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Walmart, Other Retailers to Start Black Friday Sales on Thanksgiving Day

Target, Kmart included in turkey day sales. Is it too early to start Black Friday shopping on Thanksgiving Day?

 

If you have a black belt in Black Friday shopping, listen up: Area big-box retailers are gearing up to dazzle bargain hunters even earlier this year — starting Thanksgiving Day, right after you put away the pumpkin pie.

Walmart, Target and Kmart are planning all-out holiday shopping assaults. Why doze off in a turkey slump watching football when you can be out taking care of holiday shopping business?

Walmart will offer, beginning at 8 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day, holiday gifts for the entire family while supplies last. That includes an electric scooter for $79, a steam mop for $39 or men's jeans for $9.50. (Why do mom and dad always get the boring presents?)

Target's deals begin an hour later, at 9 p.m. According to an ad leaked online, the best deals will be for a Nook, TV and Nikon camera.

Kmart's mega-deals will begin in-store throughout the day on Thanksgiving with special deals beginning at 8 p.m. Thanksgiving Day continuing until 3 a.m. Friday.

Walmart will offer its biggest deals from 10 to 11 p.m. Thanksgiving. The store will offer three items at low prices — an iPad, a TV and a Blu-Ray Player — and if the store runs out, you can still buy them by registering online by midnight. They'll be delivered to your local store.

According to TheBlackFriday.com, several other stores will also have "doorbuster" sales Thursday night or at midnight Friday, including some Toys R Us, Best Buy, Kohl's, hhgregg, and Macy's stores. 

For the traditionalists, several stores open at 4 a.m. with special sales for Friday morning early birds. 

If you want to keep up with all of the Black Friday deals, you can check your favorite retailers' Facebook pages.

If there's an upside to spreading out the Black Friday wheeling and dealing, it could possibly lessen the early-morning mega-crowds. A Walmart seasonal employee was trampled to death by a crowd estimated at 2,000 shoppers four years ago at a store in Long Island, N.Y., when its doors opened at 5 a.m., according to The New York Times.

Want to avoid the holiday shopping mega-crowds altogether? Look for Cyber Monday deals on Nov. 26 or visit your local Mom 'n Pop retailers on Small Business Saturday, Nov. 24.

  • Your opinion please: Black Friday holiday shopping on Thanksgiving Day.

    (Voting has been closed for this question)
    • YES: Thumbs up! Shopping on Thanksgiving Day is fine, it's no big deal.
        1 (7%)
    • NO: No way! Save Black Friday shopping for Friday.
        11 (78%)
    • Other answer (please explain in the comments)
        2 (14%)
    Total votes: 14
  • Your vote will only count once. This is not a scientific poll. View Results Vote!
Related Topics: Black Friday, Holiday Guide, Kmart, Target, and Walmart

Tom Pendleton

12:46 pm on Friday, November 9, 2012

Thanksgiving, until last year and somewhat the year before, has been the only truly national holiday that all Americans celebrate that has not been ruined in the past by the greedy retailers. And if you believe the myth that the employees volunteer to work on Thanksgiving day, ask them. I have, and the answer was a resounding NO! Please keep the stores closed on Thanksgiving.
So far I have managed to boycott for the entire year all the stores that have opened on Thanksgiving. Maybe if enough of us do this the profit the stores make on Thanksgiving will be lost during the remainder of the year.

Reply

Johnny Detestin

5:59 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012

Welcome to America. Go shopping. (Implied facepalm). I hope nobody dies in pursuit of that cheap Blu-ray player they need so badly.

Reply

Terrence Dankel

8:35 am on Saturday, November 10, 2012

Understanding the retail motivations, this move serves to enhance their draw, emphasize the focus on the material aspects of what is just one way to observe Christmas. Strictly personally speaking, it also could be seen as a direct challenge to the deeper aspects of celebrating Christ's presence with mankind. Everyone desires to have a wise shopping experience...start by looking at the real cost.

Reply

T Ailshire

3:08 pm on Saturday, November 10, 2012

Since I've never in my life shopped on a Black Friday, I don't have any stake in it. I just hope they realize the chance of this coming back to bite them.

Reply

Eileen P

11:51 am on Monday, November 12, 2012

I would absolutely support this if the stores sold only American-made items.
What I mean by that is, I absolutely abhor the idea of ruining Thanksgiving in this way.

Reply

Alex Craige

12:00 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012

Shop Small Business Saturday - ignore 'Black Friday' and 'cyber Monday'.

Reply

DocAce

6:44 pm on Monday, November 12, 2012

For the love of god let the employees stay home on Thanksgiving... Whatever happened to being with family on the holidays?

Reply

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