So flashback to Detroit and what it used to represent in America: A host of families that were either working and middle class with good factory jobs in the auto industry and the support companies that feed the auto factories. Most of those jobs have either became automated, downsized, or eliminated.
And here you have the most salient point about the decline of bowling, and it's the one I've been trying to make for the past 20-odd years that keeps getting covered up by the "bowling is in decline because of scoring pace" argument. Kind of funny that I'm having this discussion now on two different bowling forums, but anyway, here goes ...
The decline of the U.S. manufacturing shift-worker has been what hurt bowling the most. When you have manufacturing, you have: (1) predictable work schedules, (2) disposable income and (3) the salt-of-the-earth everyman. Perfect for bowling.
Over the last 15 years especially, I've noticed the makeup of leagues I was in starting shifting from the manufacturing guy, to the retiree or professional -- someone in control of their own schedule and/or who needed something to do with free time. The blue-collar quotient was in retreat.
Add in competition from video games, the internet and -- especially for parents of adolescent/teen children -- outside family commitments (have a kid that plays travel ball? good luck getting to the bowling alley at the same time for 36 straight weeks...), and what you have is a threatened sport.
Around where I live now (I've moved), it's a rural area and I have to drive an hour to the nearest center. It has two very strong leagues and the person in charge is a bowler, but he's an older gentleman. I'm not complaining, though, as the local league golf scene is no more, courses are closing, adult softball leagues are struggling -- anything that involves regular, scheduled human interaction and physical activity. It's just not as important as it was.
But it's those factory jobs (or more specifically, the lack thereof) that have killed us: I watched a factory shut down a shift once, and with it went a 24-team, 96-person league overnight. Poof. About 80 of those bowlers never came back to any league. That's easily 8-10 times the number of bowlers I've known to quit over scoring pace, just in one day in one town.
There are society macro issues in play here, most of which bowling itself cannot fix no matter how hard it tries.
Jess