Black Friday: Why do we do this to ourselves?
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BEAVER FALLS, Pa. (AP) — Gravy was still warm. Dallas Cowboys were still in uniform. Thanks were still being given across the country as the pilgrimages to the stores began, heralding a new era of American consumerism.
Lured by earlier-than-ever Black Friday sales, people left Grandma and Grandpa in search of Samsung and Toshiba. They did not go blindly: In dozens of interviews, people acknowledged how spending has become inseparable from the holidays. Older folks pined for the days of Erector Sets and Thumbelinas while in line to pay iPad prices. Even some younger shoppers said it felt wrong to be spending money instead of quality time on Thanksgiving.
"But we're still out here," said Kelly Jackson, a paralegal who was standing inside a Best Buy store in the Pittsburgh suburbs, a 32-inch television ($189) in her cart. It was a consolation prize: Despite four hours on line, she missed the cheaper 40-inchers ($179) that she had heard about while listening to Internet radio.
Jackson's resignation was common among those who flocked to capitalism's temples for the consumer equivalent of genuflecting. Many said that this Black Friday bled into Thursday crossed a line, that merchants should not intrude like this. Christmas is about the message of Jesus, the feeling went — not about the gold, frankincense and myrrh.
Yet amid these protests, people still talked about feeling powerless beneath the moment — as if they had no choice but to shop.
"You have to have these things to enjoy your children and your family," said Jackson's friend Ebony Jones, who had secured two laptops ($187.99 each) for her 7 and 11 year olds.
Why must we buy? To demonstrate our love for others? To add a few more inches to our televisions? To help America recover from a vicious recession that itself was born of the desire for more?
Such questions make Jones wince. "It shouldn't be that way, but in a sense there's no way around it," said Jones, a nurse. "Everything ends up with a dollar amount. Even your happiness."
Retailers have long capitalized on the holiday season's perfect storm of emotion and tradition. "We all want to be loved, we all like to give love," says Roger Beahme, director of the Center for Retail Innovation at the Wake Forest Schools of Business. Through a flood of advertising on TV, radio and newspapers, he says, retailers can create emotions.
"Will Rogers said it's the art of convincing people to spend money they don't have on something they don't need," Beahme says. Although advertising can serve useful purposes, he says, "there's some truth to that."
Many embrace the feeling — and have, in accelerating ways, for a generation and more. Without legions of believers, Black Friday never would have gotten this bold. Despite a surge of resistance as the sales drew near, with scolding editorials and protests by retail employees and reminders of frantic tramplings past, Black Friday's grip on America may have been proven stronger than ever this year.
"It's all part of the holiday — part of the tradition," said Dennis River, a truck driver who was in line for a television at the Walmart in Beaver Falls, a small community outside of Pittsburgh. Last year, he went out alone at midnight Thursday. This year, he brought his wife and daughter. They were in place by 7 p.m.
"You get up in the morning, cook, do your dinner and your football, then you go shopping," River said. "It's the new thing now. Everyone's afraid of change."
"If they wanna have sales today," he said, "I'm gonna go shopping today."
Walmart's cavernous store is always open, but the deals began at 8 p.m. As with most big retail stores, a police car was parked near the Beaver Falls store entrance. A uniformed officer was at the door, near a stand holding maps to "featured products" such as bikes, cookware, sheets, video game consoles, and eight different TVs.
The witching hour approached. Yellow CAUTION tape cordoned off the bargains and funneled a few thousand supplicants through aisles of ignored items — yarn, shower curtains, party hats, clocks. Balloons printed with dollar signs followed by low numbers floated above the treasures.
As the cell phones struck eight, a din arose. Excited voices mixed with the sound of boxes dropping into metal shopping carts. The balloons danced as people dug into stacks of leather ottomans ($29) and 5-by-5 foot bins of $5 DVDs.
The temperature climbed. An old man inched through the throng using a folding chair ($11.88) as a crutch. Traffic jammed. Complaints and a few curses echoed.
"I'm not an angry person, but I was angry for the 20 minutes I was in there," Danyel Coyne, a college student, said as she loaded a child booster seat ($12.98) into her trunk.
She and her boyfriend, Mike Yanke, had not come to shop. They needed a spare car seat to take Yanke's daughter back to Pittsburgh. Yet Yanke still had bought a red, battery-powered convertible ($129) at his dad's request.
"I wouldn't say Black Friday has taken over," said Dave Davies, a music producer who was part of the national parade of TVs (his was 50 inches and $399). "Shopping IS the holiday. That's all people care about — what are you gonna get?"
For some, the items themselves can even take a back seat to the simple act of shopping.
