ADAMS AVENUE NEWS, JULY 2015

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ADAMS AVENUE NEWS A Positive Community Newspaper Created by Locals, for Locals, Supporting Local Businesses northparknews.biz/digital

WHAT’S INSIDE?

Vol. 23 No. 7 July 2015

KENSINGTON VIDEO: THE SEQUEL

Mosaic Art Normal Heights is now home to a creative new experience via the San Diego Mosaic School, where art enthusiasts can join designer Kim Emerson for in-depth workshops intended to bring art enrichment to the community. PAGE 4

Hidden Worlds Revealed Exhibit at the San Diego Natural History Museum offers a glimpse into the daily life of the Maya people. PAGE 10

Winnie Hanford will not be an owner or employee, but will be a constant presence.

‘This is going to be a movielover’s paradise’ BY JENNIFER COBURN

Mid-City Improvement Project Construction has started on a $65 million project to improve public transit in the Mid-City area and along the State Route 15/I-15 corridor. PAGE 13

Big Hearts Lend Healing Hands Doctors with the Fresh Start Surgical Gifts program are transforming the lives of disadvantaged children and teens with physical deformities through reconstructive surgery. PAGE 21

Guy Hanford believes if he builds it then they will come. That’s not just wishful thinking on his part. His family has already built two successful businesses at the same location on Adams Avenue. In 1963 Winnie and Richard Hanford opened Kensington Gifts, which thrived for two decades until their son Guy left his job as a middle school vice principal and helped transform the business into Kensington Video. Locals say the video rental store wasn’t just another shop; it was an institution. The video store shut its doors in March, but Guy Hanford, 66, says the cast is getting ready for the sequel this fall — Kensington Video and Juice Bar. “This is going to be a movie-lover’s paradise,” Guy Hanford says, walking through what is now 3,500 square feet of gutted storefront. The space is empty except for a single display case with a few hundred DVDs, four metal folding chairs, and the Hanford family’s dreams. “We’re going to have shelves lined with videos, and jewelry cases filled

with film memorabilia,” he says gesturing to a 19-foot wall marked with discolored paint. He says the new store will house more than 30,000 movies and customers will have access to another 40,000 in a warehouse. “We’ll have a space for guest filmmakers to come in and show their work, and we’re getting a sound system so powerful that when we screen ‘Top Gun,’ you’ll think those planes are really flying overhead.” The rebirth of the shop around the corner will also have a juice and smoothie bar so customers can relax while making their movie selections. Guy Hanford points to the high ceilings where he plans to hang largeblade fans to create a distinctly “Casablanca” vibe. Kensington Video is adding new features but what has always made the business special is its old-fashioned service. Eighty-eight-year-old Winnie Hanford has been at the front counter for 52 years and plans on sticking around for the new phase. A soft-spoken woman with energy that belies her age, she rattles tales of customers she has known for decades. “We take

The official relaunch of the store will be in a few months.

time to listen to what’s going on in their lives,” even pinch-hitting for them when they have needed childcare or a prescription delivered. “I feel like I was meant to be planted here for that reason,” says Winnie as her son places a cup of strawberry ice cream beside her. “You can’t let it all be about the dollar, you have to give of yourself.” This philosophy has earned Kensington Video a loyal following since it began renting movies in 1984. “We became experts in the tastes of our clientele,” says Guy Hanford. “Sometimes women come in and they say

they have no idea what movie they want, they just tell us they need a good cry so I recommend ‘Imitation of Life’ or ‘An Affair to Remember,’” he says. “Each time they come back and tell us what they liked and didn’t like, we get a better sense of their taste.” Winnie isn’t as easy-going, though. “If someone doesn’t like a movie I recommend, I can get a little, well, indignant,” she says. “I wonder what in the world didn’t like about that movie. If they say they didn’t finish it, sometimes I’ll tell them to take it back and give it another try. If I know SEE VIDEO, Page 12


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