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  • 26
    Dec
    2012
    3:21pm, EST

    Boxing Day traditions: Shopping, hunting, and swimming are among Brits' picks

    Olivia Harris / Reuters

    Shoppers beg sales assistants for perfume products at Selfridges on the morning of the Boxing Day sales in London on Dec. 26. Retailers in recent years have started sales online on Christmas Day, ahead of the clearances in stores from Boxing Day, but are increasingly launching their online offers before Christmas after delivery deadlines for the day have passed.

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    Shoppers sit on benches in a busy Oxford Street on Dec. 26, in London, England. Thousands of shoppers are in London looking for a bargain in the traditional Boxing Day sales.

    Matt Cardy / Getty Images

    Stuart Radbourne, huntsman and joint-master with the Avon Vale Hunt, leads the riders and hounds for their traditional Boxing Day hunt, on Dec. 26, in Lacock, England. As hundreds of hunts met today, Environment Secretary Owen Paterson claimed that moves to repeal the ban on hunting with dogs in England and Wales may not happen in 2013, although he insisted it was still the government's intention to give MPs a free vote on lifting the ban.

    Darren Staples / Reuters

    A member of the Quorn hunt laughs before the start of the traditional Boxing Day meet at Prestwold Hall near Loughborough, central England, on Dec. 26. A ban imposed seven years ago states that foxes can be killed by a bird of prey or shot but not hunted by dogs. Hunts continue nowadays with pursuers accompanying dogs in chasing down a pre-laid scented trail.

    Matt Cardy / Getty Images

    Huntsman Mike Smith from the Avon Vale Hunt, joins supporters outside the Red Lion pub who have gathered to watch their traditional Boxing Day hunt, on Dec. 26, in Lacock, England.

    Rebecca Naden / Reuters

    Hundreds of swimmers wearing costumes take part in the annual Tenby Boxing Day swim in Tenby, Wales, on Dec. 26.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

     

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  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    5:18pm, EDT

    Looking for Mr. Right? Go shopping in Paris

    Fred Dufour / AFP - Getty Images

    Women gather and take pictures in front of boxes where men stand like toys on Sept. 11 in Paris, on the opening day of a store of the online dating site "AdopteUnMec.com" (AdoptAGuy.com), where women can choose and also date men according to their profiles and taste. This traveling store will open ten days in Paris, before going to Brussels, Lausanne, Toulouse and Lyon and then going back to Paris.

    Looking for love in all the wrong places? You might want to hop offline and head over to Paris. The French dating site "Adopt-a-Guy" opened a physical story where ladies can find their Mr. Right. Go to AdopteUnMec.com (in French) to start shopping online if you can't make it to one of the stores. The store is open for 10 days in Paris, before it moves to Brussels, Lausanne, Toulouse and Lyon, according to News.com.au.

    Jacky Naegelen / Reuters

    A single woman pushes a bachelor riding in a shopping trolley at the "adopt-a-guy" (adopte-un-mec) store in Paris Sept. 12.

    Christian Hartmann / Reuters

    A single woman looks at a bachelor's profile as a man poses in a glass box at the French dating site "adopt-a-guy" (adopte-un-mec) store in Paris, Sept. 12. The boutique, with a short-term lease which expires at the end of the week, opened its doors on Tuesday, promising a high-end shopping experience for women searching for Mr. Right.

    Christian Hartmann / Reuters

    Photos of bachelors are displayed at the French dating site "adopt-a-guy" (adopte-un-mec) store in Paris, Sept. 12.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    1 comment

    Where is the romance in this. Ok - it may be a gimmick but it's in very bad taste. The fact that it took place in what many would consider to be the romantic capital of Europe makes it even worse. In any case if this company had done its research it would have discovered that women are turned on by  …

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    Explore related topics: france, paris, shopping, love, dating, adopt-a-guy
  • 2
    Jan
    2012
    11:00am, EST

    Barely-clothed coeds queue for clothes in Spain

    Denis Doyle / Getty Images

    Semi-nude shoppers stand outside in cool temperatures for free clothes during a promotion by a Spanish clothes outlet on Jan. 2, in Madrid, Spain. The first one hundred semi-nude shoppers were alllowed free clothes on the first day of the January sales.

    Paco Campos / EPA

    Shoppers in underwear rush into Desigual in dowtown Madrid on Jan 2.

    Paco Campos / EPA

    Youngsters in underwear shop inside Desigual in dowtown Madrid, Spain on Jan. 2, during the first day of the winter sales in the Spanish capital. The first 100 customers who arrived to the store in their underwear were allowed to choose an outfit free of charge.

