cookie outlet. We try to be "community ori- ented." We supply free strollers, and we sponsor events like Halloween celebrations to bring the kids out. But remember, every event is tenant- driven. --Karen Fox, Marketing ' Director, Briarwood Mall To what extent does the shopping mall function within the community'? All the way down to the bottom line, profits. A recent Halloween event, which included tots "trick-or-treat- ing" from shop to shop, a costume party, potato-chip giveaways and a magic show, all clearly served one purpose: get people into the mall so they can spend money. Of course, a mall can only exist if its tenants can pay their rents. But capitalism, corporate interests and profit-motives mean nothing to the screaming kids who clutch their par- ents in fear and delight when the magician produces a surprise out of his hat. If it all brings families to- gether, then maybe it's not all that bad. Certainly not the end of civilization. Or is it? Witness the following testimonial of 16- year-old Jim Doolittle: "I ' v e been here -- a .,-.". vi/ Jr .« , a~k , , L2 , ._. _, ... .. , at the Local Mall since 12:00. It's ten to five? That means I've been here for nearly five hours... No, I'm not bored. I'm look- ing for Madonna singles. "Everybody likes to shop at malls, you know? It's okay. If this is where you want to _'take me, I'll go." 7 f 7 out, smoke cigarettes, and sit in the Burger King lounge." -Steve Moore, 17, and Amourell Canfield, 16 Those were the days, local high school students will tell you. "We're here because there's no place else to go... we used to come to the mall a lot more," said Moore and Canfield. Back in the more rambunctious days, they explained, say two or three years ago, the mall was the place to be. The big drawing card in those days Story by Alex Gordon and Mark Swartz Photos by Jonathan Liss Page 8 Weekend/November 10, 1989 Weekend/November 10, 1989 0