Childhood friends Jesse Bredholt, Ryan Seech and a few other buddies have camped out at Best Buy for four years straight. This year, they arrived a full week early, with a tent, sleeping bags, deodorizing mist sprayer, propane heater and battery power for their gadgets.
They had no idea what they would buy. That was not the point.
For this group of single men in their early 20s, part of a generation who mark the passage of time by their first cell phones and video games, the point is spending time with each other at the source of the products that have always defined their lives.
"Our family is here," said Bredholt, who works for a health-care company. "With five guys on one mattress, you gotta be family."
Karen Jefferson, 49, also has found family on line at Best Buy, beyond her husband and three children. She was there Wednesday, seated on a folding chair, clutching a rolled-up circular.
"I'm missing Thanksgiving, and my husband thinks I'm crazy," said Jefferson, who works at a mortgage insurance company. "But I do this every year . because I enjoy meeting people and the people that come when I do. I mean, you see the same people year after year. And I do get some very good deals."
What about studies that have shown better deals are available at other times of the year?
"Oh, really?" Jefferson said. "You just think, Black Friday! Oh, my gosh, that's the deal of the year."
"Maybe that's something I need to look into," she continued. "Because, I mean, if these aren't good deals, then what are we DOING then?"
Jesse Washington can be reached at http://twitter.com/jessewashington or jwashington(at)ap.org. AP National Writer Allen Breed in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
Post divorce we celebrate Thanksgiving on either Friday or Saturday following the Big Day (as my ex has the kids every other year for The Big Day). I have to say, it works well. I can do any shopping I want or need to without shorting the holiday as so many people are doing these days. My Thanksgiving was today (Saturday). Totally relaxed and not pining to run out and score some deal. Maybe I am on to something. Who says you have to spend Thursday of this weekend as The Day? Switch the day you eat a big meal with family. Do it next year, you might be surprised how easily you could adapt!
What no one got trampled shot or stabbed? saw the fun on you tube. stop buying crap you gotta toss away in two years. Santa NO more sweaters, i don't wear them!
and while you were shopping...radioactive sludge is leaking out of Hanford...thank you KATU for reporting this, It is a very important saftey issue and I'm glad I didn't have to go all the way to LA to find out...oh that's right, you didn't report this...http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-bechtel-radioactive-waste20121121,0,696754.story    Â
Only the sheep and zombies do this to themselves... Those of us awake to the crumbling,festering ,rotting, decline in this country know better and spend our money on things needed or things MADE IN AMERICA.
Tis the season to be greedy, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Office parties that get seedy, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Shopping with thier eyes all beady, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Pass by the Homeless and Needy, Fa la la la la, la la la la
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Wait for Walmart's doors to open, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Bargains they are all a scopin, Fa la la la la, la la la la
To stop thier Brat's endless moping,
Get there first is what thier hopin, Fa la la la la, la la la la
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Greed corrupts all of the races, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Getting into people faces, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Gun fights over parking spaces, Fa la la, la la la, la la la.
Creditors on thier cases, Fa la la la la, la la la la
Don't include "me" in the "we". Why do stores do this? Because somehow, if you discount a couple of items at really screwy hours, there's a hoard of idiots that are tripping over themselves to sacrifice time with their family to scuffle over spending money they don't have on things they don't need.
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Somehow, I'm a scrooge if I'd rather give my nephew a hug and my grandfather's pocket knife than a DS-3.
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When I think about it, I can specifically name only a couple of the gifts I received got on Christmas. But I can remember just about person who was there.
There was absolutely nothing, no 'must have' items, that was worth getting caught up in mob mentality for.
@ Ms. Jones (from the article); ...that's right, baby! Â You can't win, if you don't play...
Some people like being among large group of people and others are happy to save even if it is only $20. The deals are still ongoing http://kilos.notlong.com
So after a year of being an ugly idiot some folks think that one day will suddenly make everything ok.. It won't..
Save yourself alot of money and grief, be nice all year and people will want to be around you.. It's pretty simple !
"We" does not include "me."Â I have enough common sense to not stand in the middle of a circular firing squad.
Gotta chuckle when reading where this is all the fault of the mean and manipulative retailers. If it were not for the greedy sheeple out there, retailers would have no reason to open early. If the consumer did not create the demand, there would be no need for the supply.Â
For the record, I have never shopped on black friday and never will.
I had a great day, stayed home.
"Black Friday: Why do we do this to ourselves?"
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Don't include me in this insanity.
