Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Black Friday
Episode Date: November 26, 2021The United States has created many cultural institutions which have spread around the world. People all over the Earth have enjoyed and benefited from rock and roll, Hollywood films, and the Internet.... However, we’ve also created some things that have spread to other countries which, to be totally honest, are probably not our best look. Learn more about Black Friday, the surprising history of the term, and how it manifests around the world today, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The United States has created many cultural institutions which have spread around the world.
People all over the earth have enjoyed and benefited from rock and roll, Hollywood films, and the
internet. However, we've also created some things that have spread to other countries, which,
to be totally honest, are probably not our best look. Learn more about Black Friday, the surprising
history of the term, and how it manifests itself around the world today on this episode of
everything everywhere daily. Do you ever climb into bed, ready to sleep, only to have your
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The term Black Friday, as it's used today, refers to the Friday after Thanksgiving in the United States.
It's given special attention because it's considered to be the beginning of the Christmas shopping season.
American Thanksgiving falls approximately one month before Christmas, and because it always falls on a Thursday, many people have the following Friday off from work.
That means that there are lots of people who are able to go shopping.
The Christmas shopping season has traditionally been the biggest sales period of the year,
and the term black comes from the accounting tradition of using black ink to represent positive values
and red ink to represent negative values.
So, Black Friday is the day, or at least begins the season,
where retail stores become profitable or go into the black.
Or at least that's the modern use of the word.
The phrase, Black Friday, however, goes back much earlier.
While it didn't initially refer to retail shopping, it did have an economic association.
The word black in a business sense has always had a mixed meaning. In an accounting sense,
being in the black was good. However, market crashes were often also referred to as black,
such as Black Tuesday when the stock market crashed in 1929. The first Black Friday occurred in
1869. During the Ulysses S. Grant administration, the government began selling its gold
reserves to pay off the debt from the Civil War. Three financiers,
Jay Gould, James Fisk, and Abel Corbyn, tried to corner the market in gold. They formed a group called
the gold ring to try and buy up as much gold as possible. Corbin was the cousin of the president,
and they tried to use his contacts to influence the government's gold sales, and hopefully
even stop the sales. The Grant administration was extremely corrupt, and their plan actually
worked for a while, driving up the price of gold. However, when President Grant caught wind
to this, he ordered the sale of gold driving down the price, causing a panic and the markets to
crash. It all occurred on Friday, September 24th, 1869, a day that was dubbed Black Friday.
The association of the period after Thanksgiving with Christmas shopping goes back to the early
20th century. In fact, in 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt moved the date of Thanksgiving from
the last Thursday in November to a week earlier just to extend the Christmas shopping season in
the middle of the Great Depression. The first association of the term Black Friday with the day
after Thanksgiving occurred in the early 1950s in Philadelphia. The association really had more to do
at the Army-Navy football game, which also took place every year in Philadelphia on the Saturday after
Thanksgiving. The Friday before the game, the city would be crowded, stores would be filled
with shoppers and shoplifters, bars would be packed, people would get rowdy, and fights would
break out. The day was dubbed Black Friday by the police who weren't able to get the day off.
Again, the day had a negative connotation and had nothing to do with the accountant's Black Ink.
The name Black Friday took off locally so much that stores tried to change it to
Big Friday to avoid negative connotations, but that never really got accepted.
The current meaning of Black Friday started to take off nationally in the late 1980s.
Retailers embraced the term and gave it a positive association.
Stores began to offer sales and deals on Black Friday to get people in their stores.
As things tend to do, Black Friday sales and promotions began to grow and get more elaborate.
stores which might have normally opened at 10 a.m. began to open early.
8 a.m. or 7 a.m. became the norm on Black Friday, and then, of course, it kept getting
earlier and earlier. Soon, some stores would open at 5 a.m. or even 4 a.m. The next logical step was
just opening on Thanksgiving evening and just staying open for 24 hours. Black Friday sales were
then extended throughout the entire weekend and even the entire week. Sales and extra hours are not
necessarily a bad thing. What began to give Black Friday a bad name were some of the
promotions that were run. Stores began offering very good deals on products as a loss
leader to the first customers in the door on Friday. Thousands of people would often wait
outside overnight to line up for whatever the deal was. In 2008 in Valley Stream, New York,
2,000 people were outside of a Walmart waiting for a 5 a.m. opening. When the time arrived and
the doors were open, the push of people into the store was so great that the doors were broken down
and one of the employees was killed in the stampede.
Stampedes and near riots happened almost every year somewhere in the country.
People waiting in line would get in fistfights as people left the line or tried to butt ahead.
There were instances of shootings, people getting maced, and other instances of rather uncivilized behavior all over.
Believe it or not, Black Friday is now being recognized in countries that don't even celebrate American Thanksgiving.
They're just using the same date as the last Friday in November to be Black Friday in the start of the Christmas shopping season.
There have been Black Friday sales appearing in countries all over the world, including Canada,
the United Kingdom, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand, and Germany.
It still isn't as big of a deal as it is in the United States, but it's starting to appear more often.
The funny thing is, just as it's gaining in popularity overseas, it's starting to become less
of a thing back in the United States.
The pandemic pretty much quashed Black Friday in 2020, which many retail stores didn't seem to mind.
The rush of people puts a strain on businesses and the people who work there.
Some companies like REI, in fact, close their doors on Friday.
And, of course, online commerce is lessening the importance of retail stores and rushing to a single place at a particular time for deals.
In fact, Cyber Monday has become the bookend to Black Friday as the day when online stores offer deals.
Cyber Monday came about years ago when most people didn't have good internet connections at home and would be able to shop online when they went back to work.
For better or worse, and no matter how much it may spread around the world, Black Friday,
is definitely an American institution.
The associate producers of Everything Everywhere Daily are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Kyle Kindle on Apple Podcasts in the U.S.
He writes,
New Favorite Podcasts.
Love the succinct information with this podcast.
Even loaded up the crummy Apple Podcast app to rate favorably as I don't know how to or can't do it on the Overcast app.
Keep it up.
I love it and I'm going to get my kids listening to.
I'm kind of drunk, but that doesn't detract from the solid performance of this podcast.
Keep it up.
Thanks, Kyle.
I'm happy to announce that your review
is going into the Review Hall of Fame.
Overcast is a great podcast app,
but you went out of your way
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Bonus points.
You got your kids listening to the show.
Bonus points.
And you did a drunk review.
You hit the trifecta.
Remember, if you leave a review
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