    1 comment

    California is Iowa with Palm trees. Two deranged populations,

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    Explore related topics: shopping, world-news, weird-news
  • 26
    Dec
    2011
    3:19pm, EST

    Shoppers hunt for Boxing Day bargains in London

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP

    Shoppers rush into a department store as it opens for Boxing Day sales in central London, Monday, Dec. 26. Despite disruptions caused by London's subway drivers striking over a pay dispute, large crowds of shoppers started flooding department stores in London as soon as doors opened early Monday.

    Lefteris Pitarakis / AP

    Shoppers rush into a department store as it opens for Boxing Day sales in central London, Monday, Dec. 26. Despite disruptions caused by London's subway drivers striking over a pay dispute, large crowds of shoppers started flooding department stores in London as soon as doors opened early Monday.

    Justin Tallis / AFP - Getty Images

    A woman with sale bags sits on the bus 73 to King's Cross on Boxing Day in London on Dec. 26, during the first day of the post Christmas Sales. London's underground train service was virtually halted by a strike over pay today, disrupting the start of the post-Christmas sales and sporting fixtures. Most lines were shut or operating a vastly reduced service, with people forced to use buses or taxis to reach shops which are desperate for business after disappointing sales in recent months.

     

    1 comment

    Just curious if anyone here knows why the vast majority of those shoppers are Asian? Not racist, just curious.

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    Explore related topics: business, london, england, shopping, world-news
  • 8
    Dec
    2011
    3:01pm, EST

    Shop photojournalism for the holidays

    By Meredith Birkett

    There’s Black Friday. And Cyber Monday. What about “Photojournalism Thursday”?

    OK, I'm kind of kidding, but a recent Facebook post reminded me to remind you Photobloggers that buying a print, or joining a Kickstarter campaign, or even hitting up your local newspaper for a print could be a great gift for someone on your list this holiday season.

    Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times

    White terns, albatross and several other species of birds make Midway Atoll their home as it makes a perfect nesting location with its remote Pacific Ocean location. However, danger lurks beyond the beauty with plastic trash inadvertently being consumed by nesting birds and ghost netting ensnaring endangered marine mammals. This image is part of the Los Angeles Times' 5-part series, Altered Oceans, which won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Reporting.

    One of the most frequent emails we get from our readers, especially after we publish The Week in Pictures or Animal Tracks is “Can I buy a copy of that image?” You can. Below, find a rundown of some ways to bring photography home.

    Barbara Davidson / The Los Angeles Times

    Hawa Barre Osman looks for a sign of life from her one-year-old severely malnourished child, Abdi Noor Ibrahim, inside the Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) therapeutic feeding center at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya, Africa, July 2011. She walked for one month, with her 5 children, from Somali, to the camp.

    Lights, camera, action…print:
    By buying a print, you can help fund a documentary film. Chad Stevens, who is a photojournalist and University of North Carolina assistant professor, has been working for six years on a film about a grandmother who is caught between her region’s economic backbone of coal mining, and her environmental concerns about their methods. This isn’t a Hollywood production with million-dollar backing. It’s a self-funded endeavor, with an occasional grant helping along the way. Over the course of the project, other photojournalists have admired the work and wanted to help Chad, offering prints to sell to fund his film. Until Dec. 11, you can buy one of them at A Thousand Little Cuts Online Print Auction. It was Chad’s Facebook post that inspired this blog.

    Some other print sales: Nuru Projects, Friends of Anton, Fraction Magazine, Wall Space, Collect Give.

    Virtual photography
    Does your favorite somebody have an iPad? Or maybe a slick new tablet is waiting for them under the tree? Get them started with some photography apps. Of course there are tried and true publications like National Geographic, but be sure and check out one of our partners, newcomer Once Magazine.

    A crowd-funding stocking stuffer:
    Have you heard of Kickstarter and Emphas.is? They are two crowd-funding web sites that are being utilized by photojournalists to fund their in-depth projects on important topics worldwide. What’s in it for you, Santa’s little helper? You can help make sure important stories are told. Also, by contributing to these campaigns, backers get to participate in the story creation and also receive gifts like prints or books. A journalist featured on msnbc.com last year is currently running a campaign:

    Life without lights: 1.4 billion people – nearly a quarter of humanity lives without access to electricity. Photojournalist Peter DiCampo explores the economic impact of energy poverty and energy’s future.

    Books, of course:
    It goes without saying that photography books are a great gift. One to consider is Iraq|Perspectives by Benjamin Lowy, showing every day scenes from the war in Iraq captured through Humvee windows and night-vision goggles. Check out American Photo Magazine’s Best Photo Books of 2011 for some other options.

    Did you see that shot?
    As always, if you’ve spotted a great image on msnbc.com, you can buy a print from the photographer or agency who originally created the image. See our FAQ for more information…and happy holidays.

