06th Jan2012

The Plight Of The Concords By Spit (#PlightOfTheConcords)

by iSpit

Many of you in recent months have begun to proclaim yourselves as what you believe to be a “Sneakerhead” largely due to the fact that you… occasionally wear sneakers. This myth couldn’t be further from the truth. How can you be a sneakerhead if you know absolutely nothing about the sneakers you claim to be obsessed with? Is it because you slept outside for some sneakers? …Nah. Let’s do the knowledge…

On May 7th, 1995 when Michael Jordan stepped onto the court in the beginning of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals between the Chicago Bulls & the Orlando Magic in a pair of sneakers the world (& Nike execs) had never seen before (& wouldn’t see again for a year), he had no idea what he had started. The subsequent ban of the sneakers due to what NBA executives called a “dress code violation” only heightened the excitement for a commercial release.

The sneaker in question? The Nike Air Jordan #11 – Concord’s, whose release in November 1995 release coincided with the still active hype over MJ‘s comeback. At the time they were simply known as the “patent leather” Jordan‘s & along with the Bulls going 72 – 10, they sold out nationwide almost instantly.

Fast Forward:

**October 25th, 2000 – The first re- release

**January 28th, 2006 – Another re-release, another sellout (in both meanings of the phrase)

**January 17, 2011 – Confirmation that ONCE AGAIN, a version of the Concords would be re-re-released, is leaked on a Nike line sheet.

**December 23rd, 2011- N*ggas once again camped out, lined up, missed meals, didn’t pay bills/daycare/child support/buy gas etc. just for the Nike Air Jordan #11 Concords

…… Wow…..

Regardless of the historical significance the release carries, if I thought it was stupid for people to sleep outside for #OccupyPhilly & #OccupyWallstreet, you can only imagine how I feel about a bunch of pseudo Jordan enthusiasts & “collectors” sleeping outside for some sneakers I had in the 3rd grade which have been released on two other separate occasions. Correct me if I’m wrong, but I thought the purpose of collecting sneakers was to have rare & limited editions which haven’t been commercially released or have been but in other countries. What I don’t think it’s about is shooting, looting, leaving your children in the car to make a purchase, & fighting over $200 6-year-old Air Jordan’s.  In Atlanta, at least four people were arrested in a mob scene at a suburban mall, according to the Associated Press. Twenty police cars responded and the crowd broke down a door to enter the mall before it opened. Police had to smash the windows of a car to get two toddlers out after a woman had left them there to go buy the shoes. She was taken into custody when she returned, according to the AP. Florida police used pepper spray on unruly shoe seekers and fights were reported in Kentucky; glass was shattered at stores in North Carolina. Frantic shoppers even tried to break down a door at one of the Indiana malls. Over the last decade, more than 45 deaths or violent incidents have been reported in relation to the release of a Jordan shoe.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

I’ve already established the fact that #N*ggasAreTooFree so there is really no need to beat a dead horse, but I do have a few concerns. Michael Jordan, as owner of the Charlotte Bobcats was an integral part of the prolonged NBA lockout. Nearly 87% of the profit from these sneakers goes into his pocket. So the man who was one of the owners who kept your precious basketball away is now your priority when just a few short weeks ago you were in distress trying to understand football to fill your sport watching needs.

Lastly, the current unemployment rate is 8.6% (15.5% for African Americans) which means most of you n*ggas are camping out because you don’t have jobs or a place to live & can’t afford the sneakers anyway. “Ballin’ on unemployment”. If you can afford it then please, by all means, spend $200 on a 6-year-old pair of sneakers if that’s how you choose to spend your money. I don’t judge people, I leave that up to  Jesus M Christ and honestly I have been guilty of being a vanity slave too. It’s like the Post Christmas Stress Syndrome; Once that temporary high is gone you’ll be left with nothing but a new excuse…You’ll be just another victim of the #PlightOfTheConcords. Until next release

05th Jan2012

IAmNotADictionary Phrase Of The Day: PCSS (Post Christmas Stress Syndrome)

by iSpit

Warning: PCSS, or Post Christmas Stress Syndrome is a common affliction that affects scores of people during the month of January. Untreated, this malady seriously impairs one’s ability to cope with several post holiday tasks, including:

  • Removing, packing and storing of Christmas decorations
  • Labouring with clothing that has mysteriously shrunk
  • Facing the bottom line of your credit card statement
  • No longer being able to ignore past due notices (the red ones)

Fortunately, this disorder can be easily remedied with self administered therapy… STOP BUYING SH*T AND PAY YOUR BILLS!!!

