Press Coverage
Over the years, Hoodlums has been fortunate enough to get a fair amount of coverage from local, and in some cases national, media. In some cases, the coverage is a result of activity at the store, and in others it is due to our role as “activists” within our insane industry (our proudest moment is when the New York Times called us “low-price advocates”.
Below you will find links (for as long as they stay live) to various stories about Hoodlums, or in which a hoodlum is quoted, in various publications from Java and New Times to Forbes and United States Congressional Record.
Press about the New Store
October 2008: Amy at Java takes a look at three different indie record stores in the Phoenix area, and interviews Steve to get his take on how to deal with the digital era.
October 2008: A little more in-depth look at the new store for our old gang down at ASU. It’s nice to see that the kids still care.
October 2008: This article details how four of Tempe’s indie record stores are battling the chains, the economy, and all the other fun things that challenge us.
October 2008: A quick and insightful take from the Business Buzz. You have to love that headline.
October 2008: Our friends at State Press give us some love on the first day of ASU. We are happy about our new location, but that doesn’t mean we don’t miss the kids and staff and the campus itself.
September 2008: Five days after being open, we receive our first “Best of New Times” for “Best Addition to a Strip Center”. Wow, that’s cool.
September 2008: One of our best customers wrote this fine blog about our upcoming return. Richie, we thank you for the coverage!
September 2008: Even before we are open, we get mentioned as one of the reasons that our corner (Guadalupe and McClintock) is on “Neighborhood Watch” for the Lifestyle sections’ Things to Do area. It helps to have friends in powerful places… so thank you to Changing Hands.
Press from our various stories, rants, and events at our ASU Store
January 2008: This is an article about the ASU Memorial Union opening without Hoodlums.
January 2008: Article about our decision to close the ASU store.
June 2008: The online version of ASU’s newspaper covers the potential of our return on their online blog. I responded when I found it.
Arizona Republic
August 2007: Kristian and Marla star in “Campus Record Store Keeps Music Playing for 10 Years”. Unfortunately, I can’t find it online anywhere.
August 2006: The ASU Guide says we are the best indie record store for students. We’re pretty good with non-students too.
March 2006: Kristian explains that kids are smart enough to buy their share of classic music… and credits the iPod for helping spread the word.
September 2005: Kristian reassures the ASU paper that our store will indeed not suffer from Garth deciding to sell out.
September 2004: Steve comments on industry’s ridiculous prices and manipulative practices, again.
July 2004: Steve is quoted in response to Universal’s Jump Start program. For the record: We never did play by those rules, CDs still aren’t as cheap as they said they would be, and Universal has invented many, many new prices points since then. We thought it was a stunt then… we think it is a stunt now.
March 2004: Coverage of a panel that Steve was on called “The Death of the Record Store”. The comments are consistent with what we believe to this day.
March 2004: More coverage of “Death of the Record Store” panel at SXSW.
Coalition of Independent Music Stores/U.S. Senate
September 2003: This is a copy of the letter we wrote to the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations in response to their hearings on file-sharing and the music industry. As the lead-in suggests… we didn’t view the digital revolution the same as the major labels, and many of our comrades.
Note: Here is the official document - if you want to see how to set up a subcommittee.
January 2002: This is the Hoodlums profile for the Coalition of Independent Music Stores issue.
June 2000: This is a letter that we wrote to the Federal Trade Commission in regards to their “debate” about whether or not abolish the Minimum Advertised Price, which essentially prevented the corporations from loss-leading. Hmmm…. big corporations versus small ones in a government decision…. wonder how that one went? Oh well, we keep up the good fight.
September 1998: This is the very first article written about Hoodlums. We were very thankful that Gilbert did the article, it helped us turn the corner and start off with a bang.
Note: There are a bunch of articles missing, including the Forbes story (with Arnold the Guv on the cover). Eventually, I will scan them in. As it is, I assume no one actually reads any of this anyway.










































































Steve Wiley. Steve is one of the owners of Hoodlums Music. Steve has been in & out of music stores since his early days in the Great White North. No, not Canada, dammit, North Dakota. He is a graduate of the University of North Dakota in marketing and advertising. He is the only one at the store crazy enough to have a family at this point…a great wife and five kids to be exact. He spent the ten years prior to opening Hoodlums managing Arizona record/video stores from Tucson to Flagstaff. Yeah, that means he is the oldest one at the store (in a sea of pups with eighties birthdates), so ask him about “old” guys like Tom Petty, the Beatles, Aerosmith, and Van Halen.
Kristian Luce. Kristian is the other owner of Hoodlums. He has been running the streets of Tempe ever since they brought him in from small town Pennsylvania (did you notice the Steelers color scheme on our store signs?). He also has spent his life in and out of record stores. When he isn’t hanging out in Tempe, he likes to spend his time in Bisbee. He isn’t quite as old as Steve, but he aint no spring chick either, so ask him about “ancient” artists like Tom Waits, Apples in Stereo, Jane’s Addiction and The Clash.




















