Shoppers line up for 'Black Friday' specials

By: PATRICK WRIGHT - Staff Writer | Friday, November 24, 2006 9:28 PM PST

Allisa Galik, 17, yawns as she, her sister Amber Galik, 14, and their grandmother Ella Galik rest after a morning of Christmas shopping at the Westfield Plaza Camino Real mall in Carlsbad on Friday. The three, who are from out of town visiting family in La Costa for Thanksgiving, said all the women of the family got up at 5 a.m. to shop while the men stayed home to watch the children, but they would eventually relieve the men of child duty so that they could go play golf.
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SAN MARCOS ---- Nate Greene thought getting in line at 12 a.m. Friday would be early enough to secure one of the five, 50-inch plasma television sets advertised by Wal-Mart as a "Black Friday" special. But in the end, the Escondido 17-year-old was too far back in line and he had to settle for a 32-inch, liquid-crystal display television instead.

"They ran out before we entered the store," he said. The doors opened at 5 a.m. for about 1,000 people waiting in line. Starbucks, a few stores down from the Wal-Mart, opened at 3 a.m. to give customers something warm to help brave the chilly morning weather.

Thousands of North County shoppers packed stores, shopping centers and malls Friday, marking the beginning of the holiday shopping season.

Retailers call it "Black Friday" because it's the day many stores become profitable. Traditional accounting practices would list a company's profits in black ink and losses in red. High volume sales during the day make a possibly unprofitable year profitable for many companies, changing their financial accounts from red ink to black.

The promise of low prices and specials led hundreds to wait in lines for other predawn store openings.

Shoppers stuffed the Westfield Plaza Camino Real in Carlsbad when it opened at 8 a.m. to take advantage of early morning sales specials.

Sheila Golding from Oceanside said she started shopping at 6 a.m. with trips to Mervyns and Target before coming to the mall. Her husband, Ray, stood next to her with four large bags from three different stores, as she explained why she liked shopping on Black Friday.

"Prices are better," she said. "If you know what you are looking for, it is worth it to come out."

Avis Tolliver, 32, from Oceanside said he decided to shop today out of boredom, but wishes he would have picked a better day.

"It's a bad day to be out because there are too many people," he said.

Some malls, such as Carlsbad Premium Outlets and Lake Elsinore Outlets, got a jump of several hours on other retailers by opening stores at 12 a.m. Friday.

Michele Rothstein, spokeswoman for Chelsea Property Group, which own and operates of the Carlsbad outlet mall, said the "Midnight Madness" promotion was a hit with shoppers.

"Since this was our second year hosting Midnight Madness," she said, "many shoppers knew what to expect and came out extra early. By 9:30 p.m., we had thousands of shoppers on site ready to patiently wait on line for their favorite stores to open. We've had great crowds of upbeat shoppers ---- so far, we're very pleased to the start of the season."

Retailers are predicting good cheer from this year's holiday spending. The National Retail Federation, based in Washington, D.C., projects the average American consumer will spend about $790 this year, a 7 percent increase from the $738 spent last year. The organization expects total holiday spending to increase 5 percent, to $457.4 billion, this year.

Nationally, Black Friday is "becoming the biggest sport," said Marshal Cohen, chief analyst at NPD Group Inc., a Port Washington, N.Y. retail research firm. He observed that shoppers this year bought fewer, but pricier items than a year ago.

The biggest draws were consumer electronics, particularly flat-screen TVs, laptop computers and digital cameras. Toys fared well too. In addition to the hard-to-find Fisher-Price TMX Elmo, shoppers snapped up other items like anything Dora, robot toys, Fisher-Price's Kids Tough Digital Camera and Jakks-Pacific FlyWheel XPV, according to toy merchants.

In the midst of potential shopping madness this year, North County shoppers are advised to pay particular attention to prices and receipts. Automated price scanning mistakes cost San Diego County customers more than $87 million last year, according to the county's sealer of weights and measures, Robert Atkins. Shoppers are advised to verify their receipts and notify store management of any price discrepancies.

Before they could check their receipts, many customers braved long lines again inside stores for products as well as outside them. At the Best Buy store in San Marcos, customers were told it was a two-hour wait just to buy products. The Disney store in the Westfield Plaza Camino Real had a line extending past other stores as customers waited for shopping specials.

Before 6 a.m., Sandra Brooks had bought presents for all 32 people on her list, including every student in her son's fifth-grade class, for just $191. She has been seeking predawn savings during Black Friday for seven years. She said that this year, Wal-Mart was far more organized than her first experience.

"It was a zoo," said the 37-year-old San Marcos resident, of her first time. "People were yanking things out of people's hand, there were fistfights, and people were smashing into each other with their carts."

Mike Soto, 17, from Escondido, and three of his friends left their Thanksgiving dinner tables at 4:30 p.m. Thursday to sleep outside the GameStop store in San Marcos before the store opened Friday morning. He couldn't wait to buy one of the store's five Nintendo Wii game machines.

"We feasted out and then came here," he said.

But shoppers weren't the only ones out for Black Friday. Santa Claus made an appearance at the Westfield Plaza Camino Real to take pictures with children.