If followed accurately, results can be apparent in as little as 24 hours. Side effects may include a reality check, missing luxury items and the ability to cope with no longer being a victim of hallmark’s holiday gestapo.

 

04th Jan2012

Do You Share Your Videogame Controller?

by iSpit

There are two types of people in this world: the ones who share videogame controllers and the ones who don’t. Which one are you?

It came up again today, the old argument.

My husband, David, and I were shopping at the GameStop, intending to take advantage of their buy-two-get-one-free-on-preowned-games sale.

Since we have both an Xbox 360 (the console he prefers) and a Playstation 3 (the console I prefer), we were trying to decide what platform to get the games for.

Usually if it’s a game he wants to play but I don’t really care about, it’s purchased for the Xbox 360. If it’s a game that I want to play but he doesn’t really care about, it’s purchased for the Playstation 3.

Today, however, the games he had chosen were ones we’re both very interested in playing.

Our individual console preferences seem to boil down to controller, although I must admit that I like my PS3 trophy collection because it makes me happy to see all my trophies in one place.

David doesn’t care about trophies. He has a slight preference for the Xbox controller (he thinks it’s a little better for a beefy guy’s hand).

I, on the other hand, absolutely and completely heart the Playstation controller (it’s lightweight and fits my smaller hands perfectly). I love my PS3 controller to the point where I kind of avoid the Xbox (for which we have two good controllers).

He’s actually perfectly fine with playing PS3 games. I’m cool with that. I’m happy to share the console. But I don’t like anyone touching my controller. Period.

Yeah, we have two PS3 controllers, but the one that sits in the back of the wireless charger is the crappy older one that usually gets upgraded when it starts acting up.

It’s way more fun to use the nice, attractive, reliable satin silver DUALSHOCK one I splurged on last time I was in the market for a new controller. And I get all tense when he uses it. It just feels creepy when anybody else uses it.

Especially if that person is snacking on anything. I get exasperated and accuse him of “schmutzing up” the controller. I clean it with alcohol preps and give him dirty looks. I am the same way about sharing computer mice. It just gives me the willies.

This hurts my sweetheart’s feelings. He is offended. He takes it personally. He thinks its insane. This from the man who won’t share a bar of soap. Seriously. Why not? Soap is self-cleaning, isn’t it?

I do have to admit that it is neurotic. I mean, I love holding hands with him. I’m thrilled to have him touch me, so why can’t I stand his hands on my videogame controller? It makes no sense, but I would sooner lend him my toothbrush, and I think that’s nasty.

Control freak

I embarrass my husband by getting everyone’s attention and taking an informal poll of the customers and employees of the GameStop on whether they like to share their controller.

The reactions of the folks in the store ranged from apathy, “Why would I care?” to outright disgust, “No way!” and “I don’t want anyone else’s hand juice on my controller.” Hey, I didn’t say it, the store clerk did. I mean, I never thought about it in exactly those terms before, but it gave me the shivers when she said it.

Yes, it’s true, in terms of health concerns, videogame controllers are a hotbed for germs. If you don’t believe me, Google it. If your kids invite their friends over and frequently share controllers, be sure to disinfect those items regularly. But for me, I guess it’s really all about the hand juice, and its resulting residue (whether real or imagined).

We left the store with three preowned Playstation 3 games, and a new, shiny, red DUALSHOCK controller for him. Our wallets were $50 lighter, but you can’t put a price on the security of knowing your controller is your own. Or the peace and goodwill that comes from no longer arguing over the controller.

If the special someone in your life is schmutzing up your controller, Christmas is coming. It’s a great time to get him (or her) a shiny new one of their own.

All these control issues have me wondering if this is a big thing for people. How do you feel about sharing your controller?

29th Dec2011

Black Navy Veteran To Get Medal For WWII Actions

by iSpit

A black Navy veteran credited with saving the lives of some of his shipmates during a World War II battle will be getting a long-awaited medal for his heroism, a Northern California congresswoman said.

Carl Clark, 95, will be awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal with the Combat Distinguished Device on Jan. 17, U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo announced Thursday.

