New York shoppers glum at Toys ‘R’ Us

Author: Agencies

At the Toys ‘R’ Us in Times Square, in the heart of Manhattan, all is more or less normal — noisy gizmos for sale drown out the store’s background music, and employees stand at the ready.

But the few New Yorkers and tourists browsing the aisles on Thursday are in disbelief that the wonderland of their youth is closing down.

Toys ‘R’ Us announced that it would liquidate its US operations — shutting down all 735 stores in a move that could slash 33,000 jobs, and finally falling victim to heavy debts and the internet buying culture.

“It’s like an end of an era,” Jorardo, a 30-year-old Brooklyn resident, told AFP, saying he has been shopping at the retail chain since he was four.

“It’s like a big chunk of my childhood is gone,” he said. “It was not all about shopping, it was the experience, going in — it was the best place to hang out.”

“Where does a kid have to go now?” he said, lamenting that the youth of today will not know brick-and-mortar shops, and instead will turn to online retailers like Amazon.

‘A loss’

At this three-story shop in one of New York’s splashiest neighborhoods, many display cases and shelves sit empty. One employee doodles on a blank sheet of paper.

Roger Malone, who lives in Harlem, ventures into the store, looking for superhero figures from the hit film “Black Panther” for his three children.

“I am going to miss it,” he said. “I bring my kids, my daughters, and they love it.”

“It’s going to be a loss because they are not going to get a physical experience to come into a store.”

The chain saw the first signs of trouble in Manhattan in 2015, when the company shuttered its Times Square flagship, which had featured a giant Ferris wheel and huge Barbie dream house.

The firm then opened a smaller store in the area.

Stiff competition

Thirty blocks south, at Union Square, the impact of the online shopping revolution is even more acute.

The Babies ‘R’ Us — the baby brand launched in 1996 — store is nothing but a shadow of its former self, with banners boasting discounts up to 60 percent.

Cardboard boxes litter the store, while some areas are vacant, save for a few stray strollers discounted up to 40 percent.a
Employees roam the aisles and chat in small groups, but say they have been told to shy away from media.

Published in Daily Times, March 17th 2018.

Share
Leave a Comment

Recent Posts

  • Pakistan

Labour Day — A reminder for better facilities to workers

When international labor community was observing International Labour Day, scores of illiterate laborers in Pakistan…

7 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Xinjiang enjoys social stability, religious freedom and economic development

A delegation of Pakistani elite youth which recently visited Urumqi, Kashgar, and Atush said that…

7 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Pakistan, Turkey, Iran, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan delegation visits Beijing

A delegation comprised over 15 participants from the Economic Cooperation Organization Science Foundation (ECOSF) including…

7 hours ago
  • Pakistan

COMSTECH partneres with Chinese University for training program in China

The Committee on Science and Technology of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (COMSTECH) has partnered…

7 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Street gang war leaves shopkeeper dead in Lahore’s Model Town

A cross-firing between two rival groups on Model Town Link Raod claimed the life of…

7 hours ago
  • Pakistan

Woman kidnaps her own son in Narowal

A woman with the help of her lover kidnapped her own son in Narowal, police…

7 hours ago