Welcome to the Corner Store! A "bodega"-style store at the Barclays Center, with arena prices: soda, $8; water, $7, beer $13-$15
However faithful the rendition, it's jarring: the Brooklyn Corner Store hardly resembles a bodega, known for modest pricing.
As shown in the screenshot at right, soda costs $8, water $7, beer $13 to $15, while snacks are $5 to $7.50.
Empanadas and beef patties are $6 each.
This is what happens when you have a captive audience--pricing is surely similar at Madison Square Garden and other major venues.
It's just a little rich to liken it to a bodega, especially given the history of bodegas, as discussed below.
A little history on boedgas
A 7/30/02 New York Times article headlined These Colors Don't Run, But They Droop; Bodegas and Their Awnings Are Both Looking Tired notes that the "origins of the red-and-yellow bodega awnings and their near-universal application are something of an urban mystery."
The awnings, according to the article, "were the height of modernity in the 1970's," as Hispanic--notably Dominican--shopkeepers expanded. As of 2002, however, many bodega owners were hoping to modernize with newer awnings, but couldn't afford it, given "tortilla-thin profit margins."
''Bodegas mean only one thing,'' one operator told the newspaper, ''mucho trabajo y poco dinero," translated as "much work and little money."
Maybe not at Barclays.
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