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I'm confused by this whole story. if i read it correctly, the person who wrote it is at least the 11 or 12th person to arrive. There are already 2 lines formed and they picked one without talking to the folks standing in either line? How early did the people across the street at the old store get there? They mention the 70 year old people were there at about 2 or 3am, and then someone in front of them took a pic of 2 people lined up across the street, but don't say what time the people across the street were there? Then before the shop opens, "the first guy (employee) says "The line is over there" pointing across the street, and we immediately start arguing with him. None of us move".
This is the quote from the article that i don't understand: "The manager shows up, and immediately says the line is across the street, it's "my shop, my rules"...being super rude to everyone in line. He looks at us and says "I'm looking at all of your faces, and none of you are getting shoes". He tried to tell us that lines go over there, but we knew firsthand from lining up previously that wasn't the case." SO the people in the original line are trying to tell the dude running the store that they know where the line is and he doesn't?
I am not from the city, and very rarely line up for stuff (the closest store that actually gets anything decent is like an hour and a half away and they got their own folks they need to take care of so i figure its all a waste for me anyway), but i find it hard to believe that this couldn't have been resolved BEFORE the "resell cartel" even showed up when there was like 12 people spread across 2 lines.
I think the manager could have tried a little harder to make it right for everyone, but i suspect there was more drama with the line closest to the store and the employees than was alluded to in the writeup. The article is obviously biased, but this is what i take away from reading it and trying to break it down. Either way, it sucks that not everyone was able to get what they wanted from the release.
This is the quote from the article that i don't understand: "The manager shows up, and immediately says the line is across the street, it's "my shop, my rules"...being super rude to everyone in line. He looks at us and says "I'm looking at all of your faces, and none of you are getting shoes". He tried to tell us that lines go over there, but we knew firsthand from lining up previously that wasn't the case." SO the people in the original line are trying to tell the dude running the store that they know where the line is and he doesn't?
I am not from the city, and very rarely line up for stuff (the closest store that actually gets anything decent is like an hour and a half away and they got their own folks they need to take care of so i figure its all a waste for me anyway), but i find it hard to believe that this couldn't have been resolved BEFORE the "resell cartel" even showed up when there was like 12 people spread across 2 lines.
I think the manager could have tried a little harder to make it right for everyone, but i suspect there was more drama with the line closest to the store and the employees than was alluded to in the writeup. The article is obviously biased, but this is what i take away from reading it and trying to break it down. Either way, it sucks that not everyone was able to get what they wanted from the release.