    While people in developed nations spent Earth Day focused on issues like conserving energy, over a billion people in the developing world live without electricity. View a case in point: northern Ghana.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    6 comments

    We Americans, all of us even those without jobs or a place to live should be humbled by these extremely unfortunate, deprived people. This is a perfect example of how people treat their own and how selfish the human race really is. Here is a question for all you religious fanatics.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: shopping, holidays, photojournalism, featured, once-magazine
  • 25
    Nov
    2011
    3:49pm, EST

    Black Friday: Tiring for retail staff, and for shoppers too

    Sandy Huffaker / Getty Images

    Employee Neal Smith, center, yawns before the midnight opening of a Best Buy store in San Diego, California on November 25.

    J. Miles Cary / The News Sentinel via AP

    Bobby Snodderly, 77, of Jacksboro, Tenn., watches over his family's shopping bags at West Town Mall in Knoxville on Black Friday. Snodderly and his family began their Christmas shopping at midnight at the Wal-Mart in Jacksboro, Tenn., and then continued onto Knoxville.

     

    Related content:

    • Black Friday violence: 2 shot, 15 pepper-sprayed
    • Shoppers get bargains, less brouhaha
    • NYT: Friday's deals may not be the best
    • More images of Black Friday on PhotoBlog

    1 comment

    The only people with any money are old republican farts like the one in the picture above...There was an economy that worked during his prime and jobs had pension plans plus he is cashing that SS check that I pay for and he hates...

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    Explore related topics: business, labor, shopping, us-news, black-friday
  • 25
    Nov
    2011
    11:46am, EST

    Black Friday shopping frenzy

    Chris Franz / Getty Images

    Customers gather and wait for Sears to open at 4 a.m. at the West Acres Mall in Fargo, North Dakota, on Nov. 25. Over 30 stores at the mall opened at midnight.

    Sean D. Elliot / The Day via AP

    Shoppers line-up at Target in Lisbon, Conn., for Black Friday bargains late on Thursday, Nov. 24. Black Friday began in earnest as Target and other stores opened their doors at midnight.

    Nick Oza / The Arizona Republic via AP

    Landry Spitler (front left) Riley Spitler (left center) Megan Davis (top left) and Laura Davis (far right) show signs of fatigue while they wait in line for a cashier at the Target store in Mesa , Az., on Nov. 25.

    John Gress / Reuters

    Shoppers ride an escalator at a Target Store in Chicago on Nov. 25.

    Paul J. Richards / AFP - Getty Images

    Black Friday shoppers wait in the check-out line over an hour, after waiting in line to get in and then fighting huge crowds at the Toys-R-Us store at the Fair Lakes Shopping Center in Fairfax, Virginia, which opened up at 9 p.m. on Nov. 24.

    Related content:

    • Black Friday violence: 2 shot, 15 pepper-sprayed
    • Shoppers get bargains, less brouhaha
    • NYT: Friday's deals may not be the best
    • More images of Black Friday on PhotoBlog
    • The essential video guide:

    Did you know that the term "black Friday" was coined by a Philadelphia newspaper? TODAY's Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda Kotb talk about the history and fun anecdotes surrounding the busiest shopping day of the year.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    3 comments

    It's not about the holidays anymore it's about getting stuff  getting in line we have turned the houses into warehouses so we can store our stuff if it's out there I must have it no matter what it is. I have become a program person from all the commercials that I've seen on television they have pro …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: business, shopping, us-news, black-friday
  • 25
    Nov
    2011
    12:06am, EST

    Black Friday shopping starts on Thursday

    Andrew Gombert / EPA

    Shoppers line up outside Toys R Us in Times Square, New York, New York, Nov. 24, 2011. The store opened its doors at 9 p.m. on Nov. 24 to entice early Black Friday shoppers. Black Friday is the day following the Thanksgiving and marks the unofficial beginning of the Christmas shopping season with stores offering special deals.

    By Rich Shulman

    I get tired just looking at this madness.


    Chris Keane / Reuters

    Joni Sappington looks at a brochure for Toys R Us as she stands in line in Pineville, North Carolina Nov. 24, 2011.

    Chris Keane / Reuters

    A customer runs into a Toys R Us store as it opens in Pineville, North Carolina Nov. 24, 2011.

    Chris Keane / Reuters

    A customer stands in line with a toy vehicle at Toys R Us in Pineville, North Carolina Nov. 24, 2011.

    Andrew Burton / AP

    A customer shops for video games in the Toys R Us in Times Square in New York on Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011.

    Andrew Burton / AP

    A customer waits in line to pay for items inside the Toys R Us in Times Square in New York on Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011.

    Michael Nagle / Getty Images

    Black Friday bargain hunters wait in line at Toys R Us, which opened at 9 PM Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24, 2011 in New York City.

