Clay S. wrote:
Since this thread is drifting as on the Gulf Stream, I'll add this to carry it a little further to the Sargasso Sea....
Film photography and LP's (as us oldtimers called them) are kind of a niche market, similar to the Audiophiles who would buy an album, play it once to record it on a high end reel to reel and store it away to keep it undamaged. Today these things have gone "digital" and my kids trust having their stuff on the "cloud" not wanting to be burdened with the care and ownership of physical objects. We Luddites still cling to the idea that "clouds" are somewhat ephemeral things.
I will still break out my old 8X10 camera, 2 1/4 Hasselblad, or an old (even to me) Contax rangefinder and shoot film and make "silver prints" as the last photographic process before digital photography has come to be known, but digital photography has so many advantages that can not be ignored. I'm more likely to grab my Olympus M5ii than my OM-1 for even casual photography. The creative possibilities are so much greater.
That Mom and Pop's morphed into online sellers and ditched the storefront to survive is not that surprising. I think it may work in the short term, but they don't have the buying power to compete with the Corporate Behemoths. The "buy to try" schemes these places offer depend on volume sales of commodified product.
I have noticed that many of the people in the workforce are wanting to work "remotely" now and avoid the daily commute and physical contact with a workplace. I'm thinking there is someone in India wanting that same job, and willing to do it for less.
Random thoughts pushing things a little further away....
And I'll help with the push

. Cool post Clay. When the pandemic was on it's way here I was in a cardiac ICU for four days watching the news reports from a place called Wuhan, China. Having lots of time on my hands and tethered to my IVs it seemed to me that this thing was going to come our way. And so it did, sadly.
So when I got out since I have a 90 year old blind Mom who is a two time cancer survivor Dave and I decided that I had better go hide for a while based on a criteria and case count in our university town. That March day 2020 I walked down my two flights of stairs after saying good bye to Dave and did not return, not once, not even at night for 15 months. Dave being young and invincible AND willing..... willing ran the show and I will forever, forever be grateful for what he did for me and my Mom.
But I digress. After going down two flights of stairs I stopped on the way home at a camera store and spent about $15K on a Sony A7 RIV, 200 - 600 lens, 100 - 400 lens and a 24 - 104 lens. Then I went back to my youth and spent 15 months in the woods taking pictures of bald eagles, deer (made friends with a deer to that followed me around), you name it even fish. It was a good time and I was able to avoid human contact for months and months.
Anyway my intent even though this is framed by the pandemic is to talk about photography with you. Absolutely the digital stuff is hands down much easier to use, much smarter than my old film Nikon and I will go so far as to say for a hack like me more fun too because the percentage of good shots is way higher. There is also the immediate gratification available as soon as I can open Photoshop too and no waiting for film processing or the cost.
Some cameras today have real time, bird's eye auto focus for birds in flight - wow incredible and it works too. Pretty impressive.
These days I'm back in the shop but woking nights to avoid people and I like it better, no phones, no jerks, even the pan handlers on the street are off drunk someplace and leaving me alone. I did find a dead guy in an elevator at 2:00 AM and called the authorities and then went and fixed guitars. Talk about a bad day, for him.... not me.
Strange times, kind of a nightmare really but on the other hand I'm pretty OK and could do this indefinitely. Never liked people much anyway.... JUST KIDDING.
So anyway a tip of the hat from me to you for being a photographer too and it sounds like a pretty good one from the film days too. PS: Life long audiophile as well here who still uses a turntable
