Grocery Retail Archives - Page 34 of 72 - I Hate Working In Retail

By

Sainsbury’s Sorry For ‘Racist’ 12 Years A Slave Costume Used To Promote DVD

Sainsbury’s has apologised after it was accused of racism for using a slave costume to encourage customers to buy a copy of Best Picture Oscar-winning film 12 Years A Slave.

This image of the costume on a mannequin emblazoned with stickers saying ‘NEW’, was posted to Twitter by a surprised shopper who said it was “in very poor taste”.

sainsburys slave outfit

The outfit appeared next to DVD and Blu Ray copies of the film
 

The costume features the black trousers and beige shirt worn in the film by slave Solomon Northup, played by Chiwetel Ejiofor.

It carries a price tag the same as the cost of the film on DVD, implying the costume itself was not for sale but was only promoting the film.

The suggestion that a costume was an appropriate way of promoting a harrowing film about slavery in pre-Civil War American failed to get much support on social media.

One tweeter described it as “shocking”.

Another asked: “How is this EVER ok? Appropriating black struggle as a look, nice #racism”

How is this EVER ok? @SainsburysPR http://t.co/3PPryj4PMH pic.twitter.com/a6eyKXYpbd Appropriating black struggle as a look, nice #Racism

— Sam Ambreen (@SamAmbreen) May 19, 2014

Sainsbury’s said the mannequin, which was on display in the Heyford Hill, Oxford branch, “should never have gone up in the first place”.

In a statement, the store told The Huffington Post UK: “We can only apologise.  It’s been taken down from the Heyford Hill store and clearly should never have gone up in the first place.”

The Twitter account @sainsburyspr has been forced to repeat this line to a lot of people asking about why the costume went up.

twitter

The film, directed by British filmmaker Steve McQueen, came out on DVD and Blu Ray in the UK last Monday.

 

Sourced from the Huffintonpost.com

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

Shopping combinations to completely freak out a cashier

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  

By

Comcast Cruises Past Verizon, Walmart Upsets Bank Of America In Worst Company Quarterfinal Action!

wcia2014header

Worst Company In America Quarterfinal action kicked off this morning with a doozy of a double-header, one resulting in one of the tournament’s most decisive victories and the other going down to the wire in this year’s latest buzzer-beater bout.

comcastvz

COMCAST VS. VERIZON With both contenders sporting red and black trunks, we’d worried it might have been difficult to distinguish between the two pugilists. But once Comcast unleashed its trademarked Blast Plus package on poor little Verizon, there was no mistaking who was doing the pummeling and who was the pummelee.

It’s been four years since Comcast last took home the Golden Poo, but like Philly’s own Rocky Balboa training out of the spotlight in snowy Krasnogourbinsk for his fight against Ivan Drago, the Kabletown Krew has only gotten leaner, stronger, and more fierce since its last win. And that hard work showed with today’s 83-17 crushing of Verizon.

Comcast may want to brush up with another training montage, as it still has to go up against the victor of tomorrow’s bout between upstart rookie SeaWorld and WCIA vet Chase.

Walmartbofa

BANK OF AMERICA VS. WALMART: In each of the last three years, Bank of America cruised to the WCIA Final Death Match, only to lose out each time; first to the oil-spillers at BP and then twice more to nickel-and-diming, customer-hating video game giant EA. With EA eliminated in a Round One upset, it seemed like BofA’s path to the Death Match was clear, and that the bank had to be considered a favorite to contend for the Poo.

But no one counted on Walmart.

The nation’s largest retailer can always be relied upon to compete in our little bit of March insanity, but it rarely makes it beyond the second round. So WCIA oddsmakers (not that we encourage gambling) had unanimously favored BofA to win by at least 10 to 15 points.

But in the third match-up to be decided by around one percentage point (and the first such match to not involve Time Warner Cable), the big bad bank was sent packing by Walmart.

Was the Walmart victory a fluke, or does the mega-tailer have the support it needs to keep going in the tournament? The answer to that question likely depends on whether it faces Monsanto or Time Warner Cable in the Final Four.

Time to print out the bracket and pretend to your friends that you predicted it would turn out this way:

2014wciabracketqfinals1

Sourced from theconsumerist.com

Share the joy
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •