25th Nov2011

Why Do They Call It Black Friday?

by iSpit

Black Friday as a term has been used in multiple contexts, going back to the nineteenth century, where it was associated with a financial crisis in 1869 in the United States. The earliest known reference to “Black Friday” to refer to the day after Thanksgiving was made in a 1966 publication on the day’s significance in Philadelphia:

JANUARY 1966 — “Black Friday” is the name which the Philadelphia Police Department has given to the Friday following Thanksgiving Day. It is not a term of endearment to them. “Black Friday” officially opens the Christmas shopping season in center city, and it usually brings massive traffic jams and over-crowded sidewalks as the downtown stores are mobbed from opening to closing.

The term Black Friday began to get wider exposure around 1975, as shown by two newspaper articles from November 29, 1975, both datelined Philadelphia. The first reference is in an article entitled “Army vs. Navy: A Dimming Splendor,” in The New York Times:

Philadelphia police and bus drivers call it “Black Friday” – that day each year between Thanksgiving Day and the Army–Navy Game. It is the busiest shopping and traffic day of the year in the Bicentennial City as the Christmas list is checked off and the Eastern college football season nears conclusion.

The derivation is also clear in an Associated Press article entitled “Folks on Buying Spree Despite Down Economy,” which ran in the Titusville Herald on the same day:

Store aisles were jammed. Escalators were nonstop people. It was the first day of the Christmas shopping season and despite the economy, folks here went on a buying spree. … “That’s why the bus drivers and cab drivers call today ‘Black Friday,’” a sales manager at Gimbels said as she watched a traffic cop trying to control a crowd of jaywalkers. “They think in terms of headaches it gives them.”

The term’s spread was gradual, however, and in 1985 the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that retailers in Cincinnati and Los Angeles were still unaware of the term.

Many merchants objected to the use of a negative term to refer to one of the most important shopping days in the year. By the early 1980s, an alternative theory began to be circulated: that retailers traditionally operated at a financial loss for most of the year (January through November) and made their profit during the holiday season, beginning on the day after Thanksgiving. When this would be recorded in the financial records, once-common accounting practices would use red ink to show negative amounts and black ink to show positive amounts. Black Friday, under this theory, is the beginning of the period where retailers would no longer have losses (the red) and instead take in the year’s profits (the black). The earliest known use, which like the 1966 example above was found by Bonnie Taylor-Blake of the American Dialect Society, is from 1981, again from Philadelphia, and presents the “black ink” theory as one of several competing possibilities:

If the day is the year’s biggest for retailers, why is it called Black Friday? Because it is a day retailers make profits — black ink, said Grace McFeeley of Cherry Hill Mall. “I think it came from the media,” said William Timmons of Strawbridge & Clothier. “It’s the employees, we’re the ones who call it Black Friday,” said Belle Stephens of Moorestown Mall. “We work extra hard. It’s a long hard day for the employees.”

The Christmas shopping season is of enormous importance to American retailers and, while most retailers intend to and actually do make profits during every quarter of the year, some retailers are so dependent on the Christmas shopping season that the quarter including Christmas produces all the year’s profits and compensates for losses from other quarters.

That the day after Thanksgiving is the “official” start of the holiday shopping season may be linked together with the idea of Santa Claus parades. Parades celebrating Thanksgiving often include an appearance by Santa at the end of the parade, with the idea that ‘Santa has arrived’ or ‘Santa is just around the corner’.

In the late 19th century and early 20th century, many Santa parades or Thanksgiving Day parades were sponsored by department stores. These include the Toronto Santa Claus Parade, in Canada, sponsored by Eaton’s, and the Macy’s. Department stores would use the parades to launch a big advertising push. Eventually it just became an unwritten rule that no store would try doing Christmas advertising before the parade was over. Therefore, the day after Thanksgiving became the day when the shopping season officially started.

