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thatguygreg t1_iz6mrrp wrote

Looks like the areas behind the counters were all swept out into the main aisle to make it easier to pick it all up by some main crew - no way the employee areas were spic & span at closing any day, never mind Xmas Eve.

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CheshireCatastrophe t1_iz8rs7q wrote

I couldn't agree more - people/customers weren't causing the mess but were the havoc coming in crowds, and the employees desperately having to serve them would have dropped the boxes that things were in behind them before they stored them as they usually might, paper ends up on the floor too, it's incredibly easy to do and for sure more manageable than dealing with people raging while you try to stay organised.

Been there, done that, bought the t shirt

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Mindful_319 t1_iz74s5d wrote

While in college I signed up to work at Macy's during the holiday season (they were hiring seasonally for the longer hours). I lasted 1 day in the Juniors clothing section. It was an absolute disaster. Clothes and hangers just thrown on the floor in piles everywhere. Literally. I was there until almost 2 am fixing everything. I hated everyone so much that night.

I quit the next day.

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andagainandagain- t1_iz7a4i7 wrote

I worked at a similar store around ten years ago. We would find dirty diapers stuffed into displays, chewing gum stuck to items, this list goes on. People are gross.

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_duber t1_iz7sqcr wrote

I've found used tampons, very dirty underwear and a crack pipe in a Kohls fitting room. This Kohls was in a nice area of Connecticut

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PvtHudson t1_iz9ro51 wrote

Reminds me of when I worked at Staples during back to school. Line was all around the store and I also worked the closing shift till around 1 AM cleaning the place up. Not sure how Macy's is, but the air conditioning in Staples gets turned off after the store is closed.

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Diva2themax t1_izd724p wrote

I lasted 2 weeks working in the infant dept for the holidays. It was a hot mess w/ no supervision. I would end up hiding in McDonald's & just kind of making myself look busy tidying here & there. First job ever & I knew immediately Macy's was not for me. The one time I was made to use the register I was soo nervous & it was of course a Saturday in December. A nightmare.

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RedditSkippy t1_iz6dshr wrote

It’s not too much of a stretch from looking like that every day, now.

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Duchock t1_iz70j2e wrote

Absolutely... The interiors look pretty close to this even today! The decorations are certainly more lavish, but the counters and general decor looks spot on.

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ChrisNYC70 t1_iz7f87c wrote

I bet it stinks to high heaven of cigarette smoke.

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jeniesque t1_iz7lzr5 wrote

This doesn’t look like a photo from 1948.

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Postalsock t1_iz8y6sx wrote

Colorized. Most color cameras didn't have this detail at the time. This was a good black and white photograph that had color added to it.

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King-of-New-York t1_iz91v7f wrote

It’s not the color IMO it’s the store employee wearing what appears to be blue jeans in 1948.

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mullse01 t1_iz94527 wrote

…you mean the pants originally designed as workwear, 75 years before this photo was taken?

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King-of-New-York t1_iz9956q wrote

Typical Reddit, you ran so fast to put out the snark you forgot to tie your own shoelaces.

Blue jeans as regular everyday fashion for the masses did not come about until the late 1960’s, most low end retail establishments not until the 1990’s.

Oh look; A source that’s not Wikipedia.

https://www.vogue.fr/fashion/article/vogue-encyclopaedia-the-history-of-denim-jeans

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mullse01 t1_iz9j6r0 wrote

…except we’re not talking about everyday fashion for the masses.

The man in the photo is (presumably) a custodian—he’s not wearing jeans as a fashion statement, he’s wearing them as workwear.

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bsanchey t1_iz6bbpr wrote

Lots of last minute shoppers

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[deleted] t1_iz6nrk0 wrote

Poor guy is probably thinking "Can I just get the hell out of here?"

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squall571 t1_iz6n1oj wrote

The stuff sold at Macy’s back then was probably decent, now it’s mostly junk.

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yasth t1_iz79s94 wrote

Eh I mean it cost a lot more. I mean they were pushing 10% of household income for clothes and down to 3% now and for more pieces. The past 80 years are basically the story of money shifting out of clothes and food and into housing, non labor services(Amazon prime bills are way up since the 1940s) and electronics.

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Pennwisedom t1_iz89u61 wrote

Damn those 1940s people with their cheap Amazon prime purchases.

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PostureGai t1_iz91cbw wrote

>non labor services(Amazon prime bills

Huh? Most Amazon purchases are goods.

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yasth t1_iz9drw5 wrote

Amazon itself is a goods provider (actually it is a cloud computing company with a break even goods company attached, but I digress). Prime is a non labor service as it provides free shipping and entertainment.

I originally wrote cell phone bills if you'd like that. One important thing is that until the 40s there were more domestic servants than shop clerks. We went from direct employment that was pretty closely calibrated to work put in (even in the service sector, e.g. pay a cobbler more to repair a more difficult to repair shoe) to weird relationships like paying monthly for the fractional work of the software and network engineers that let you have MS office.

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PostureGai t1_iz9j17b wrote

Well if you wanna bifurcate it like that I'm sure the Prime subscription fees are way below what they gross in selling consumer goods.

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HeavyMessing t1_iz7hwkj wrote

So they were goddamned animals back then, too. nice

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switch8000 t1_iz7svzj wrote

Years ago, maybe 8-10, there was a holiday season where Macy’s was open 24 hours a day. It was amazing to shop at midnight, no crowds, and you could just kinda wander around and enjoy the architecture and atmosphere.

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QuickRelease10 t1_iz9cqvm wrote

Celebrating that Post-WW2 world with some mindless consumerism and ransacking a store.

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finebydesign t1_iz9qzc2 wrote

ALso a hellhole the day AFTER Christmas. Soooo many people returning shit and spedning gift cards. It is unbelieveable.

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sventhewalrus t1_izab7og wrote

If you posted this photo somewhere with no caption, people would say "wow, people these days have no manners! this wouldn't have happened back in my day!" and it would be hillarious

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whiteKreuz t1_iz7krcj wrote

Not the Christmas spirit at all. Rather the consumerist spirit that unfortunately has consumed this holiday.

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PostureGai t1_iz91eby wrote

Consumerism has always been part of the fun, Ebeneezer.

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Ok-Strain-9847 t1_iz67fy6 wrote

Exactly the same as it would look today, except several cases would be cleaned out and several displays would either be stolen or on fire.

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nonlawyer t1_iz6he15 wrote

Yes I can confirm this is accurate, every time I go to Macy’s it is on fire

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