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CC-013 Video rental · USA 2021

Family Video — The last video chain standing, until its landlord couldn’t save it

Lifespan
1978–2021 · 43 yrs
Peak Stores
~800 (late 2000s)
Killed By
streaming + pandemic
Status
Shuttered

Summary

Family Video was the Midwestern video-rental chain that owned its own buildings, and in January 2021 its president announced that all of its remaining stores — around 250 of them across 17 states — would close. The final rental day was 6 January 2021, and the shutdown was complete by the end of February. Founded in 1978 by Charlie Hoogland as a video offshoot of his family's Illinois distribution business, opening its first store in Springfield, Illinois, Family Video grew to roughly 800 locations and did something no other large rental chain managed: it outlasted them all. Blockbuster, Movie Gallery, and Hollywood Video each went down under debt and streaming; Family Video kept renting discs into the 2020s, the last big national rental chain on its feet.

The reason it lasted so long is the reason it belongs in this archive as a counterpoint rather than a copycat. Family Video, through its parent Highland Ventures, owned the real estate under most of its stores. While Blockbuster and Hollywood Video paid escalating rent on thousands of leased boxes — rent that turned a demand collapse into an unpayable fixed cost almost overnight — Family Video paid itself. Its occupancy cost was effectively flat, it could sublet unused square footage to a Subway or a Jimmy John's, and it ran lean enough that a store needed only a fraction of the traffic to stay open. Owning the building was a quiet structural advantage that bought the chain an extra decade in a dying business.

But owning the building slows the bleed; it does not refill the store. Streaming drained rental demand through the 2010s, and the company leaned on its real-estate flexibility — adding a fitness brand and a cannabis-dispensary venture in some buildings — to keep the lights on. Then COVID-19 arrived. As president Keith Hoogland put it, the chain had faced "digital competition from Netflix and others for years," but "nothing has been as devastating to our business as COVID-19": the pandemic crushed foot traffic and dried up the supply of new releases as Hollywood delayed its 2020 slate. A video store with no new movies and no customers had run out of road.

Family Video's fate is properly read as a shuttering rather than a court-ordered liquidation: a privately held, real-estate-rich company that closed its stores when the business stopped working, keeping the valuable property and winding down the rental operation. It was the last of its kind, and it closed not because it had failed where the others failed, but because even the smartest structural hedge cannot outlast both streaming and a pandemic at once.

Timeline

1946
The family business begins
Clarence Hoogland founds a Midwestern distribution company that later moves into consumer electronics and media, the foundation the rental chain grows from.
1978
The first store
Charlie Hoogland opens the first video-rental store in Springfield, Illinois — initially "Video Movie Club" — as a retail venture of the family's Highland Ventures.
1980s–1990s
The real-estate model
Family Video expands across the Midwest while buying, not leasing, the buildings its stores occupy, keeping occupancy costs low and stores under family control.
Late 2000s
The peak
The chain reaches roughly 800 stores, even as Netflix streaming and Redbox kiosks begin reshaping home video.
2010
The rivals fall
Blockbuster files for bankruptcy and Movie Gallery/Hollywood Video liquidate; Family Video becomes the last large national rental chain standing.
2010s
Diversify the buildings
As rental demand erodes, Highland Ventures fills store real estate with other ventures — including a fitness brand and, later, a cannabis-dispensary business — to monetise the property.
Early 2020
The slow contraction
Family Video enters 2020 with more than 500 stores, already down from its ~800 peak as streaming steadily drains demand.
March 2020 onward
The pandemic
COVID-19 collapses foot traffic and, with Hollywood delaying its release slate, leaves the stores with few new movies to rent.
Late 2020
Down to ~250
A last-ditch effort to keep the chain alive falls short; the footprint shrinks to roughly 250 stores across 17 states.
5 January 2021
The announcement
President Keith Hoogland announces that all remaining Family Video stores will close, citing COVID-19 as the decisive blow.
Early 2021
Last rentals, then dark
The final rental day is 6 January 2021; going-out-of-business sales run through the winter and the stores are closed by the end of February.

Owning the Building

Family Video's whole strategy can be read off its parent company's name. The rental chain was a venture of Highland Ventures, a Hoogland-family business with deep roots in Midwestern media distribution, and its defining choice was not about movies at all — it was about property. Where almost every other video chain leased its storefronts, Family Video bought them. Owning the real estate under most of its stores meant the company paid rent to itself, which is to say its occupancy cost was essentially fixed and low, immune to the annual escalations that landlords imposed on chains like Blockbuster and Hollywood Video.

That single decision compounded into a durable edge. A store that owns its building can survive on far less revenue than one writing a rising rent cheque every month, so Family Video could keep open locations that a leased competitor would have had to close. It could carve up its own square footage and sublet the surplus — a Subway, a Jimmy John's, a tanning salon — turning a video store into a small landlord that happened to rent movies, and shaving its net occupancy cost further. It ran lean, kept the family in control, and treated the buildings as the real asset. Through the late 2000s the chain grew to roughly 800 stores on this model, expanding even as the rest of the industry began to wobble.

The Last One Standing

The wobble became a collapse for everyone else. In 2010, Blockbuster filed for bankruptcy and the Movie Gallery group — which owned Hollywood Video — liquidated, taking thousands of stores and tens of thousands of jobs with them, brought down by debt and leases at the exact moment Netflix streaming and Redbox kiosks were pulling demand out of the stores. Family Video watched its national rivals disappear and kept renting. By the early 2010s it was, by its own and the industry's reckoning, the last large national video-rental chain in the United States — "the last man standing," in Keith Hoogland's phrase.