Clark was serving as an E-6 Steward First Class aboard the USS Aaron Ward when Japanese kamikazes attacked the destroyer near Okinawa in May 1945.

“They would guide those planes directly into the ships,” Clark said of the planes he described as “flying bombs.”

Six kamikazes hit the destroyer, with the blast from one plane so powerful that Clark said it blew him “all the way across the ship.”

Though he suffered a broken collarbone in the attack, Clark was credited with saving the lives of several men by dragging them to safety. He also put out a fire in an ammunition locker that, according to Eshoo’s office, would have cracked the destroyer in half.

Reached at his home in Menlo Park on Christmas Eve, Clark told The Associated Press that even though the destroyer’s captain acknowledged that he had saved the ship, it took 66 years to be recognized for his actions, according to Clark, because of “bigotry.”

“It wouldn’t look good to say one black man saved the ship,” he said.

The captain of the destroyer tried to make up for the slight by giving him extra leave and making sure that he was not sent back to sea, Clark said.

The work in eventually getting him the medal was made more difficult because of the lack of documentation and living witnesses to the attack, Eshoo said, adding that the decision to award the medal was a “Christmas Miracle.”

“It is a singular privilege to be in a position to correct the record for those who have fought to preserve our freedoms,” she said in a statement.

Carl Clark served our nation during a time when the Navy was deeply segregated and a culture of racism was prevalent. His courage stands as a symbol of the greatness of our nation, and this award, also given to Senator John McCain, calls out Mr. Clark as a true American hero.”

Clark will receive the medal during a ceremony at Moffett Field in Mountain View, Calif.

28th Dec2011

So Everybody Got An iPhone For Christmas huh?

by iSpit

Apple and Google activated a record breaking number of mobile devices this Christmas, according to Flurry analytics, which delivers mobile analytics to developers. Flurry has 140,000 apps running its software, and believes it can track every new Android or iOS device activated.

Between December 1 and 20, 1.5 million Android and iOS devices were activated daily on average. On Christmas day, a record breaking 6.8 million devices were activated, a 353% increase over the rest of the month. It’s also much better than 2010, when 2.8 million devices were activated

25th Dec2011

A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas (Full Movie)

by iSpit

Get your glasses…

Six years after their Guantanamo Bay adventure, stoner buds Harold Lee and Kumar Patel cause a holiday fracas by inadvertently burning down Harold’s father-in-law’s prize Christmas tree.

 

25th Dec2011

Young Chris – Young Christmas (EP)

by iSpit

1. Property Tax (Produced by: Mike Jerz)
2. So fly (Produced by: Cardiak)
3. Still Creeping (Produced by: Mike Jerz)
4. 100 & Rolling (Produced by: Mike Jerz)
5. 6 In da Morning Prouduced by: (CERTIFYD)
6. Make you a Believer (Produced by: CERTIFYD)
7. *Bonus* Black out
8. *Bonus* Trouble on my Mind (Produced by: Ritz)

Young Chris – Young Christmas EP

25th Dec2011

From The Vault: Eazy E – Merry Mutha-F*ckin Christmas

by iSpit

 

I am almost 100% sure that 90% of you never knew this song existed… let alone heard it before. So this alone is our gift to you all! Happy Saturnalia!

Eazy E – Merry Mutha-F*ckin Christmas

24th Dec2011

How The Grinch Stole Christmas 2000 (Full Movie)

by iSpit

Based on the book by the famous Dr. Seuss. Inside a snowflake exists the magical land of Whoville. In Whoville, live the Who’s, an almost mutated sort of munchkinlike people. All the Who’s love Christmas, yet just outside of their beloved Whoville lives the Grinch. The Grinch is a nasty creature that hates Christmas, and plots to steal it away from the Whos which he equally abhors. Yet a small child, Cindy Lou Who, decides to try befriend the Grinch. Rejected by the Who’s as a child and living in spiteful seculsion for most of his life, the Grinch has always hated the citizens of Whoville. That especially goes for Christmas with the Who’s noise, phony sentiment and wasteful materialism. When little Cindy Lou Who’s attempt to transcend the festivities’ empty commercialism by inviting the Grinch ends with his public humiliation, the Grinch hatches upon on his supreme scheme to ruin the holidays.

