The Musings of Jaime David
The Musings of Jaime David
@jaimedavid.blog@jaimedavid.blog

The writings of some random dude on the internet

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Tag: retail etiquette

  • Guidelines to Being a Customer in 2025: Content Creators Filming In Stores (Inspired by BlackbusterCritic)

    Guidelines to Being a Customer in 2025: Content Creators Filming In Stores (Inspired by BlackbusterCritic)

    There’s something undeniably surreal about walking into a store in 2025 and realizing you’ve just entered a live set for the latest TikTok or YouTube “content creation” stunt. It’s like the aisles have become a reality show stage where unsuspecting shoppers and employees are involuntary extras in someone else’s quest for internet fame. Filming in stores has become such a bizarre norm that the line between shopping and starring in a viral video has blurred—except nobody asked to be cast.

    It’s weird on multiple levels. First, it’s disruptive. You’re there to buy toothpaste, not be background noise for someone’s selfie cam or prank. Second, it’s invasive. Employees have a right to a workspace free from random recording, yet too often their day is hijacked by people chasing likes and views. And third, it’s just plain rude. Imagine if every trip to the grocery store felt like being under a microscope for a global audience judging your every move and mistake.

    For content creators who think filming in stores is the fast track to clout, here’s a 2025 customer guideline: get permission or take it elsewhere. Your viral moment isn’t worth turning a peaceful shopping trip into a chaotic circus. And for everyone else, the customer or employee, remember that sometimes the weirdest part of shopping isn’t the prices or the lines—it’s the people wielding phones like cameras on a reality show.

  • Guidelines to Being a Customer in 2025: Online Deals vs In-Store Shopping (Inspired by BlackbusterCritic)

    Guidelines to Being a Customer in 2025: Online Deals vs In-Store Shopping (Inspired by BlackbusterCritic)

    Remember when a deal was a deal, whether you clicked a button or walked into a store? Yeah, those days are long gone. In 2025, online deals have evolved into their own strange, exclusive universe that doesn’t always translate to the brick-and-mortar world. So before you march into a store waving your phone like a battle flag, expecting that magical 50% off deal, pause and remember: online deals are often just that—online.

    Retailers have gotten very clever. They use exclusive online discounts to drive traffic to their apps or websites, hoping you’ll order from your couch instead of dealing with the chaos of real aisles and other humans. Sometimes the fine print says “online only,” sometimes it’s buried in the terms and conditions like a digital Easter egg you’ll never find. Guess what? It’s on you, the customer, to know this. Showing up in-store with an online-only promo code and demanding the discount is basically the customer equivalent of yelling “I’m right!” at a heated family reunion—unproductive, embarrassing, and making everyone uncomfortable.

    And no, yelling at the cashier or calling corporate won’t miraculously unlock that online deal for you in person. Customer service reps have heard it all before and aren’t your personal discount genie. If you want that online-only price, click “Buy Now” online or learn to accept that sometimes, you pay full price for the convenience of touching and smelling the product first.

    So, here’s the 2025 customer lesson: online deals and in-store deals are often not interchangeable. They live in parallel discount dimensions, and crossing over without a portal (read: proper purchase channel) won’t work. If you want to play the deal game, learn the rules, or get used to paying more in person. Either way, don’t be that customer who drags employees into your online deal drama.