I'm a heavy renter and I purchase films - from Blockbuster. I have also purchased candy from Blockbuster. The key seems to be the "heavy renter" part, not the purchases.
The problem is that Blockbuster does not always have the best price and so I tend to buy most of my new DVDs from Amazon.
The second part is that while Blockbuster deactivated my account, they continued shipping titles for another week, but ceased about ten to fourteen days prior to the old renewal date.
Because I paid for a full month's service and because I did nothing to end the service, the conundrum became a nasty one for Blockbuster. I had made enough noise on Hacking Netflix and in e-mails that I think they felt I might take legal action if they didn't offer some solution to not shipping discs for a third of the month.
And if they hadn't either been willing to refund the money for the unfulfilled service or do something to make up for not shipping discs, the FTC form is easy to fill out and I had plenty of ammunition.
The result was a two-week free extension for all my trouble. And permission to open another account to make up for the loss of rentals.
All in all, the experience was not pleasant and the increased stress related to dealing with copied responses was not fun. I had repeatedly told them that I was not happy over them dropping the 4 at-a-time plan, that I used it to scan films for a purchase decision, and the bottom line was that I had no problem with a price increase.
The result is that I'm actually paying less for the service, still getting the number of film exchanges that I want, and still renting the daylights out of the list. As to opening the next account, that remains to be seen as I may decide to open one with NF just to pick up titles that either BBOL does not carry or can't deliver for one reason or another (like not having the database set up to recognize a second disc in a multiple disc set).
NF is still a bad memory for me, mostly because they heavily throttled me a little over 18 months ago and provided no recourse for what amounted to delivering a 6 at-a-time plan while charging for 8 at-a-time.
At least Blockbuster has responded, but it took them going to the edge of the law before they made things right. I suspect since I was right in the middle of the time frame for dropping accounts, that they may have realized they really did not do themselves any favors the way they handled this whole fiasco.
And, in my opinion, it isn't the pricing. It is the way things were handled, especially between various renters. If it had been absolutely the same, across the board - everyone moved automatically to a 3 at-a-time limited exchange plan at the next billing date, but having the option to select one of the others, then I don't think they would be facing the kind of negative feedback that they've drawn from their most important asset - their customer base.
One store manager told me that about a third of the total access customers were dropping the program.