 Early signs point to bigger crowds at the nation's malls and stores as retailers like Target  and Macy's opened their doors at midnight on the most anticipated  shopping day of the year and a few others opened on Thanksgiving Day.  Shoppers were mostly peaceful across the country, but a few violent  incidents broke out as millions of shoppers rushed into stores and  tensions flared.
Early signs point to bigger crowds at the nation's malls and stores as retailers like Target  and Macy's opened their doors at midnight on the most anticipated  shopping day of the year and a few others opened on Thanksgiving Day.  Shoppers were mostly peaceful across the country, but a few violent  incidents broke out as millions of shoppers rushed into stores and  tensions flared.It started on Thanksgiving, when Los Angeles authorities say 20 people at a local Walmart  store suffered minor injuries when a woman used pepper spray to gain a  "competitive" shopping advantage shortly after the store opened.
Then,  early Friday in Fayetteville, N.C., gunfire erupted at Cross Creek Mall  and police say they're looking for the two suspects involved.  Separately, police say two women have been injured and a man charged  after a fight broke out at an upstate New York Walmart. And a central  Florida man is behind bars after a fight broke out at a jewelry counter  in Walmart in Kissimmee, Fla.
Later Friday morning, a Phoenix  television station KSAZ reported that witnesses say police slammed a  grandfather in a Walmart in Buckeye, Ariz., to the ground after he  allegedly put a game in his waistband so that he could lift his grandson  out of the crowd.The  incidents are the result of two converging trends on Black Friday. The  crowds continue to get bigger as retailers offer more incentives and  longer hours. At the same time, shoppers are competing for a small group  of products, instead of years past when there were several hot items  from which they could choose.
"The  more the people, the more the occurrences," says Marshal Cohen, chief  industry analyst with market research firm The NPD Group.
Indeed, a  record number of shoppers are expected to head out to stores across the  country this weekend to take advantage of discounts of up to 70  percent. For three days starting on Black Friday, 152 million people are  expected shop, up about 10 percent from last year, according to the  National Retail Federation."I  came here for the deals," said Sidiki Traore, 59, from Roosevelt Island,  N.Y. who was among about 10,000 people who were standing outside of  Macy's store in New York's Herald Square for its midnight opening.
The crowds are good news for retailers, many of which depend on the busy holiday shopping  season for up to 40 percent of their annual revenue. To draw in  shoppers this year, they pulled out of their bag of tricks. In addition  to several retailers opening much earlier than previous years, some  began offering to match the prices of competitors and rolling out  layaway programs.
Shoppers on  Friday, though, say they mostly are being lured into stores by the  deals, including discounts of 20 to 60 percent on many items at The Gap  and a $400 Asus Transformer 10-inch tablet computer for $249.99 at Best  Buy.
After showing up at Best  Buy in New York on Wednesday at 3 p.m., Emmanuel Merced, 27, and his  brother were the first in line when it opened. On their list was a Sharp  42-inch TV for $199, a PlayStation 3 console with games for $199.99 and  wireless headphones for $30. Merced says he likes camping out for Black  Friday and he figures he saved 50 percent.
"I like the experience of it," says Merced, who plans to spend $3,000 to $4,000 on gifts this season.
To  be sure, not every store was filled to the brim with people looking for  deals on Black Friday. With so many major stores opening at midnight,  crowds shopped early, staying up late to snag the best deals. That meant  there was an unusual lull during the typically bustling pre-dawn hours  when stores used to open their doors.
At  a Target on Chicago's north side, for instance, crowds were light four  hours after the store opened. And door-buster deals, including the  typically quick-to-sell out TVs and gaming systems, remained piled up in  their boxes. Shoppers pushed carts through mostly empty aisles while  thumbing through circulars and employees - some in Santa hats - roamed  the store. There was no Christmas music — or any music — playing.
Rebecca Carter, a graduate assistant, began Black Friday  shopping at 11 p.m. on Thursday night and left Target around 4 a.m.  carrying a bag full of pillows. Carter, who prowls Black Friday deals  every year, said crowds were noticeably lighter this year as she(...)Read more.

 
 
 
 
 
 11/25/2011 10:35:00 AM
11/25/2011 10:35:00 AM
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