Later on, the fact that this marked the official start of the shopping season led to controversy. In 1939, retail shops would have liked to have a longer shopping season, but no store wanted to break with tradition and be the one to start advertising before Thanksgiving. President Franklin D. Roosevelt moved the date for Thanksgiving one week earlier, leading to much anger by the public who wound up having to change holiday plans. Some even refused the change, resulting in the U.S. citizens celebrating Thanksgiving on two separate days. Some started referring to the change as Franksgiving.

In 2011, inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement, there is currently a boycott against Black Friday known as Stop Black Friday or Occupy Black Friday. The movement calls for people to boycott publicly traded and large retail stores with a history of political donations to show economic solidarity and to force the lobby to back the candidates that they want.

25th Nov2011

I Am Not A Rapper xDJ Nastee Naj: #ClassicFriday Vol. 5 – #BlackPowerMixtape #BlackFriday

by iSpit


MusicPlaylist
Music Playlist at MixPod.com

MixPod for iPhone

24th Nov2011

A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving (Full Movie)

by iSpit

Peppermint Patty invites herself and her friends over to Charlie Brown’s for Thanksgiving, and with Linus, Snoopy, and Woodstock, he attempts to throw together a Thanksgiving dinner.

 

Writer:

Charles M. Schulz (written and created by)

24th Nov2011

88 Keys – Wake Up Call Feat Colin Monroe (Music Video)

by iSpit

WAKE UP CALL FT. COLIN MUNROE from 88-Keys on Vimeo.

Directed by Martin Linss & Josh Milowe

This slipped under my radar somehow… 88, what happened??

24th Nov2011

Lupe Fiasco – Friend Of The People (Mixtape)

by iSpit

I’m not entirely sure which one of these is the cover sooo, take them all. You decide

Lupe Fiasco – Friend Of The People (Mixtape)

24th Nov2011

Lockheed Martin’s CEO Is After Your Social Security Check!

by iSpit


Download Video or MP3 -Iamnotarapperispit.com

Tell committee members to keep war contractors’ hands off the money that should go to Social Security and Medicare: http://warcosts.com

The law that created the deficit committee also created a zero-sum game: Any expensive program that escapes the budget knife does so at the expense of cuts to other programs. If the military contractors succeed in keeping the war budget intact, they’ll likely do so at the expense of Social Security and Medicare. That means money that would go to your Social Security or Medicare benefits will instead go into the hands of people like Lockheed Martin CEO Robert J. Stephens, who last year made $21.9 million, almost totally from taxpayer-funded military contracts.

This should an easy choice: cut the war budget.

Tell committee members you want military contractors’ hands off the money that should go to Social Security and Medicare. http://warcosts.com

24th Nov2011

Event: FreshFest Vol. IV – 11-28-11 – @ Silk City

by iSpit

FRESHFEST Vol.4 – 11.28.11 – SILK CITY

Performances by:
SELA, ANTWAN DAVIS, ZILLA ROCCA, & AQUIL

w/Dj’s
DJ AMBUSH & DJ PHSH

Hosted by:
THE UNICORN, SELINA CARRERA,
& MIKE THALANDLORD

 

SHOTS! | SHOTS! | SHOTS! | SHOTS! | SHOTSSSS!

ENJOY THE SHOW, NETWORK, THEN PAAAAAAAAAAAAARTY!!!

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9pm – 2am
Silk City
435 Spring Garden St.
Donate Clothes or Non Perishable Food Iteams for $2 off Admission

Click to RSVP!!!

24th Nov2011

Mumia Abu Jamal – What Do They Want?

by iSpit

Mumia Abu Jamal – What Do They Want?

23rd Nov2011

Colombiana (Full Movie)

by iSpit

 

23rd Nov2011

Saukrates x Nike – Say I {ALWAYS ON} (Music Video)

by iSpit


Download Video or MP3 -Iamnotarapperispit.com

23rd Nov2011

Why Longer School Days Work for Families

by iSpit

As school districts across the nation have scaled back instructional hours and moved to four-day weeks to balance their budgets, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel is forging ahead with his push for a longer school day and year. And, though his plan is stirring controversy on many fronts, if implemented well, it stands to benefit students and another group largely missing from the discussion: their families.

