The Good Guys was a West Coast consumer-electronics chain, founded in San Francisco in 1973, that sold itself into a larger company in 2003 and was effectively gone within two to three years — absorbed, rebranded, and then carried down by the very acquirer that bought it. It is the encyclopedia’s case of death by absorption: not a liquidation auction or a fraud, but a healthy-enough specialist that surrendered its independence and then discovered it had tied its survival to a buyer with even less of a future.
Ronald Unkefer opened the first Good Guys store on Chestnut Street in San Francisco’s Marina district in 1973, building a chain known for higher-end audio and video, attentive service, and a deliberately more upscale assortment than the discount competition. At its peak in the late 1990s it employed around 5,000 people, ran roughly 79 stores across California, Nevada, Oregon, and Washington, and posted annual sales above $900 million. It was the regional answer to Circuit City and the rising Best Buy — and, like most service-led electronics specialists, it found the late-1990s squeeze between the big boxes on one side and the dawning internet on the other increasingly hard to survive alone.
One correction to the file’s working note: the chain’s anchor summary recorded the buyer as Tweeter in 2005, but the record is clear and consistent that The Good Guys was acquired by CompUSA, in a cash deal valued at roughly $55 million (about $2.05 a share), announced on September 29, 2003 and completed that December. Tweeter, the high-end audio roll-up profiled in the adjacent case file, never owned it. The verdict — Acquired, absorbed out of existence by its buyer — holds; only the buyer’s name needed fixing.
CompUSA folded The Good Guys into its own struggling computer-superstore business, converted the surviving locations into a “CompUSA with The Good Guys Inside” departmental format, and let the standalone chain wind down by around 2005–06. Then CompUSA itself collapsed: it sold its stores to a liquidator in December 2007, and Systemax (parent of TigerDirect) bought the brand and a handful of locations in January 2008. The Good Guys died not from a failure of its own format so much as from choosing a lifeboat that was already taking on water.
Egghead Software sold the thing the entire personal-computer revolution ran on — boxed software — in the years when software still came in a box. Founded in 1984 by Victor D. Alhadeff as a single store in Bellevue, Washington, backed in part by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, it rode the PC boom into the largest software-specialty retail chain in the United States, with around 200 stores in 30 states and over $860 million in sales by the mid-1990s. Then the box that was its whole reason to exist began to disappear. Big-box retailers undercut it on price, the manufacturers it depended on started selling direct, and software itself began to move to the download. In January 1998 the company made the only decision left to it: close all of its remaining stores, lay off most of its staff, and become an online-only retailer, Egghead.com. The verdict here is acquired — because in 2001, after a bruising data-security scare and a bankruptcy, Egghead’s remains were bought by the company that had made boxed-software retail obsolete in the first place: Amazon.
The irony is the point of this file. Egghead was, briefly, an internet pioneer — among the early specialty retailers to pivot hard to e-commerce, shedding its entire store base in one stroke to chase online sales. It even merged with the online auctioneer Onsale in 1999 in a $375 million deal explicitly framed as a way to compete with Amazon. But it could never make the online business profitable, the dot-com winds turned against it, and a December 2000 breach in which the company feared the credit-card data of over 3.7 million customers had been exposed shattered confidence at the worst possible moment.
Egghead filed for Chapter 11 in August 2001. A deal to sell its assets to Fry’s Electronics for $10 million fell apart in October. The following month, Amazon stepped in and bought Egghead’s website, intellectual property, customer data, and product information out of bankruptcy for $6.1 million in cash. The chain that had once been the dominant physical retailer of the software powering the PC era ended as a redirect into Amazon’s catalog.
Nobody Beats the Wiz — “the Wiz” to anyone who lived within range of its commercials — was the New York-metro consumer-electronics chain whose advertising jingle was inescapable and whose stores, by 2003, were gone. Founded in 1977 by four Jemal brothers, it grew through the 1980s and into the 1990s as the rivals around it imploded, reaching some 94 stores, roughly $1.4 billion in revenue, and about 2,000 employees across New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Maryland, and Massachusetts. It was a fixture of regional life: the relentless “Nobody beats the Wiz!” jingle, the price-match promise baked into the name, and, eventually, a place in the pop-culture record when Seinfeld built the episode “The Junk Mail” around a man famous for appearing in a Wiz commercial.
The chain died in two stages, which is why the verdict is “Acquired” rather than simply liquidated. The first stage was self-inflicted: having expanded aggressively, the Wiz pushed its store count from roughly 20 to over 80 in less than a year, plunging into a New York electronics price war that its overbuilt cost base could not survive. It filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in December 1997 and closed 17 of its remaining stores. The second stage was a rescue that became a slow shutdown. In 1998, Cablevision — the cable operator — bought the chain’s assets for about $80 million, hoping to use the stores as showrooms for cable modems, HDTV, and its own telecom services.
What killed the Wiz, in the end, was that neither owner could make the math of a New York-metro electronics chain work. The original family overexpanded into a market already thick with discounters and getting thinner on margin. Cablevision, for its part, had bought a retail concept it did not understand and could not turn around: over the roughly five years it operated the Wiz, it lost an estimated $500 million. It closed stores steadily, and on February 10, 2003 announced it would sell or close the last 17 — all in the New York metro area — citing a weakened retail economy. P.C. Richard & Son later bought the assets, principally for the brand name.
So the Wiz is the rare case where the jingle is more durable than the company. The stores are gone, the chain absorbed and then wound down by a buyer outside the retail trade. What survives is a piece of New York advertising memory and a cautionary tale about growing too fast into a price war, and about a cable company that thought owning the showroom would sell the cable modem.