Guttersnipe
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,942
- Location
- San Francisco, CA
My Question is, what do FLoungers think of this event / practice?
Loungers outside the U.S. may not be familiar, but "Black Friday" is the day immediately following the U.S.'s national day of Thanksgiving, which always falls on the fourth Thursday in November. Traditionally seen as the first day of the holiday shopping season, many retailers (especially large chains) hold sales on the day following Thanksgiving. This leads to anecdotal news items about people lining up for hours in the cold and then trampling one another in order to buy deeply discounted schlock.
Personally, I find it somewhat distasteful, too materialistic, and not really in keeping with the Holiday Spirit. It also seems (to me) to be part of the wider commercialization of Christmas / Hanukkah / Kwanzaa / Winter Solstice / Festivus (did I leave anyone out?). I also can't help but feel sorry folks who work in retail and often have to forgo Thanksgiving Day with their families in order to prepare stores for a flood of shoppers . . .
Loungers outside the U.S. may not be familiar, but "Black Friday" is the day immediately following the U.S.'s national day of Thanksgiving, which always falls on the fourth Thursday in November. Traditionally seen as the first day of the holiday shopping season, many retailers (especially large chains) hold sales on the day following Thanksgiving. This leads to anecdotal news items about people lining up for hours in the cold and then trampling one another in order to buy deeply discounted schlock.
Personally, I find it somewhat distasteful, too materialistic, and not really in keeping with the Holiday Spirit. It also seems (to me) to be part of the wider commercialization of Christmas / Hanukkah / Kwanzaa / Winter Solstice / Festivus (did I leave anyone out?). I also can't help but feel sorry folks who work in retail and often have to forgo Thanksgiving Day with their families in order to prepare stores for a flood of shoppers . . .