Things have changed a lot in the homes of American schoolchildren over the past 50 years or so. There are more two-income households, more single parents raising families, and more mothers in the paid labor force. The days of June Cleaver waiting to greet the school bus each afternoon with a plate of warm cookies and a nice, cold glass of milk are pretty much over, assuming they ever existed at all.

 

But you wouldn’t know it by taking a glance at a typical school calendar.

 

Once you subtract all the holidays, teacher in-service days, and winter, spring, and summer breaks, you are left with about 180 days, which is the average school year in the United States. Compare that to 245 days, which is a quick back-of-the-envelope approximation of the average number of days a mom or dad has to work in a year (five days a week times 52 weeks, minus 15 holiday and vacation days), and you don’t have to be a 2nd grade math whiz to see we’ve got a problem.

 

And it’s one that is taking a tremendous, albeit quiet, toll on working parents like the mom I met recently at a fundraising training session in Chicago.

 

She had arrived late to the session, which was set to begin at 10 o’clock in the morning, and after we were introduced she explained why. With school out for the summer, she had enrolled both her children in day camp. Because the camp didn’t start until 9:30 a.m., she had orchestrated an elaborate carpooling scheme with other parents. While it was someone else’s turn to drive that particular morning, she wanted to make sure the girls got off safely. So she waited until their ride arrived before embarking on her commute.

 

As she recounted the story (with her supervisor looking on), she appeared exhausted and had a very worried look on her face. Having missed many early-morning business meetings because my daughter didn’t start school until 8, I could relate all too well to the stress I knew she must have been feeling. Especially in these tough economic times, showing up late or having to tell your boss that you can’t come in at all because your children are out of school is something every working parent dreads even if they have the family-friendliest of employers.

 

Yet, in all the discussions about why we need to lengthen the school year, closing the gap between school schedules and the employment realities of 21st-century families is rarely, if ever, mentioned. Dare one raise the issue, and we are swiftly reminded that schools are not day-care centers and that teachers are there to teach, not baby-sit, our children.

 

I couldn’t agree more. Education is-and should be-schools‘ first order of business.

 

However, the inextricable link between school schedules and family economic needs is firmly rooted in history. And, as social scientist Jody Heymann pointed out in her 2002 article “Can Working Families Ever Win?,” it was during the period of rapid industrialization from 1870 to 1930 that the American school year experienced its most dramatic growth-a 30 percent increase from 132 to 173 days.

 

Since then, the length of the school year has remained relatively stagnant, and its failure to keep pace is undermining our children‘s education. Not only are they losing ground in terms of having sufficient time to master the skills and knowledge needed to succeed in the global economy, but the inadequate calendar is also placing undue stress on parents, which can impede their children‘s ability to learn.

 

Countless studies have shown that children whose families are experiencing financial hardship are more likely to struggle academically. And, even if job loss hasn’t hit home, just knowing it’s a real possibility is negatively affecting student achievement, according to a June 2011 paper published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, titled “Children Left Behind: The Effects of Statewide Job Loss on Student Achievement.”

 

Creating a school calendar more in sync with the needs of today’s working families would not replace the continued need for more supportive employer policies or high-quality, affordable child care. But it would go a long way toward helping those of us who need to earn a living in order to ensure that our children come to school ready to learn and that their classrooms are well stocked with the necessary supplies.
———————————————————————————————–

Rhonda Present is the founder and director of ParentsWork, an Illinois parents’ organization that advocates more family-supportive communities, schools, and workplaces.