Survival, though, is not the same as health, and the company knew it. Rental demand kept eroding year after year as streaming libraries grew, and Family Video responded the way a real-estate company would: by finding better uses for its buildings. Highland Ventures launched a fitness chain and later a cannabis-dispensary venture, often physically inside or beside the stores, so that the property kept earning even as movie rentals shrank. The video aisle was increasingly a tenant in its own building. It was a clever managed decline — monetise the asset, let the legacy business contract gracefully — and it might have run for years more on the strength of the low cost base. The chain entered 2020 with more than 500 stores still open.

A Pandemic With No Movies

Then came the one shock the real-estate hedge could not absorb. COVID-19 hit a video-rental store in two ways at once, and both were fatal. First, lockdowns and fear gutted foot traffic — the entire model depended on people physically driving to a store, and for months people stopped going anywhere. Second, and more insidiously, Hollywood responded to closed cinemas by delaying its 2020 release slate, which meant the new-release wall — the engine of every rental store since the format began — had almost nothing new on it. A brand manager described "a five-month gap when we were just getting B-movie after B-movie." A video store with no customers and no new movies is not a video store; it is an empty building the company already owned.

By late 2020 a last-ditch effort to keep the chain alive had come up short, and the footprint had fallen to roughly 250 stores across 17 states. On 5 January 2021, Keith Hoogland announced they would all close, and he was precise about cause: years of digital competition from Netflix and others had worn the business down, but "nothing has been as devastating to our business as COVID-19." The final rental day was 6 January 2021; the going-out-of-business sales ran through the winter, and by the end of February the last big video-rental chain in America was gone. The buildings, of course, remained — owned outright, to be repurposed or leased — which is exactly why the ending reads as a shuttering of the rental business rather than the forced liquidation of a company.

The Five Factors

01
Owning the real estate beats leasing it when demand is in structural decline
Family Video's defining advantage was paying rent to itself. Flat, low occupancy costs let it keep stores open on revenue that would have bankrupted a leased competitor, which is the single biggest reason it outlasted Blockbuster and Hollywood Video by a decade. The same fixed footprint that crushed the leaseholders was survivable for the owner.
02
A structural hedge buys time, not immunity
Owning the buildings and subletting the surplus slowed the bleed dramatically, but it never reversed the decline in rentals. The edge bought years; it did not change the fact that fewer people each year wanted to rent a disc. Being the cheapest operator in a shrinking market postpones the ending without preventing it.
03
Being the last survivor means inheriting a market that is still disappearing
Outliving every national rival left Family Video with the loyalty of the dwindling population that still rented physical movies. That is a real but terminal position: the last store in a dying category collects the final customers, then closes with them.
04
Diversifying the asset is not the same as saving the business
Highland Ventures cleverly filled its stores with fitness and cannabis ventures to keep the property earning, which protected the company's value but quietly conceded that the rental business itself was finished. When the core operation becomes a tenant in its own building, the building is the business and the brand is a legacy.
05
A correlated shock can defeat even a well-hedged operator
The pandemic attacked the rental model on two fronts at once — no foot traffic and no new releases — and no amount of cheap rent helps a store that has neither customers nor product. The hedge was built against the slow erosion of streaming; it was never built for both streaming and a global shutdown arriving together.

Aftermath

Family Video's closure in early 2021 ended a 43-year run and put its remaining store employees out of work, but the parent company emerged in a fundamentally different position from the leaseholders it had outlived. Highland Ventures kept the valuable real estate it had spent decades accumulating, free to lease, repurpose, or redevelop the hundreds of buildings the rental chain had occupied. Where Blockbuster's empty boxes reverted to landlords, Family Video's reverted to Family Video. The video chain shut down; the real-estate business behind it remained, which is the whole point of the model and the reason the ending was a shuttering, not a bankruptcy.

The lasting significance is the contrast it draws with the flagship of this sub-site. Blockbuster is the cautionary tale of the incumbent that could not shrink its leased footprint fast enough; Family Video is the answer to the question "what if the same business had owned its stores instead?" The answer turns out to be: it lasts roughly a decade longer, it becomes the last chain standing, and it still closes — because the asset strategy was a defence against rent, and the thing that finally killed it was a pandemic that took away both the customers and the movies. The Friday-night video aisle survived longest in the Midwest, in buildings the family owned, and even there it could not survive a year with nothing new on the shelf.

Lessons

  1. Own the cost structure you cannot control elsewhere: in a category facing structural decline, owning the real estate converts the killer fixed cost — escalating rent — into a flat one, and that alone can buy a decade of extra life.
  2. Recognise that a structural advantage is a time-buyer, not a cure; if underlying demand is falling every year, the smartest cost base only changes when, not whether, the business ends.
  3. Do not mistake outlasting your rivals for beating the trend; the last operator in a dying market inherits the final customers and then closes with them.
  4. When you diversify the asset out from under a legacy operation, be honest that you are managing a decline, not running a turnaround — and plan the wind-down before a shock forces it.
  5. Stress-test the hedge against correlated shocks: a defence built for slow erosion (cheap rent vs. streaming) may collapse against a fast, two-sided shock (no traffic and no product at once).

References