Super Bowl of shopping is more like a scrimmage

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

NEW YORK — The annual ritual of Black Friday, as we know it, is over.

NEW YORK — The annual ritual of Black Friday, as we know it, is over.

Gone are the throngs of frenzied shoppers camping out for days ahead of the big sales bonanza on the day after Thanksgiving. And forget the fisticuffs over flat-screen TVs.

Instead, stores around the country had sparse parking lots, calm, orderly lines, and modest traffic. Black Friday, which traditionally is the biggest shopping day of the year, almost looked like a normal shopping day. And not every shopper was happy about that.

In Denver, for instance, Susan Montoya had nearly an entire Kmart to herself Friday morning. Montoya half-heartedly flipped through a rack of girls’ holiday party dresses and looked down the store’s empty aisles. “There’s no one out here!” she said. “This is sad.”

Black Friday for decades was a rite of passage for U.S. shoppers. But in recent years, retailers have tried to capture holiday sales earlier and earlier.

They’ve started offering mega-discounts in stores and online earlier instead of waiting until Black Friday. And in the last few years, they’ve opened locations on Thanksgiving Day, a once-sacred holiday from retail.

That has led to the “graying” of Black Friday. According to the National Retail Federation, the nation’s largest retail trade group, nearly 60 percent of shoppers had already started holiday buying by Nov. 10.

The retail group expected about 30 million people shopped on Thanksgiving and 99.7 million on Black Friday.