Black Friday is a marketing ploy invented to take advantage of Americans' nature to buy something if someone else wants it, incite competitiveness over sale items, and kick-start the buying season, which can account for 50% or more of annual sales. Many of the "deals" are not deals at all but Americans love to think they are getting a bargain. A few loss leaders to get them in the door and then they have them hooked. Kudos to the marketing folks for luring them in and fostering the materialsim many seek to validate themselves by.Â
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Unfortunately the same play on the American psyche brings out the very worst in people. Our society has a very long way to go before we can truly call ourselves civilized.Â
I would like to know how many of them are buying things to give to others on Christmas or to keep for themselves.
 @Solipsist01 they do both. "...One for you...two for me...one for you over there, and two more for me..."
I find it rather ironic how many of us (myself included) are ridiculing the folks Black Friday was invented to please when we are all -- okay, most of us, that ought to be -- typing away on lap tops, desk tops, iPads, smart phones, etc, etc . . . . . . In other words, some of the latest techno gadgets we could get our hands on. Right? ];->
Actually, I type on a computer keyboard. The computer was put together using components of other computers. Not the latest or fastest, but it does the job.
 @Gravity Works! We can only hate on the Black Friday shoppers if they are not buying anything to personally begift us with. If they want to be all generous and stand in line, push/shove and fight to buy me a nice gift...well, I say:  let them!  However, I still find any store openings before 7 or 8 am Friday diabolically-inspired evil in terms of the workers' family and holiday rest needs.
I do not go to the "Black Friday" events. However next year I may break down and go, with a small video camera though. I have heard stories of how "adults" and children act while waiting for the bell to go off allowing the shopping to begin. The pushing and shoving that goes on, the kids in amongst the adults doing the same pushing and shoving to get their paws on the gift for themselves that they just have to have. Some call it insane or ridiculous. I call it stupid. People want to spend more than they can afford because of the hype.
Silly and stupid at the same time
 @Just Lookin Someone should get in line wearing some kind of clothing that gives off mild but quite uncomfortable shocks when contact is made by  the "pushers and shovers". Kind of like how cattle fencing works. I would call it "securing the perimeter". LOL
'Black Friday: Why do we do this to ourselves?'
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Umm.... 'We' don't.
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There are a few out there with mentalities such as '"You have to have these things to enjoy your children and your family," who 'do this to themselves', but the majority of people I know have more reasonable, and sane opinions of what constitutes enjoying their children and their families.
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 "It shouldn't be that way, but in a sense there's no way around it," said Jones, a nurse. "Everything ends up with a dollar amount. Even your happiness."
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*facepalm* Well, Ms Jones. About the only expression that comes to mind in response to your mind-numbingly stupid assertation is 'stupid is as stupid does'.Â
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I read a book that equated the 'black friday' phenominon with the primitive 'hunter/gatherer' mentalitity. That somehow, when people have to compete for these shiney baubles, it gives them some sense of accomplishment in a life otherwise devoid of acheivement.
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About the closest thing I'm planning on participating in is 'local Saturday'. I will go stand in crowds (crowds that are typically MUCH better behaved) to support local business. I will not fight tooth and nail to save $40 on a big screen TV. Especially when that same TV (or, likely an even better one) will be on sale for less the day after Christmas. Â
 @MarkKpic I have always said about shopping that it was like  just like hunting/gathering and played the same role in the human psyche. I have laughingly showed off a cashmere sweater marked down from $120 to a mere $22 like I was showing off a catch of a mighty sturgeon or huge salmon, and compared it aloud as such.  Most bargains I ever found were just serendipitous timings with a sharp eye, on the odd chances I ended up going  shopping at all. (though I do miss the long-famous and now lamently gone Catlin Gable Rummage Sale!)
One time I could not sleep Christmas night probably from too much, food, way too much chocolate too late at night or  extended family displays of insanity or the combo of all, so by dawn, I just got dressed again since the sandman never had shown up and went to  the day-after-xmas  at a mall to see what kind  of knuckleheads raced in there. Turned out: not so man,y and there were some screaming mark-downs. The main shopping blood had already been spilled on Black Friday clear thru Xmas eve. Only the die-hards went first thing Dec. 26. I have never done it again, because the sandman has not skipped out on me on Christmas night ever since.
 @whirledworld My brother was always a tad jealous of me. My birthday is in January. I'd end up getting twice the loot, for half the cost. Primarily thanks to over purchasing by store buyers.Â
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I don't know that I've ever gone so far as to go out December 26th, but we've got a TV, a HP photo printer/copier and many other nic-nacs that we've picked up on sale in the weeks after the Christmas shopping season. Did some comparisons using ads that we'd used for Christmas wrapping paper, and what I paid was generally within a few dollars (if not less) than the best 'black friday' sales run.Â
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Although, the marketeers are getting savvy to it, and the sales are becoming less and less of a 'deal'. I guess I'll wait until tax season for any major purchases any more. It is, after all, the 'dead season' insofar as retailers.Â
it will help in the eventual culling some day.