Director:
Ron Howard
Actors:
Jeffrey Tambor/ Jim Carrey/ Taylor Momsen
Genres:
Action/ Comedy/ Family/ Fantasy
Release Date:
2000
16th Dec2011

DoomOz: ‘Lean On Me’ Actor (Sams) Arrested for Buying 200 Pounds of Weed

by iSpit

What would Joe Clark say about this? You shouldve just jumped Sams…

The guy who starred as troubled youth Thomas Sams in the 1989 classicLean On Me” was arrested in Arizona for allegedly buying 200 pounds of pot from an undercover cop this week.

Jermaine “Huggy” Hopkins has been charged with two felony counts of possessing, transporting and trying to sell marijuana.

According to police, the 38-year-old actor lives in North Carolina … but traveled to AZ to make the drug deal on Tuesday.

Cops in Maricopa County say they set up the sting operation … and after Hopkins took possession of the dope, they pulled over his SUV and arrested him. Cops say they found $100k in cash in the ride.

Officials later searched Hopkins’ Arizona apartment and claim they found an additional 100 pounds of weed.

Police say Hopkins told them he got involved in the drug deal to provide a nice Christmas for his family.

Hopkins is being held on $35,000 bond. If convicted, he faces up to 5 years in prison.

08th Dec2011

Community: S 3, Ep 10 (Series Finale) – Regional Holiday Music (Full Video)

by iSpit

When the Greendale Glee Club is unexpectedly sidelined, the school’s effervescent choir director Cory Radison sets about recruiting the study group members to fill in. Skeptical at first, they eventually fall under his hypnotic spell – one-by-one – singing and dancing their way to the annual Christmas Pageant.
03rd Dec2011

Miguel Cotto vs. Antonio Margarito II (Live Video Stream)

by iSpit

Its in Spanish for now…

Boxing fans, you must have been awfully good boys and girls this year. Santa Claus is bringing you an early Christmas present on Saturday night.

Miguel Cotto of Puerto Rico will seek to avenge his 2008 loss to Antonio Margarito of Mexico for Cotto’s WBA Super Welterweight title at Madison Square Garden in New York. The Garden is a sell-out, which is rare for a non-heavyweight fight. It shows the keen level of interest in what may be one of the most exciting, action-packed bouts of 2011.

Puerto Rican fans will be squarely behind their native son, who is looking for justice after his bloody beating three years ago by Margarito, resulting in an 11th round TKO. Cotto and his fans believe Margarito’s win was aided by the use of illegal hand wraps.

Margarito and his camp deny it, and nothing was proven. However, Margarito was caught with illegal hand wraps in 2009 prior to his fight with Shane Mosley, a fight he lost. He didn’t fight again for a year. When he did, he took a brutal beating by Manny Pacquiao. In the fight, his right orbital bone was broken and his eye had to be surgically repaired.

Margarito’s eye became an issue of concern for the New York State Athletic Commission in this fight. The Commission withheld Margarito’s license until he cleared another eye exam ten days ago in New York.

Cotto has a loss to Manny Pacquiao in common with Margarito since they last met. His November 2009 fight with Pacquiao was similar in that both Cotto and Margarito were both taken out handily by Pacquiao, though Cotto lasted one more round and got in some decent punishment against Pac-Man.

There hasn’t been such a heated rivalry in boxing for a long time. The ill will has been three years in the making and time has not healed any of Cotto’s wounds. Cotto and Margarito’s strong dislike of each other is the real deal. Cotto firmly believes Margarito is a cheater and played with his life. Margarito says it’s all trash talk and he’ll prove it. Things are so acrimonious the two fighters weren’t permitted to pose for the traditional face-to-face pre-fight publicity shots. Promoter Bob Arum stood between them.

Make no mistake: There will be blood Saturday night. If you are squeamish, don’t watch. These two both like to mix it up. They both take punishment well and will fight until they have nothing left.

Margarito says he’s going to fight Cotto the same way he did the first time, constantly pressing forward and working underneath with power. Margarito is working with trainer Robert Garcia for the second time.

Cotto is working with former Cuban Olympic boxing team coach Dr. Pedro Benitez, who defected and is working his first professional fight. Cotto ended his relationship with trainer Emmanuel Steward due to scheduling conflicts. Dr. Benitez works systematically and seems to have opened up new training techniques to Cotto. Cotto says he will use speed and conditioning along with upgraded footwork skills to move around Margarito, inflicting damage while working to avoid getting hit by Margarito inside at close range.

