Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Delaying Xmas shmaltz isn't denying Christmas
Shoppers Drug Mart was still selling off half-price Halloween candy when its stores started playing Christmas songs. This led to a small-scale consumer revolt, mostly through social media. And this led to a Nov. 2 announcement via the chain's Facebook page that all Christmas music would be temporarily suspended. "We do take customer feedback to heart, and it does lead to change," read the notice.
The response was immediate, though generally polite and Canadian. Some saw the Jingle Bells crackdown as Grinchy. ("I guess the scrooges win again," groused one online commentator.) Others applauded the retailer for listening and responding to their customers' concerns. ("There is a Santa Claus after all," wrote another.)
In a followup statement to the Toronto Star, a Shoppers spokesperson made it clear that the store hasn't actually cancelled Christmas 2012. The Xmas tunes will be back, just closer to the big day.
Still, the debate goes on, often with the holiday-song faction sounding as if Shoppers were taking away small kiddies' toys rather than delaying the endless, inevitable loop of Little Drummer Boy and Deck the Halls.
Most of the complainers aren't stridently anti-Christmas. For many people, it's about timing. It's not Christmas that bothers them: It's Christmas in November. Others want to banish the songs not because they're "politically incorrect," but because they're musically excruciating, at least in their bland pop-music form.
Some commentators reference what was a long-running though unofficial Canadian tradition that hardcore Yule displays should wait until after Remembrance Day, to avoid overshadowing the Nov. 11 event.
I'm a Christmas lover from way back, and these all seem like valid points to me. But other festive fans view Shoppers' decision to give in to customer complaints as an escalation of "the war on Christmas" -- you know, that popular idea that secular humanists are out to steal everyone's Silent Night and Christmas cards and roast beast.
How about this, though? Maybe the decision to delay Christmas music could be seen as supporting the holiday. Maybe the best way to honour Christmas is to see it as something special, something worth setting apart, rather than an overwrought consume-a-thon that occupies one-sixth of the retail year.
The major western Christian denominations, which are on record as being pretty pro-Christmas, consider the beginning of the Christmas season to be four Sundays before Dec. 25, which this year will fall on Dec. 2. This Advent period is considered long enough to allow celebrants to spiritually prepare for the coming of the Christ Child.
Do we really need more time than that to stock up on wrapping paper and milk chocolate reindeer while humming along to a hip-hop take on Silver Bells? You don't see "Advent creep" taking over the Christian liturgical calendar. So why is Christmas creep covering the mall?
If stores keep trying to outdo each other in premature jollity, Christmas merchandising will end up on a collision course with the ramped-up commercialization of Halloween. At some point, jack-o'-lantern displays will crash into racks of Santa Claus hats, like some crazed retail re-enactment of Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas.
Businesses aren't going to stop, as long as they believe that shoppers have a Pavlovian response to shiny red and green objects and easy-listening versions of O Tannenbaum. Consumers will have to be the ones to back away from this stretched-out, over-advertised, ultimately cheapened Christmas season. The Shoppers Drug Mart protest could be a quiet step in that direction.
alison.gillmor@freepress.mb.ca
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition November 10, 2012 E3
Fact Check
Have you found an error, or know of something we’ve missed in one of our stories? Please use the form below and let us know.
More Life & Style
- Back to Top
- Return to Life & Style
Poll
Most Popular Life & Style
- 'The bull's-eye for awful tornadoes': Oklahoma gets an outsized share of natural disasters
- Ocean fertilization project leader fired, but First Nation still backs iron dump
- Vancouver Aquarium breeds endangered frogs, plans to release amphibians
- CT-scans: weigh negative and positive effects
- Christian gathering will kick off new football stadium
- Remember walking to school? Well, your kids probably don't
- Toxic drug that was abandoned in development offered for sale online to athletes
- Pope and the devil: Francis' fascination with Satan leads to suspicion he performed exorcism
- How sweet it isn't: Some cockroaches evolve to avoid poison - in just 5 years
- Baker's cyst A sign of something else
- Doc's memoir portrays ERs as frantic, funny, frightening ... but never dull
- Magazine's creator says style has no size
- The end of the credit card?
- Manitoba's changing spiritual landscape
- Warm weather with cool breaks forecast for Canada this summer
- Smoke sales forbidden at pharmacies, health facilities starting May 31
- US killer tornado had power of many Hiroshima atomic bombs
- Canada lifts lifetime ban on gay men giving blood, but some restrictions remain
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- In unusual pattern, Oklahoma tornado tracked path of 1999 monster twister with record winds
- 25 cents to wash blood off your T-shirt
- HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY, you nasty, miserable...
- Doc's memoir portrays ERs as frantic, funny, frightening ... but never dull
- Magazine's creator says style has no size
- The end of the credit card?
- Manitoba's changing spiritual landscape
- Astronaut Chris Hadfield back on Earth after five-month mission in space
- Possible BlackBerry tablet steals the show at company's annual conference
- CBC hockey commentator, daughter hope story helps
- Warm weather with cool breaks forecast for Canada this summer
- CT-scans: weigh negative and positive effects
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- Ebook sales plateauing: BookNet Canada report
- Vancouver Aquarium breeds endangered frogs, plans to release amphibians
- Doc's memoir portrays ERs as frantic, funny, frightening ... but never dull
- DeSoto's lives again ... for one cherry night
- The end of the credit card?
- Warm weather with cool breaks forecast for Canada this summer
- Canada lifts lifetime ban on gay men giving blood, but some restrictions remain
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Manitoba's changing spiritual landscape
- Skin picking gets status as distinct disorder, should help sufferers access help
- THE HEALTHY PLATE: Recipe for fresh summer rolls with spicy peanut dipping sauce
- Magazine's creator says style has no size
- Doc's memoir portrays ERs as frantic, funny, frightening ... but never dull
- Biomedical engineer designs exercises, tests to battle Alzheimer's
- Vitamin C and lysine proven to keep arteries healthy
- Dogs can experience separation anxiety and depression just like humans
- CBC hockey commentator, daughter hope story helps
- 25 cents to wash blood off your T-shirt
- Adrenal fatigue can have significant impact
- DeSoto's lives again ... for one cherry night
- Kidney problems price we pay for progress
- Explore Desire seminars to 'push the boundaries'
Ads by Google












You can comment on most stories on winnipegfreepress.com. You can also agree or disagree with other comments. All you need to do is register and/or login and you can join the conversation and give your feedback.
Have Your Say
New to commenting? Check out our Frequently Asked Questions.
The Winnipeg Free Press does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comment, you agree to our Terms and Conditions. These terms were revised effective April 16, 2010.