• Contact us
  • About us
  • Digital edition
  • Online archive
Saturday, May 17, 2025
Cumberland and Westmorland Herald
  • News
    Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

    Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

    Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

    Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

    Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

    Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

    Appleby Show team rallies round as treasured event under threat

    Appleby Show team rallies round as treasured event under threat

    Big splash as Lazonby Pool reopens after revamp

    Big splash as Lazonby Pool reopens after revamp

    Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

    Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

    75-year-old cyclist dies after incident on Hartside

    75-year-old cyclist dies after incident on Hartside

    Overlooked elements that define great outdoor projects

    Overlooked elements that define great outdoor projects

    Donald Campbell’s Bluebird to return to Ullswater

    Donald Campbell’s Bluebird to return to Ullswater

  • Sport
    New boss revealed for Penrith AFC

    New boss revealed for Penrith AFC

    Penrith Panthers celebrate winning season

    Penrith Panthers celebrate winning season

    Darren Edmondson leaves Penrith AFC

    Darren Edmondson leaves Penrith AFC

    Lucy plays key role in county T20 triumph

    Lucy plays key role in county T20 triumph

    Gold for Keith in annual festival of orienteering

    Gold for Keith in annual festival of orienteering

    Cumberland and Westmorland wrestlers head to European championships

    Cumberland and Westmorland wrestlers head to European championships

    Kirkby Stephen Hockey Club win league title

    Kirkby Stephen Hockey Club win league title

    Dedicated Eden football volunteer wins major award

    Dedicated Eden football volunteer wins major award

    10-year-old footballer Casper Ostrowski snapped up by Morecambe

    10-year-old footballer Casper Ostrowski snapped up by Morecambe

  • Obituaries
  • Nostalgia
  • Online archive
  • Buy Photos
  • Buy your paper
  • North Lakes Living
No Result
View All Result
Cumberland and Westmorland Herald
  • News
    Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

    Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

    Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

    Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

    Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

    Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

    Appleby Show team rallies round as treasured event under threat

    Appleby Show team rallies round as treasured event under threat

    Big splash as Lazonby Pool reopens after revamp

    Big splash as Lazonby Pool reopens after revamp

    Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

    Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

    75-year-old cyclist dies after incident on Hartside

    75-year-old cyclist dies after incident on Hartside

    Overlooked elements that define great outdoor projects

    Overlooked elements that define great outdoor projects

    Donald Campbell’s Bluebird to return to Ullswater

    Donald Campbell’s Bluebird to return to Ullswater

  • Sport
    New boss revealed for Penrith AFC

    New boss revealed for Penrith AFC

    Penrith Panthers celebrate winning season

    Penrith Panthers celebrate winning season

    Darren Edmondson leaves Penrith AFC

    Darren Edmondson leaves Penrith AFC

    Lucy plays key role in county T20 triumph

    Lucy plays key role in county T20 triumph

    Gold for Keith in annual festival of orienteering

    Gold for Keith in annual festival of orienteering

    Cumberland and Westmorland wrestlers head to European championships

    Cumberland and Westmorland wrestlers head to European championships

    Kirkby Stephen Hockey Club win league title

    Kirkby Stephen Hockey Club win league title

    Dedicated Eden football volunteer wins major award

    Dedicated Eden football volunteer wins major award

    10-year-old footballer Casper Ostrowski snapped up by Morecambe

    10-year-old footballer Casper Ostrowski snapped up by Morecambe

  • Obituaries
  • Nostalgia
  • Online archive
  • Buy Photos
  • Buy your paper
  • North Lakes Living
No Result
View All Result
Cumberland and Westmorland Herald
No Result
View All Result
Home Ross Brewster

Comment: I refuse to succumb to the Black Friday con

by CWH
3 December 2023
in News, Ross Brewster
A A
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Nobbut Laiking, by Ross Brewster

It’s a giant con. A rip-off. I refuse to respond to any so-called Black Friday deals and bargains.

It used to be a single mad buying day. Now it goes on for weeks. It’s more like the November sales than one great end of the week spending splurge.

You can’t avoid the urgent treatises to buy now, don’t miss out and beat the end of the deal. I wonder, even in a cost-of-living crisis, how many buy things they don’t really need simply because they have been tempted by the advertising lure of Black Friday with its yellow stickers and cross-out prices.

Consumer advice group Which came up with some interesting facts and figures a couple of years ago when they tracked 208 items on sale in eight major stores over a six-month period. Only two per cent were at lower prices in the November sales.

My computer inbox has been flush with temptation this past fortnight. It’s all gone straight into trash. No, I don’t need that 66 inch telly. In fact I would need to move to a bigger property to fit it in. If you see a cut-price deal that’s too good to be true then 100 per cent I can say it is.

It doesn’t take long for the scammers to get in on something that smacks of profit. Some dodgy websites are around. They will most likely take your bank details, but no goods will arrive.