Cotto, age 31, is 36-2 (29), with his only losses to Pacquiao and Margarito. Margarito, age 33, is 38-7 (27).  Cotto weighed in at 152-1/4; Margarito at 154-1/2.

This fight should look a lot like the first one: demanding, relentless, and bloody. Margarito will be willing to take a lot of punches for the chance to bring a few well-chosen blows against Cotto. In the later rounds all semblance of skill and technique could go out the window and the fight might become an all-out brawl.

The unknown factor is the condition of Margarito’s right eye. Cotto has admitted that if Margarito presents the opportunity, Cotto will go after the weak eye. Margarito brushes off questions about his eye, but if he feels the slightest bit protective or concerned and becomes distracted by it, it may give Cotto an advantage.

In the end, I don’t believe Cotto will need any advantage. He is fueled by a sense of righting a wrong, seeking justice for what happened to him in 2008. As long as he can channel his fury, he should win a brutal, close fight in the later rounds, perhaps with a TKO.  Boxing fans, it’s the Twelve Rounds of Christmas

26th Nov2011

Paid Slavery: Tentative Deal Reached, The NBA Lockout To End On Christmas

by iSpit

With a Christmas Day tripleheader on everyone’s wish list and a tentative labor agreement in place, NBA owners and union officials went back to work Saturday, relaying details of the deal with hopes of cementing it quickly.

After a 149-day lockout that ultimately will cost the league approximately a half-billion dollars in losses, a marathon bargaining session produced a handshake agreement earlier in the day—actually, just a few hours before daybreak.

Commissioner David Stern still must sell his owners on an agreement that could change the way they do business. And the players, looking beat and beaten, face a tougher healing process in approving a pact that significantly limits their earnings.

But considering everything owners sought when these negotiations opened with a contentious meeting at the All-Star break in February 2010, perhaps they will feel relieved they got as much as they did.

Players’ association executivesDerek Fisher(notes) and Maurice Evans(notes)hardly looked enthused about the agreement as they sat next to executive director Billy Hunter on the same side of a conference table with Stern, Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver and Spurs owner Peter Holt, the chairman of the league’s labor relations committee.

But at least they weren’t sitting in a courtroom, where they appeared headed less than two weeks earlier.

Just 12 days after talks broke down, Stern and Hunter appeared together after 3 a.m. Saturday to announce the 10-year deal, with either side able to opt out after the sixth year. It leaves the NBA with its second shortened season (the first was the 50-game 1998-99 season), with the hope of getting in 66 games instead of a full 82-game schedule.

Stern said he expects the labor committee to endorse the deal and recommend it to the full board for approval.

The players’ side has revealed little of its feelings about the deal, noting the pending antitrust litigation in its desire to keep details quiet. But players always preferred to be on the court, rather than in it, and now they finally have the chance—starting Christmas Day.

For the season openers, it would be Boston at New York, Miami at Dallas and Chicago at the Lakers—sorry, little guys, the big markets still rule Christmas.

Now, the regular season would end one week later and push back NBA finals a week, potentially setting up a Game 7 on June 28, 2012.

The deal also calls for no hard salary cap, no rollbacks of existing salaries and contracts can still be fully guaranteed. Owners had called for all of that, seeking a route to profitability after saying they lost $300 million last season, and believing they would create a level of parity that had been missing.

But players’ annual raises were trimmed from 10.5 percent for those re-signing with their own teams and 8 percent for those leaving to 7.5 percent and 4.5 percent respectively. Rules implemented to curb spending by teams over the luxury tax will limit some of their options in free agency.

Owners relented slightly on their previous insistence that players receive no more than 50 percent of basketball-related income after they were guaranteed 57 percent in the old CBA. The target is still a 50-50 split, but with a band from 49 percent to 51 percent that gives the players a better chance of reaching the highest limit than previously proposed.

“I appreciate what Billy and Derek and the players have compromised on because it will allow us, as a small market, to be competitive and create more parity across all 30 teams,” Holt said. “We are really excited. We are excited for the fans. We’re excited to start playing basketball for the players and for everybody involved.”

