The True Origin Of The Term 'Black Friday'

WNYC | Nov 29, 2013

Many people assume the term “Black Friday” comes from the massive shopping day, the day after Thanksgiving, that puts retailers back in the black.

But as linguist Ben Zimmer tells Here & Now‘s Meghna Chakrabarti, the term can be traced to the frustration of factory managers in the 1950s, and the frustration of Philadelphia traffic police in the 1960s.

Zimmer says the rebranded term referring to retailers turning a profit didn’t appear until the 1980s.

Guest

Copyright 2013 WBUR-FM. To see more, visit http://www.wbur.org.

WNYC Homepage - Top Stories

'It's chaos': LIRR commuters face shutdown, workarounds on first weekday of strike

The History Wars and America at 250, with the Historian Jill Lepore

10-Question Quiz: American History

Democrats make a run for Stefanik's seat

On an off-Broadway stage, actors bring immigrant stories alive and spark public debate

YOU ARE ONLINE