The last dedicated video rental business in West Marin is for sale and, according to its manager, the next owner won’t be renting DVDs. “We’re not getting community support on the videos, so they have to go,” said the manager of Video West, the Forest Knolls video rental and take-and-bake pizza business. The store opened over 20 years ago, he said, but in the past three or four years, rentals have sharply declined as people have turned to online streaming services. (It is the business, not the building itself, which is for sale.) The closure follows that of Odyssey Video, which operated in both Bolinas and Stinson Beach. The Bolinas branch closed four or five years ago and the Stinson location—which sold ice cream, coffee and gifts to help keep it afloat—about two or so years ago, said the business’ former owner, Mary Robinson. “For sure a lot of people went to Netflix, where you can stream [videos],” Ms. Robinson said. The manager at Video West said rentals cannot support the business, and that in the past six months or so pizza sales have also suffered. “It took a nosedive last June and hasn’t picked up. I don’t know. As far as I’ve heard no one in the county can beat our pizza,” he said. He wondered if fears over gluten or white flour have scared away customers who started flocking to more sophisticated fare. “The good old pizza is suffering because of it,” he went on. He said that a new operator could still operate the take and bake and replace the videos with another venture, or perhaps operate another kind of food business, though he said that septic capacity issues and the proximity to a creek would probably mean that the county would not allow a full-service restaurant. He also said the business has long provided “a local place where the kids out here can have a job without taking a bus into town. A lot of kids have their first jobs here,” he said. At least two places in West Marin, though not dedicated video stores, still offer rentals: the Inverness Store and the Whale of a Deli, in Point Reyes Station.