Though the shopping list might be shorter and the gifts more practical, Black Friday shoppers proved that the show will go on, even in a tanking economy.
At the Kohl's store in Roseville, shoppers showed up as early as 1 a.m., some watching DVDs while sitting in their cars. By opening time at 4 a.m., more than 400 people snaked around the store.
High school students Colin Marrin and Jeremiah Cornehl ate their Thanksgiving Day dinners at their neighborhood Best Buy in Apple Valley, ensuring they'd be near the front of the line when doors opened Friday, the traditional kickoff to retailers' crucial holiday shopping season.
Sales and traffic figures for the post-Thanksgiving shopping event won't be released for days, but an early reading shows that consumers are being more deliberate with their spending, and they're walking away if deals aren't good enough.
Many Twin Cities parking lots had cleared out by 9 a.m., and some shoppers were spotted walking away from stores empty-handed.
"I'm referring to them as hit-and-run shoppers," said Britt Beemer of America's Research Group, who spent Thursday and Friday surveying shoppers nationwide. "If it was available, they bought it. If it wasn't, they were gone."
Many merchants earn 25 to 40 percent of their annual sales in November and December, and the mood on Black Friday -- so named because it was the day retailers would first show a profit, or go "into the black," for the year -- tends to set the tone for the season. Analysts are predicting one of the slowest holiday seasons in decades, as recession-weary consumers worry about job losses, credit-card debt, and falling investments tied to the stock market.
Aware that consumers' wallets are being stretched thin, some Twin Cities retailers highlighted functional items rather than luxuries on Friday. At the Herberger's in Roseville, a stack of slow cookers on sale for $29.99 was displayed near the entrance.