The Holiday Story
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There were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night via infrared cameras. A salesman appeared to them in radiant 3-D, and the glory of over 1 billion colors shone around them, and they were terrified. But the salesman said to them, âDo not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of Wilsonville a Sale has been born to you; it is Black Friday, the Sale. This will be a sign to you: You will find a long line of idiots wrapped in rain gear and lying in wait near the doors, and Marylou, Joe-Bob and their baby, Baby-Jesus in their midst.â
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Suddenly a great company of the advertising host appeared with the salesman, praising the Almighty Dollar and saying, âGlory to Cash in the highest social circles, and on earth peace to those on who have lots of loot.â
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When the salesman had left them, the shepherds said to one another, âLetâs go to Wilsonville and see this thing that has happened, which the salesman has told us about.â
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So they hurried off and found Marylou and Joe-Bob, and their baby Baby-Jesus, who was lying in a humongous six-wheeled, air conditioned, all-terrain stroller. When they had seen him, they spread the word concerning what had been told them about this Sale, and all who heard it were amazed at what the shepherds said to them. But Marylou treasured up all these things and pondered them in her heart, and moved ahead cut in at the front of the line while everyone else was distracted. The shepherds moved to the end of the line, glorifying and praising Cash for all the things they had heard and seen, which were just as they had been told.
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Amen.
@Mikey .........vey very clever. Kudos !
 @Mikey well done! Thank you for the entertainment.
Because we are a country whose moral values have have steadily eroded over time.
Real Love is not Bought or sold, it is given I highly disagree with the
"You have to have these things to enjoy your children and your family," said Jackson's friend Ebony Jones, who had secured two laptops ($187.99 each) for her 7 and 11 year old."
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You don't have to have any of this to enjoy family times,look at our early settlers, they did not have these gadgets, they were thankful to get there own cups and plates if lucky enough. If the Father brought home a horse and carriage, it was welcomed with joy and excitement but these things were useful and if you really were able to give a gift for a young or girl of age you got them a GUN! If you want to make some one happy get them something they need not some piece of crap junk that will break in a few years.
ok, Laptops are the modern Day Slates those are a need for school. that I can understand.
I still like to see where we would be if all of the gadgets broke.
The headline, in part: "Why do we do this to ourselves?"
I don't know . . . why *do* some people do this to themselves? I'm one of many more thousands or even hundreds of thousands who . . . wait for it . . . . . . DON'T do this! It's much easier, safer and, most especially, *saner*!
Social engineering at it's finest.
Not me.Â
Advertising's got you on the run...
 @Reflect There's an app for that!
I wouldn't be caught dead shopping Black Friday or Gray Thanksgiving. I will never understand the mentality that goes along with it.
 @QuandoQuandoQuando And I support the workers who want to stay home with their families until Friday morning when the sun comes up...not midnite or Thursday evening for minimum wage jobs. Shame on the companies who started this trend. I hate them all.
@whirledworld .....don't ever buy anything from them
Now it's Reefered to as "Black & Blue" Friday. when everyone goes for the same item........
They do it because they aren't very smart. Â The great deals they think they are getting aren't great. Â Most of the stuff on sale is merchandise that is now out of date and needs to be sold to make room for the next year's models. Â But, because people are greedy, they will fall for the scam year after year. Â Â
When asked by an Athenian why the Spartans did not build castles, and why they wore no jewelry or fancy clothing, a Spartan king replied "Freedom is what we reap from this way of life, my friend." The concept of "Black Friday" would have been alien to the pilgrims and Indians, and offensive to their modest values. If our civilization has grown dependent on consumerism for its own sake, we have already lost our freedom because now we're told that if we don't buy, our economy will collapse.
Why do people do this to themselves on Black Friday? Because they are all sheep, heading down to the local store to be sheared! Trying to find bargains they can't afford but will charge on cards until their accounts are maxed. Holiday shopping used to be a joyful occasion, buying presents for people you cherish as friends or family. Now it is just a gross buying spree with not a glint of joy in anyone's eyes. I refuse to shop in that kind of environment! I will shop where I want and for what I want when I want to, not because of any special colorful title for the day!
 @jpk Or don't buy at all as often as you can. Reduce, reuse, recycle.
Not everyone does this. Thank goodness. Not a bargain in the universe good enough to cause me to buy things I can't afford for people I spend most of the year avoiding.