I don't watch many movies, but I love old westerns. If John Wayne is in them though, forget it. Not a fan.
I think I'm going to put in a good day of outside work, then go to a record store. I went to one yesterday, for the first time in decades. My daughter bought and got an old stereo system running, and is curious about a lot of vinyl that has never been digitized. Plus she likes the novelty of old tech. She asked me to scope out the local stores, with a list of things she's trying to find. She lives in a city 4 hours away.
The two places I looked at yesterday were dismal - not much other than classic rock at high prices. This is a small city and there isn't a lot of competition. But there are two stores uptown, so I can walk in to a mix of guys my age and what were recently called hipsters, and see what they have. I know deep down, I am infinitely cooler than all these young beardie-boys, but I don't seem to look it anymore. The resurrection of vinyl is pretty funny, but there is a ton of music that has never been digitized, and a lot of it is very good. Technology often pushes us to a mainstream where everything is the same - safe, expected, predictable and very marketable.
Spotify algorithms drive me crazy, as they always want to direct me to boring music that is slightly like what I started out searching for, but not it. I looked at one sixties album once, and got a barrage of artists I didn't miss or want to hear. It was like the program was happy to latch on to something it could pigeonhole me with, and even if it missed by a mile, it was uncompromising. More developed AI is going to be as bad, I expect. So I can see why younger people would seek their odd music offline.