Details were provided to owners Saturday afternoon in what would be described as a largely congratulatory teleconference. A person with knowledge of the meeting told The Associated Press that some owners said they wished certain issues—usually ones specific to smaller markets—were addressed, but many were simply relieved the process was nearing an end.

“The way the deal shakes out, particularly the system issues, there’s something in there for every owner to hate,” the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the pact still needs to be ratified. “A number of the small market owners may feel bad that they were not protected the way they thought they were going to be protected. Having said that, virtually all of them say it’s better to play than not to play or lose the season.”

Players filed an amended antitrust lawsuit in Minnesota on Monday that could have earned the players billions but surely would have come at the cost of at least the entire 2011-12 season.

The sides said all along the only way to a deal was through negotiating. They got back together Tuesday, setting the way for the pivotal meeting that began Friday.

“I think we saw a willingness of both sides to compromise yet a little more and to reach this agreement,” Silver said. “We look forward to opening on Christmas Day and we are excited to bring NBA basketball back and that’s most important.”

Now, players must drop a lawsuit against the league and reform their disbanded union before they can vote on the deal. Hunter said it could take anywhere from three days to a week to get that completed.

Once the pact is approved, it would pave the way for training camps and free agency to open simultaneously Dec. 9, setting off a chaotic flurry of activity that could leave coaches running practices with different players arriving each day. There could be an even larger pool of free agents if teams use the amnesty clause, which allows them to waive one player during the deal and have 100 percent of his salary taken off the cap and the tax.

President Barack Obama gave a thumbs-up when told about the tentative settlement after he finished playing basketball at Fort McNair in Washington on Saturday morning.

Because the union disbanded, a new collective bargaining agreement can only be completed once the union has reformed. Drug testing and other issues still must be negotiated between the players and the league, which also must dismiss its lawsuit regarding the legality of the lockout.

“We’re very pleased we’ve come this far,” Stern said. “There’s still a lot of work to be done.”

A number of minor issues remain unsettled, such as sponsorship patches being added to jerseys and how the preseason should work.

Some major matters—like revenue sharing, which the NBA has said it will not really dive into until a new CBA is complete—remain on the table as well. Meetings on that issue take place every few days, and the person briefed on the status of the NBA’s discussions said many teams are not thrilled by the notion of paying both a luxury tax and into a revenue-sharing pool.

When the NBA returns, owners hope to find the type of parity that exists in the NFL, where the small-marketGreen Bay Packers are the current champions. The NBA has been dominated in recent years by the biggest spenders, with Boston, Los Angeles and Dallas winning the last four titles.

“I think it will largely prevent the high-spending teams from competing in the free-agent market the way they’ve been able to in the past. It’s not the system we sought out to get in terms of a harder cap, but the luxury tax is harsher than it was. We hope it’s effective,” Silver said.

“We feel ultimately it will give fans in every community hope that their team can compete for championships.”

Owners locked out the players July 1, and the sides spent most of the summer and fall battling over the division of revenues and other changes owners wanted in a new collective bargaining agreement. They said they lost hundreds of millions of dollars in each year of the former deal, ratified in 2005, and they wanted a system where the big-market teams wouldn’t have the ability to outspend their smaller counterparts.

Players fought against those changes, and scored some concessions at the end. The full midlevel exception of $5 million a year for four years will be available to all teams as long as the signing doesn’t take them more than $4 million over the tax, and the “mini midlevel” for taxpayers was increased to $3 million a year for three years.

“This was not an easy agreement for anyone. The owners came in having suffered substantial losses and feeling the system wasn’t working fairly across all teams,” Silver said. “I certainly know the players had strong views about expectations in terms of what they should be getting from the system. It required a lot of compromise from both parties’ part.”

Stern denied the antitrust litigation was a factor in accelerating a deal, but things happened relatively quickly after the players filed.

“For us the litigation is something that just has to be dealt with,” Stern said. “It was not the reason for the settlement. The reason for the settlement was we’ve got fans, we’ve got players who would like to play and we’ve got others who are dependent on us. And it’s always been our goal to reach a deal that was fair to both sides and get us playing as soon as possible, but that took a little time.

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.

07th Oct2011

Home Alone (Full Movie)

by iSpit

An eight year-old, who is accidentally left behind while his family flies to France for Christmas, has to defend his home against idiotic burglars.

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