23rd Nov2011

I Am Not A Rapper Presents: ___ Podcast – Season 1,Episode 2 – #ThePodcastAboutNothing

by iSpit
Play

Aaand we’re back with another podcast full of random goodies. This past Sunday in our nerd laboratory we had a group discussion about six headlines in today’s media (including the words of the day). Our group discussion featured Ms. Melissa x Ms. Si x Kevin Golden x Spit x Mr. Blair which = Headline Anarchy. Once we hit the record button, this was what happened…

Topics discussed: #OccupyPhilly (& #OccupyPhilly) + Barack Obama + Facebook + CIA + Penn State + Rainbow Ranger + Ringtones + Benches and Ninjas + Spanish Television + Tyler Perry vs. Tyler the Creator + Mortal Kombat + etc.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  

Featured Music:   1.) Young Jeezy Feat Jay-Z x Andre 3000 – I Do    2.) Chiddy Bang – Ray Charles   3.) Matt x Kim – Wires

BTW: IF ANY OF YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHAT THE PURPOSE OF OCCUPY WALLSTREET OR OCCUPY PHILLY ARE ABOUT PLEEEEEASE COMMENT OR EMAIL US & ENLIGHTEN US… BECAUSE WE HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO CLUE!

T0p 10 Ringtones From #OccupyPhilly

1. Puff Daddy & The Family – Mo’ Money Mo Problems

2. Big Tymers - Number 1 Stunna

3. Will Smith Feat Sisqo - Wild Wild West

4. Jay- Z Feat Jermaine Dupri - Money Aint A Thang

5. Ma$e x Puff Daddy - Cant Nobody Hold Me Down

6. Chapter – Swipe Yo EBT

7. Puff Daddy Feat Jimmy Page – Come With Me

8. Kanye West – You Cant Tell Me Nothing

9. Luniz – I Got Five On It

10.  Young Jeezy - I Get Alotta Dat

23rd Nov2011

Historic Event For Mumia x Troy Davis To Be Held On Dec 9 at National Constitution Center

by iSpit

Honor Troy Davis
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal

011
0:30 pm
CONSTITUTION CENTER, PHILADELPHIA

SPEAKERS:
Cornel West
Michelle Alexander (by video)
Ramona Africa
Michael Coard
Vijay Prashad
Louisa Hanoune
Mark Lamont Hill
Immortal Technique
Amiri and Amina Baraka

And more

• No to the racist death penalty!
• Stop the massive incarceration of the poor and oppressed!
• End torture and police terrorism!
• Free all political
prisoners!
Free Mumia!

PERFORMERS:
IMPACT Youth Repertory Theatre, African Dance Ensemble, others T.B.A.

Info and bus reservations:
PHILA: 267-760-7344
NYC: 212 -330-8029.

www.freemumia.com
www.emajonline

23rd Nov2011

Roberto Cavalli Shows Spring 2012 Collection At Tel Aviv Fashion Week (Video)

by iSpit

Roberto Cavalli‘s Spring 2012 collection was so nice, he’s showing it twice!

Cavalli staged a runway show in Tel Aviv, which is currently holding its first fashion week in over 30 years. While the fashion industry is alive and active in Israel, Israeli designers rarely play a role on the international stage.

But this week they’ve got the world’s attention, as Israel is staging a major fashion week in cooperation with Italy. As the Jerusalem Post reports, the two countries are drawn together over fashion, technology and a connection between two of its two biggest cities, Milan and Tel Aviv, which are “sister cities.”

Camera Nazionale della Moda Italiana, Italy‘s CFDA equivalent, worked with Israeli fashion executives led by Ofir Lev, the deputy CEO of the Israel Fashion and Textile Association, to get the project off the ground. The process, says the Jerusalem Report, took two years.

So today, one of Italy‘s biggest names showed his wares on a runway at Jaffa’s historical Railway Station. Roberto Cavalli gave an encore performance of his Spring 2012 line, which originally showed in Milan.

“I feel that fashion today… is international,” Cavalli said at a Tel Aviv press conference, “because all of you read the same magazines, we watch the same movies and fashion is there. From there you get an idea what to buy.”

We are definitely getting an idea of what to buy from Cavalli’s Israeli reprise. On our shopping list: backless dresses, animal prints and loads of sequins.

22nd Nov2011

Donald Glover – Weirdo (Full Video)

by iSpit

 

 

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