For all the standard reasons, I very much want to have a local analogue camera store around. Two preferably, for competition. My particular pet peeve with online buying: paying $5 to ship a $5 filter or other such small, cheap part. Argh! Old stores with bins full of second-hand bits and bobs are the way to go!
In sparkling "New South" Charlotte, North Carolina, where new is worshipped and history is an inconvenience, we have two old-school stores clinging to life. (A third snuffed it last year.) I try hard to give these two my business, but they do make it difficult. When I was trying to buy a TLR: nope, just sold our only one. Rangefinders? No. (My one so far is a lucky eBay buy.) Efke film? Nope. My entire purchase history across these two stores is lots of paper, some film, all my color processing, and one Mamiya TLR lens.
Next best before going online to KEH or B&H, I'll try other towns' free-range, organic, shade-grown
😀 stores when traveling. Ball Photo in Asheville, NC (2+ hours up the mountain) is great. A new(?) tiny place in Philadelphia, 10th Street Camera, shows promise. Last year I saw Central Camera in Chicago for the first time and nearly wept at the sight of their inventory. Tried a minty C330 there, hesitated at its size so went home without buying, got burned on a smaller Yashica 124 on eBay, and weeks later finally gave up and phone-ordered (how quaint) from Central the very C330 I had seen previously, fortunately still there. (Love it now.) That'll teach me.
BTW, at all these places, don't curse their forays into digital. If their sales of digital to the masses in effect subsidizes the slow-selling vintage gear they stock and services/supplies they provide to us quirky film folk, more power to 'em. It doesn't get in my way, and keeps the stores alive for all of us.
EDIT: http://www.10thstreetcamera.com ... Certainly nothing from close to the 21st century in there. (Usual disclaimers apply: Not affiliated with, related to, etc.)