2008 rant

jas72 said:
THEY ARE IN THE SHOPS????

*wants to buy one now.

Some people need them for work. My job is finance and I usually need one from mid september. Kylie is much more interesting on my office wall than the works calendar.

But I do understand your rant.


Well our work ones are dull too (didn't get any this year actually) but I would still wait until December to buy one personally, there will still be plenty around in the Christmas rush.
 
i kind of agree, it really ****** me off that the christmas adverts start in october then the summer holiday adverts start on boxing day. if i had my way i'd ban any mention of christmas until december. bah humbug.

however at work we have been sorting our budgets for 2008 since early august so we've thinking about next year for a while.
 
nin9abadga said:
i kind of agree, it really ****** me off that the christmas adverts start in october then the summer holiday adverts start on boxing day. if i had my way i'd ban any mention of christmas until december. bah humbug.

however at work we have been sorting our budgets for 2008 since early august so we've thinking about next year for a while.
I bet your the one that runs around a packed shopping center in December trying to get presents in that one, single day.


edit: I get wrapping paper etc in the Boxing Day sales and stick it in the loft ;)
 
blighter said:
I bet your the one that runs around a packed shopping center in December trying to get presents in that one, single day.

i won't deny that i've done it before :D all part of the fun. but a month is plenty of time to organise stuff for people, especially when i can get stuff off the t'internet.

i find it takes the gloss of christmas itself for me, a massive long build up then it's over in a day.
 
blighter said:
I bet your the one that runs around a packed shopping center in December trying to get presents in that one, single day.

Personally I like to know what I'm buying then go out and get it over a few days. Have almost come to the one day rush before now, but not quite.

My brother once managed to get a shop to re-open on Christmas Eve after the owner had locked up. He knew exactly what he wanted, banged on the door to get the guys attention then persuaded him to open up again. Was another sale for him afterall...
(Twas a replica Ferrari/Michael Schumacher F1 car for me....)
 
Azagoth said:
Hasn't Harrods already got the Christmas stuff up? I'm sure I heard it had on some Talksport show.

Yeah, we went to London last week and took the kids to see the Harrods xmas display before heading downstairs to buy some Krispy Creme Donuts :D
 
I have to plan the holiday list for next year and requests for each member of staff's mandatory fortnight need to be in mid-september so I can ensure that there are enough staff by the time we've got round to weeks 4 & 5 (end of the year/beginning of 08) so I'm already using a 2008 calander, though I printed mine off lotus notes rather than buy it!
 
My local Tesco putting the back to school stuff out about 2 months before the kids even broke up from school, let alone started their holiday was one of the most ridiculous things ive ever come across.

There should be laws to punish people for this kind of stuff. Im thinking cutting their hands off seems like a reasonable punishment?
 
Some things that are put on sale early, like calendars I think is fine, you need to plan ahead etc, but greeting cards is what really gets on my nerves.
I used to work in a card shop years ago, and to make room for Easter/Christmas/Mothers Day cards and so on, half the usual stock had to be removed from sale and packed away,
so for probably 6 months of the year, the selection of normal cards was pretty poor.
 
CChrisca said:
Was in Next at Bluewater yesterday - they had their Christmas cards on sale :rolleyes:
Some people seem to manage to send millions of cards to their "friends", many of which I assume they have never met as there isn't enough time of day for that many meetings. They then spend every waking hour writing cards, so this may help spread the load.

Things like booking christmas parties seems resonable, given that you need to make sure you've booked it, and then can organise everything else, as does selling calendars as people book holidays etc the previous year.
 
Back
Top Bottom