Best Buy In Illinois Catches Fire, Then Floods
A fire broke out in a Best Buy in Quincy, Illinois, over the weekend, and although the sprinkler system put it out promptly, it flooded the entire store in an inch and a half of water. The store manager told the local news station that it would take a few days to clean up and restock inventory—but we prefer to imagine that there's going to be an awful lot of CompUSA-style "AS IS" deals in the Quincy Best Buy very soon.
(Thanks to the anonymous Quincy Best Buy employee!)
"Fire at Best Buy" [WGEM]
(Photo: Brett L.)
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Comments:
@Moosehawk: "What do you kids have to say for yourselves?"
"At least we weren't stealing the products"
@BayStateDarren: No, it's pronounced KWIN-see, unlike the one in MA. (I grew up in the area and lived in the town for several years after returning to IL after college.)
I find this to be bad foreshadowing of this particular Best Buy. It's a brand new store in an area of new development (being built up right off the interstate off-ramp), but it's extremely tiny as it is. When I was back in the area at Christmas (my family all live in that area), we were surprised at how small the store was and how inefficient the entire check-out process was. They have the check-out area in a tiny, tiny corner that is partially walled off, so people line up perpendicular to the two cashier desks and right in front of the customer service desk, completely blocking that area while waiting to check out. It was built completely inadequately to begin with and was finished just a few short months back.
(And their hiring process was unprofessional and insanely disorganized from what I heard from friends and family there.) We went into the place once and refuse to ever set foot in there again.
i work at borders and currently in the inventory room are some books that explode...they're like lame bargain books or holiday gifty books....but basically they have a light to illuminate the pop out illustrations....but we can't sell them, or send them back, or throw them away, so they (exploding, flammable) just sit in cardboard boxes until presumably they will be sold to walmart
First commenters:
Incidentally, this is actually the origin of the term 'fire sale'. The original fire sale was exactly that, discounted items after a fire in a store.
[en.wikipedia.org]
"According to Dictionary.com, the term originated in 1890-95 in New Zealand. The fire at Whitcombe and Tombs in Dunedin resulted in a "Fire Sale.""
@Usama & @Craig: Completely agree. What does this add to the site?
@JediQ: Are you suggesting that the only opinions welcome are the ones that agree with what the editors have to say? That would make for a very boring comment section, wouldn't it? The posts by Usama and Craig weren't useless, as they actually provide feedback to the editors about the content of this site. Your post, on the other hand... well, I hope you can understand the irony.
Well let's see.
a.) It's about Best Buy, a popular target on this website.
b.) It's letting the people who live in that area know to be wary about as-is goods from that Best Buy.
c.) It's letting anyone who is actually looking for a fire sale in that area that there should be one coming up soon.
See, that wasn't so hard. Anything else?
@wellfleet: That depends on how BBY chooses to handle it. When I worked for Circuit City several years back we were closed for several days when the area was without power after a particularly vicious storm and everyone scheduled to work that day got paid as if we were open.
Some of the more complicated cardboard displays for dvds or cds have battery powered spinning parts, there may have been a short in one of those.
Well-placed tag; this is definitely Wrath of God type stuff.
Maybe it's retribution for all those Easter egg hunts.
The name "Best Buy" actually came about because of a fire sale--except that it was a tornado. BB used to be "The Sound of Music" and was a local chain in the Twin Cities. A tornado hit the Roseville, MN store in 1981, and they held a tent sale to get rid of the storm-damaged merchandise. The sale went so well that the owner decided that going after the low end of the market worked better, and in 1983 renamed the chain and opened the first superstore.
@Craig: It's relevant because many of us hate Best Buy, and appreciate the whole karma thing. Personally, I quietly chuckle at news of this nature. If it had been WalMart, I might have actually giggled...
@Craig: Because it's good news that there's one less "Best" Buy open to screw citizen consumers?
Seriously, when a "Best" Buy closes, an angel gets it's wings. Tuuly this is an Act of God.
@WayneB: Hell, those things are BULLETproof. Many a serious wound has been created attempting to get to the goodies inside - where's a class action attorney when you need one?
























Wouldn't be the first "fire-sale" Best Buy has had...