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Blizzardwizard
11-28-2014, 10:38 AM
Any of you getting some Black Friday deals done?

One side of me hates it, because Britain's last chance of remaining credible was by avoiding the consumerism factory a.k.a. the USA but it's too late now. It'll be Thanksgiving next.

Anyways, I saw someone get knocked the fuck out by a Toshiba 40 inch :lol

Blake
11-28-2014, 11:31 AM
Neh. I've learned my lesson.

The Reckoning
11-28-2014, 02:58 PM
maybe in 10 years you'll have this thing called cyber monday

benefactor
11-28-2014, 03:21 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7go9vLm4hmU

Aztecfan03
11-28-2014, 03:31 PM
Any of you getting some Black Friday deals done?

One side of me hates it, because Britain's last chance of remaining credible was by avoiding the consumerism factory a.k.a. the USA but it's too late now. It'll be Thanksgiving next.

Anyways, I saw someone get knocked the fuck out by a Toshiba 40 inch :lol

fuck no. All the deals are on thanksgiving now anyways here and i'm not gonna ditch family for that.

Spurminator
11-28-2014, 03:38 PM
Black Friday sales seem to start earlier and earlier every year. But what makes us want to rush to the stores or online to snap up the best bargains?

Those wall-to-wall TV ads — and the holiday season itself — are tapping into a very primitive part of our brains.

"There is more of a sport to Black Friday shopping, and people expect some deal, but they aren't likely to get the best deal on a particular item because the best deal may have already happened six months ago," says Sucharita Mulpuru, a retail analyst with Forrester Research.

Overall, the best holiday deals don't happen on Black Friday. They usually happen right before Christmas and after. Analysts have been saying that to shoppers for years, and it's something we should all know, but we still go out.

Why do we do that?

"I think it's because of the role that emotions — especially positive emotions like excitement — play on people's decision-making process," says Camelia Kuhnen, a behavioral economist at the University of North Carolina.

Kuhnen says our financial decisions are governed essentially by two centers in our brain. One is the fear anxiety center — the part of our brains that reacts to panic or makes us run away from danger. The other is the reward center — the part that's a trigger when we're happy, Kuhnen says.

There's run-of-the-mill happy, she says, "and then there's happy-excited. Happy-aroused. Happy-frenzied. And it's really that happy-frenzied state that is driven by a lot of activation in this brain reward center. It's when you feel the impetus to sort of go for it."

That go-for-it impulse is what makes the holiday season run. Every single part of the holidays — the music, the food, for some of us the family — goes to get us excited and to activate that primitive part of our brain.

"When that happens, people end up making certain choices that are quite interesting," Kuhnen says. "So they tend to take on more financial risk, they tend to prefer, much more strongly, immediate rewards rather than delayed rewards. And they tend to be much more interested in purchasing a good that's showed to them."

Sound like those Black Friday ads to you?

Meanwhile, the analysts say retailers know about this ancient part of our brain and they've worked on it for centuries. The problem in the age of the Internet is whether they can keep pace.

"What's going on, I think: Convenience is a huge thing to the consumer," says retail analyst Howard Davidowitz. He says right now the Internet gives consumers the upper hand.

The fight among retailers is to provide the most convenient option for customers.

"Everybody — everybody — is trying to capitalize on that. The consumer wants free shipping, and they want it right away," Davidowitz says.

And if you're a retailer and don't give that to consumers, "you've got a problem because your competitor will," he says.

It's not about which store or brand has the keys to our brain — it's which retailers can get in line first.

http://www.npr.org/2014/11/26/366729888/holliday-shopping-ads-are-geared-toward-brains-reward-center

Blizzardwizard
11-28-2014, 03:49 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfJezF8diUg

ChumpDumper
11-28-2014, 04:41 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfJezF8diUgWhy isn't that guy with his family?

DMC
11-28-2014, 05:01 PM
I bought 2 ASUS VG248QE 24-inch LED-lit Monitors off Newegg for around 200 each. Not a great deal but I was looking to buy them anyhow. Haven't bought anything else.

baseline bum
11-28-2014, 06:52 PM
Gotta say newegg's deal for an i7-4790k for $290 looks pretty good, but I just got an i5-4590 like a month ago, so I passed. Some great deals on R9 290's if you have the power supply and room in your case for one. It's kind of funny though, newegg just sold out of the Vapor-X R9 290, which is a horrible deal at $320 (might as well spend the extra $10 and get a GTX 970, as the worst 970 is still better than the best 290). Funny how Black Friday makes people go and make bad purchases for things not on sale. Don't these motherfuckers know retailers just mark most of their shit up?

The Reckoning
11-28-2014, 07:41 PM
lol at all the poms fighting over panties

DJR210
11-28-2014, 10:56 PM
I started camping in front of Best Buy two weeks ago..

Capt Bringdown
11-28-2014, 11:03 PM
Black Friday Shopper = Dickhead

ChumpDumper
11-29-2014, 01:01 PM
I bought a cheap Roku online. That's it.

mrsmaalox
12-03-2014, 09:59 AM
Ooops missed this thread.....I didn't go out Friday, I actually went out on Thursday evening. Always swore I'd never do it. Thanksgiving dinner was done and put away, the only people left at the house were me and my brother and sis-in-law, so we decided to make a quick trip out for things we wanted, not gifts. There weren't many people out. I got a shredder for my office $90 off, a Vizio sound bar/stand for my bedroom $100 off, and 2 64gb jump drives for $15 each. Completed and back home in less than an hour :)