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Black Friday is for die-hard shoppers who don't mind fighting fellow shoppers to cash in on the advertised bargains.
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READY OR NOT, HERE IT COMES: BLACK FRIDAY! FOR SOME, IT'S A FUN TIME FILLED WITH BARGAINS. FOR OTHERS: A NIGHTMARE!

Getting the most out of Black Friday


Date published: 11/27/2008

JIMMY LEE WATCHED hundreds of men, women and children pushing, bartering and cutting in line to the tune of Christmas carols and ferocious threats. Making aisle space and stocking up more than a week in advance couldn't stop the chaos, as whole families disappeared around the corners of Central Park buildings in a line that seemed to stretch forever--all to sink their teeth into door-busters and other 5 a.m. money-saving deals.

An extreme sport in its own right, Black Friday is not for the weak of heart, spirit or health. We who enjoy it are the brave, the competi-tive, possibly even the undiagnosed insane.

But nothing rivals that thrill of waking up before the sun, or that sprint through the store for the perfect present, coupled with the race to the checkout line in what always feels like a real-life episode of "Supermarket Sweep."

"I'm just mad I won't be out there, too," said Lee, a senior sales associate at Central Park's Circuit City. "I used to shop it every year until I started working here. I still like it, though. It's competitive--now I get to watch everybody else fight."

To spare yourself excess bloodshed and hospitals bills this holiday season, here are some nonviolent tips to get the most out of your money--and precious time--on the first official day of the Christmas shopping season.

May the best shopper win.

Plan ahead

Contrary to popular belief, Black Friday's name did not, in fact, derive from the saying "out of the red ink and into the black," thus showing retail profit. According to linguist Bonnie Taylor-Blake, Black Friday actually received its name in the 1960s, when police officers compared the day's chaos to Black Tuesday of 1929--the day the stock market crashed.

The biggest similarity? Traffic jams on both roads and sidewalks--in this case, from shoppers.

And because every store in Spotsylvania Towne Centre opens at 5 a.m.; Central Park's largest retailers open between 5 a.m. and 8 a.m.; and every store in Tysons Corner opens by 6 a.m., crowds will be hungry for deals all day. This means heavy delays, which of course means lengthy lines both in and out of stores.

To avoid any I-was-here-first fist fights or vulture-like lot circling for hours, know your terrain.


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Date published: 11/27/2008


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