This year, it will be on Friday, November 24th, a date which will no doubt see a certain
kind of modern day madness hit the streets.
It starts the Christmas shopping season, and between Black Friday and the holidays, around
30 percent of all retail items for the year will be purchased.
In 2016, an astounding 154 million Americans bought stuff online and in stores, spending
$3.3 billion in total on Black Friday alone, according to Adobe.
Over three days, shoppers spent as much as $7.23 billion, with retailers such as Amazon
and Walmart rubbing their already smooth-as-silk hands.
The average shopper didn’t hold back, spending $289.19, according to the National Retail
Federation.
On the downside, three people died and a handful of others were seriously injured.
On that note, welcome to this episode of the Infographics Show, How Likely Are You to Die
during a Black Friday Sale?
Don’t forget to subscribe and click the bell button so that you can be part of our
Notification Squad.
First of all, why is it called ‘black’ Friday and not ‘white’ or perhaps ‘pink’
Friday?
There are a lot of theories out there, but according to those myth-busters at Snopes,
it doesn’t have anything to do with race.
Rather, says Snopes, it originated around 1951 when the negative color of black was
used to refer to millions of workers that called in sick after Thanksgiving.
The term was later used in relation to the chaos of people shopping on that one day,
given that they’d taken a day off.
The day was a traffic nightmare, and a pain for the police.
Hence, the cops were largely responsible for calling that particular day ‘black’.
In recent years, deaths and injuries and fights over such things as Lego pirate ships and
cheap Hello Kitty socks have added to the ‘black’ epithet.
Nonetheless, the shopping frenzy has really only been utter chaos for more than a decade
or so, and traditionally more of a US thing than a global thing.
That has changed though, and Black Friday is spreading around the world.
In 2016 in Leeds, UK, a serious Black Friday injury occurred when an off-duty policeman
was stabbed in the neck for getting in the way of a shopper who thought he might take
his goods without paying.
“Absolute madness,” said one bystander, saying that the store had just opened its
doors.
Other countries besides the U.S. and the UK are now celebrating Black Friday.
These include: Australia, Canada, China, Mexico, New Zealand, Japan, Romania, Norway, the Netherlands,
Ukraine, Russia, India, Pakistan, South Africa and more.
In 2016 a riot broke out in the latter country over toilet paper that was going for cheap.
The biggest shoppers, in the U.S. anyway, are millennials (aged 25-34) who account for
56 percent of all sales from physical stores in 2016.
This group also accounts for 62 percent of online sales.
That also meant 8 out of 10 millennials went shopping that Black Friday.
A frenzy for the mostly millennial consumer perhaps, but for retailers it’s their bread
and butter with a cherry on top.
Walmart said in 2016 that Black Friday and Thanksgiving had been bumper days, with Thanksgiving
being the online shopping day.
On Black Friday itself, Walmart said that the biggest sellers were game consoles, TVs,
toys, drones and, believe it or not, pajamas.
Other companies that do very well out of surging crowds are Target, Macy's, JCPenney, Kohl’s,
Foot Locker, Best Buy, American Eagle, and Urban Outfitters.
According to Adobe, some of the biggest sellers throughout all stores included PlayStation
4, Microsoft Xbox One, Apple iPad, Samsung 4K TV, and Lego Creator Sets.
According to research, one of the biggest things that drives sales nowadays is shopping
via smartphones, with Target stating 60 percent of its online sales coming through a mobile
device.
Walmart said 70 percent of its Black Friday sales were made via mobile.
Overall, from total sales for Black Friday 2016, 55 percent came from mobile, which was
45 percent via smartphone and 10 percent via tablet.
While everyone seems to agree that foot traffic is falling, there are still millions of shoppers
that prefer the old school shopping approach at brick-and-mortar stores.
You may, however, get caught up in a melee…or worse.
From the three deaths that occurred in the USA in 2016, one was a shooting in a Walmart
parking lot in San Antonio, another was a shooting in a Walmart parking lot in Reno,
and another was a shooting in a New Jersey mall.
The victim’s brother was shot, too, but he survived.
Maybe guns are still a big seller on Black Friday.
2015 and 2014 were thankfully good years with no Black Friday shopping deaths happening
around the world, although injuries did occur.
What’s the worst of Black Friday events?
According to Ranker, it was the 2008, “Walmart Stampede”, in which 2,000 ravenous consumers
burst through the doors and trampled on top of each other.
It was a scene befitting the social commentary zombie apocalypse movie, and one which must
have seen filmmaker George Andrew Romero muttering to himself, “Told ya so”.
People were beaten, and even the cops got pushed aside, all for a cheap game console.
One unfortunate worker was trampled to death and four more were seriously injured, including
a pregnant woman.
2008 was a bad year for celebrating consumerism the only way we know how on Black Friday.
In another case, two men went shopping for toys and both of them didn’t get out of
Toys ‘R’ Us alive.
It started with their partners getting into a fist fight in the aisles and ended with
both men pulling out guns and killing each other in the store.
What about your safety?
Well, given that just a handful of deaths have occurred over the last decade linked
to Black Friday shopping, we can say that you’re pretty safe.
The U.S. murder rate did go up 8.6 percent in 2016, following a 10.8 percent increase
in 2015, according to the FBI.
But this was mostly due to spikes in gang-related murders in places such as Baltimore, Chicago,
St. Louis, Washington, D.C., and Milwaukee.
If we delve into the issue of mass shootings, well, Black Friday would seem like a day when
that could happen given the crowds that amass in small areas waiting for stores to open.
If you are part of the mob of shoppers, well, you know the risks, which could just be getting
an accidental elbow in your face.
If it makes you feel any better, the National Safety Council said that almost 40,000 Americans
died in traffic accidents in 2016 and another 4.6 million people were injured, so driving
to the store is statistically a lot more dangerous than shopping in it.
If at all possible, don’t take your gun with you this Black Friday.
In the spirit of Kantian philosophy and his ‘categorical imperative’, if everyone
abides to the ‘no gun’ rule, no one will get shot.
So, have you ever experienced a Black Friday sale?
If so, what’s the craziest thing you witnessed?
Let us know in the comments!
Also, be sure to check out our other video called Regular Things that are Illegal in
North Korea?!
Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe.
See you next time!
American Things Europeans Find Weird Regular Things That Are Illegal In North Korea Worst Prison Experiments Conducted on Humans What If The World Was One Country? Bill Gates' Wealth Visualized & 1,000,000 Subscriber Announcement Jake Paul vs Average American - How Do They Compare? - People Comparison Best Pre-Black Friday 2017 Deals available RIGHT NOW! GYMSHARK BLACK FRIDAY SALE! New Releases + Try On & Haul What if Google Was A Country? BLACK FRIDAY & CYBER MONDAY | Come non perdervi le offerte!