TikTok influencer Kat Leech tells her 40,000 followers impulse buying is the road to ruin. Don’t fall for the adverts. Don’t buy anything that has the spectre of Black Friday on it. 

So where did it all start? And why Black Friday which has a rather ominous ring to it?

Like many things, it probably began in the United States after Thanksgiving Day. The shops helped coin the description because for once their ledgers were in the black, showing a profit. Or it could have been the cops who blamed the chaos in the streets prompted by the rush to buy for their endless shifts.

You can’t blame businesses spotting a way to make a few quid, especially given the boom in online sales. But as shoppers we’ve got to learn a simple truth and just say no. Wait and that better deal could be round the corner in the new year.

Facing up to the benefits of the human touch

Two wins for the little guy. Hey, the worm is turning.

First came the reversal of the decision to close train station ticket offices. Train companies naturally want to cut their costs and with just 12 per cent of bookings made face to face, it seemed logical to push all the business online.

Except that 12 per cent added up to five million who find computers hopeless and prefer to buy tickets in person. Soon the rail authorities began getting the message that minorities matter. For once the rush to technology went wrong. A lot of us prefer the human touch. It’s not just that we prefer dealing with a person rather than a website, we are more likely to get the right advice and, in the case of the railways, someone to steer us through the complex ticketing policy.

The owners of Booths supermarkets saw that and a relatively modest tinkering with the tills, bringing back more human contact with their customers, proved a major public relations success that went nationwide. Most of their stores have done away with the emphasis on self-service.

Booths today, the banks and GPs tomorrow? Sadly no. But at least the little guy has enjoyed one moment in the sun.

It’s a matter of importance

Residents of the village of Twyford in Hampshire have won a 12-month battle with the local council over a mis-placed apostrophe. Speaking as a bit of a punctuation fanatic I say good on them.

What does a simple apostrophe matter? It can alter the whole sense of a word or a sentence. Councils are notorious for getting them wrong then claiming their mistakes are deliberate to assist postal deliveries. Modern computer systems can do wonderful things, but they are rubbish at spelling and punctuation.

The villagers have got their St Mary’s Terrace back. There is of course a simple answer. Just call it St Mary Terrace. No need for apostrophe wars and everyone satisfied.

It reminds me of a newspaper I did some writing for several years ago. It was notorious for its mis-spellings. Every week a copy of the paper would be shoved through the office letterbox, errors precisely marked in green ink.

A local schoolteacher was the prime suspect. A tyrant of the incorrect semi-colon and erroneous gerund. The green ink deliveries stopped suddenly the week his death notice appeared in the newspaper.

Obsessive behaviour perhaps. But I empathised with him to a degree. In fact I often carried a piece of chalk in my pocket to correct some of the more glaring errors on pub and café noticeboards. Companions looked away in embarrassment while I rubbed out unnecessary apostrophes.

You’ll be glad to hear that eventually I got a life, and put away the chalk for good.

Tags: premium

Related Posts

Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair
Latest

Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

16 May 2025
Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith
Latest

Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

16 May 2025
Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks
Latest

Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

16 May 2025
Appleby Show team rallies round as treasured event under threat
Farm and Countryside

Appleby Show team rallies round as treasured event under threat

16 May 2025
Big splash as Lazonby Pool reopens after revamp
News

Big splash as Lazonby Pool reopens after revamp

16 May 2025
Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award
News

Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

16 May 2025
No Result
View All Result

Stay connected

Facebook Twitter Instagram

Most popular

Penrith Panthers celebrate winning season

Penrith Panthers celebrate winning season

16 May 2025
Overlooked elements that define great outdoor projects

Overlooked elements that define great outdoor projects

14 May 2025
Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

Man arrested after police drugs raid in Penrith

16 May 2025
Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

Hedgehog Bookshop nominated for national award

16 May 2025
Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

Appleby flood scheme work to pause for town’s horse fair

16 May 2025
Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

Man fined after abandoning car at Penrith Railway Station for several weeks

16 May 2025
Cumberland and Westmorland Herald Logo

33 Middlegate
Penrith
Cumbria
CA11 7SY

Phone: 01768 862313
Email: news@cwherald.com

Registered in England as Barrnon Media Limited. No: 12475190
VAT registration number: 343486488

Explore

  • News
  • Sport
  • Farming
  • Property
  • Obituaries
  • Nostalgia
  • Your view

Useful links

  • Contact us
  • Photosales
  • Online archive
  • Buy your paper
  • Digital edition
  • North Lakes Living
  • Advertise
  • About us

Follow us on

© Barrnon Media Limited 2020

Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Cookie Policy

This website and its associated newspaper are members of the Independent Press Standards Organisation
IPSO Logo
Review Your Cart
0
Discount
Add Coupon Code
Subtotal
Total Installment Payments
Bundle Discount
Checkout

 
0
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Obituaries
  • Nostalgia
  • Online archive
  • more
    • North Lakes Living
    • Buy Photos
    • Buy your paper
    • About us
    • Contact us

© 2020 Cumberland & Westmorland Herald