Heidi Strona said she thought it was great that Santa could take time out of his busy schedule to have his picture taken with her 5-year-old daughter, Samantha.

"I'm glad he got a chance to take a break and visit with the kids," she said. "He must be so busy working at the North Pole right now."

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

Contact staff writer Patrick Wright at (760) 739-6675 or pwright@nctimes.com.

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Pre-Registration Comments[-]Go to Top

No, thanks! wrote on Nov 24, 2006 10:32 PM:They could be giving away free Mercedes-Benzes and that still wouldn't be enough to draw me out to join a crowd at such a wretched hour.

Litl Bits wrote on Nov 25, 2006 5:08 AM:NO THANK YOU! The years I worked at a mall - on Black Friday - were more than enough for me! I got more than my share of that day working a 12 hour day at that time. I vowed I'd NEVER shop on that day again! (and I have NOT!)

Unreal wrote on Nov 25, 2006 5:13 AM:These people standing in line for long hours just to save some money. What has this country come to. Stay home to be with your families.

P1 Shaunde wrote on Nov 25, 2006 7:12 AM:I find it funny how I was third in line and stood there for 13 straight hours. And the lady you say was second, was definately not second in line. A man by the name of Steven was second in line. If you really wanted to know who was second in line you should have gotten there much earlier. I also recieved one of the five 52'' HDTV that were the "secret item". It's kind of sad that the story on the FRONT PAGE isn't even accurate, I wonder what else isn't. Thanks.

To NO thanks wrote on Nov 25, 2006 7:41 AM:I loved it, My daughter, daughter in law and I went to 3 different stores when they opened. Yes it was early but was fun. I will do it again next year too!. We got everything we wanted and more. They lost money on us!! LOL

Good going people... wrote on Nov 25, 2006 8:27 AM:Once again the American people show exactly how they get into debt over their means every year. I have a better idea...throw money into the street. Same premise. Better yet get a caller ID phone because then you can avoid the bill collectors come the end of January.

gimmeabreak wrote on Nov 25, 2006 10:14 AM:It IS a wretched hour. It is wretched to treat employees with such disregard - in retailing one is already paid near pittance wages but now the trend seems not only to open at o-dark thirty on the Friday After, now we're just chucking that and staying open on Thanksgiving - no time with family, no opportunity to relax and enjoy the company of friends and loved ones on a day of gratitude and repose, get back to work or else. "The Simpsons" ran one of their little sight-gags in a Holiday themed episode a few years ago. It showed the town's mega mall box store with its sign/message board out front. On it was written "In honor of our Savior's birth we will be open all day Christmas." That, sadly is not even funny anymore, it is fast becoming the foul norm in this country. Where are the complaints of self styled populists like O'Reilly and company about these practices foulling the meaning of the Holidays?

Sad Times wrote on Nov 25, 2006 11:58 AM:What a sickening commentary on our lives that this article appeared next to one that describes 6 human beings being set on fire while the police and others failed to assist. Is it any wonder other countries don't understand the US? Our gluttony and avarice far exceed any country in the world. I hope Grandma and the girls are making some nice sized charitable donations this year!

Wow such anger wrote on Nov 25, 2006 7:53 PM:Why do you assume everyone is going into debt? People make choices in where they work. I worked retail and got out of. There are many people that have to work those hours including doctors, police and quite a few others. Why do you assume people are not with their families. We just spent the whole day together on Thanksgiving.

gimmeabreak wrote on Nov 25, 2006 8:49 PM:Gee, "Wow," how many of those doctors of which you speak were working for 8 bucks an hour? How about the police officers? And are you forgetting the consumerist monster that lives in everyone's living room (and sometimes bedrooms, too) and tells us all that we'll really be something as soon as (or we'll never be anybody until) we buy . . . . The holidays have become all about squeezing the last dollar commitment out of people, about selling dreams made of stuff, and yes, about spending money that many, if not most people don't have. If you don't realize that, then you're both fortunate and oblivious. And yeah, as a middle class person I am bombarded with at least 5 to 7 unsolicited credit card offers a week by mail, begging me to incur more debt. I can resist it fine enough, but those companies know that not everybody can, and push, push, push to spend, spend, spend. Wake up and smell the 4 dollar cup of coffee!

Wrong Priorities wrote on Nov 27, 2006 10:58 PM:These are the same type of people who don't have 30 minutes to spend with their kids' teachers at back-to-school night, but they're camp out and sleep on the ground like a homeless person for literally hours and days just to desperately get their hands on a discounted 52-inch boob tube to further advance their kids' illiteracy and lack of good study habits!

P1 Shaunde wrote on Nov 30, 2006 10:12 AM:I beg to differ, "these people", myself included since I was second in line, are people who simply want to have fun and get in on the bargins early. I am a college student who thought it would be fun for my 9 year old sister and I to esentially "camp out". We had a blast, meeting new people in line and getting the bargins that we came for, and some that we didn't even know were offered. We took coloring books, books, music, food and had the best time. We had all our shopping done by 6 AM that morning. We then went home and had the entire day to work on the "illeracy and bad study habits" that you speak of. It blows my away how people who weren't even there tell others how ridiculous it really is.

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