    Michael Nagle / Getty Images

    Black Friday bargain hunters carry their purchases out of Toys R Us, which opened its doors at 9 PM Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 24, 2011 in New York City. Marking the start of the holiday shopping season, Black Friday is one of retailers' busiest days of the year.

    Stores are opening earlier than ever and the mad dash for Christmas bargains is already on, and retailers are desperate for shoppers' business. NBC's John Yang reports from Chicago's Magnificent Mile.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    13 comments

    Why even bother with the American holiday known as Thanksgiving. Just make if a f%&*ing shopping day, and get it over with. Who the ef cares about being thankful and grateful anyway, the almighty dollar and how much people believe they are saving is what matters.

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    Explore related topics: business, shopping, us-news, featured, black-friday
  • 23
    Nov
    2011
    2:55pm, EST

    Black Friday shoppers camp out in Texas

    Larry W. Smith / EPA

    Barbara Riccelli sits outside her tent knitting while camping out outside the Best Buy store waiting to be the first ones in line when the store opens at midnight for Black Friday in Mesquite, Texas, November 23, 2011. Riccelli has been camping out for four days, along with four other tents.

    By Rich Shulman

    At first glance, I thought I was looking at an Occupy Wall Street protest. I can't imagine these deals are worth the trouble.

    Larry W. Smith / EPA

    Barbara Riccelli, Vicki Hawkins, and Vicki Lawrence, sit outside their tents while camping out outside the Best Buy store waiting to be the first ones in line when the store opens at midnight for Black Friday in Mesquite, Texas, November 23. People have been camping out for four days, along with four other tents.

    Related:

    Stores hope you say "Merry Christmas" to me

    Avoid Black Friday madness (and still get great deals)

    Cabela’s Black Friday freebie Is a gun

    Consumer fasts, mall sit-ins -- anti-Black Friday actions urged

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: business, texas, shopping, us-news, mesquite, black-friday
  • 31
    Aug
    2011
    12:30am, EDT

    Park Ji-Hwan / AFP - Getty Images

    A South Korean woman looking at the virtual retail shop at Seolleung subway station in Seoul. A major South Korean retailer has opened what it claims is the world's first virtual store geared to smartphone users, with shoppers scanning barcodes of products displayed in a Seoul subway station.

    World's first smart virtual store opens in Korea, caters to smartphone users

    From Korea Joongang Daily:

    Homeplus, the nation’s second largest discount chain, announced yesterday that it will open what it calls a “fourth generation retail store,” Homeplus Smart Virtual Store, at Seolleung subway station in southern Seoul today.

    It says it’s the first of its kind in the world.

    At a press conference yesterday before the official launch, Homeplus CEO Lee Seung-han said discount store chains must respond to rapidly changing consumer habits and behavior, and a new kind of virtual store will cater to skyrocketing smartphone users in Korea. (Read the full story)

    52 comments

    Personally, I don't own an iPhone or live in a large city (for the moment). However, when I lived in San Francisco recently, many large grocery store chains offered free delivery (home or office). The only catch: Place your order over the internet. It was easy.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: asia, shopping, south-korea, world-news, smartphone, tech-science
  • 23
    Aug
    2011
    7:33am, EDT

    Hatem Moussa / AP

    Palestinians shop at the new al-Andulusia mall in Gaza City on August 16. An abrupt flurry of construction is suddenly allowing a tiny middle class to flaunt its wealth in the impoverished Gaza Strip, fueling perhaps the most acrimonious grassroots resentment yet toward the ruling Hamas movement.

    A supermarket in Gaza

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    When I saw this picture I thought of Martin Parr, who once said that he took photographs in his local supermarket "because this to me is the front line."

    The AP moved Hatem Moussa's photo from the newly opened al-Andalusia mall alongside a report about the Gaza Strip's nouveau riche, whose wealth and conspicuous consumption are said to be the cause of growing resentment toward the ruling Hamas movement:

    This middle class, which has become visible at the same time as a mini-construction boom in this blockaded territory, is celebrating its weddings in opulent halls and vacationing in newly built beach bungalows. That level of consumption may be modest by Western standards, but it's in startling contrast to the grinding poverty of most Gazans, who rely on U.N. food handouts to get by.

    Some of the well-off are Hamas loyalists. That rankles many Gaza residents because the conservative Islamic movement gained popularity by tending to the poor — through charitable aid, education and medical care — along with its armed struggle against Israel.

    "Hamas has become rich at the expense of the people," fumed a 22-year-old seamstress, Nisrine. Continue reading.

    9 comments

    Are we surprised that Hamas is corrupt?

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, mall, gaza, shopping, supermarket, palestine, world-news
  • 16
    Jun
    2011
    8:18am, EDT

    Shoppers in underwear queue in the rain for free clothes

    A fashion chain offered shoppers in London and Berlin the chance to dress for free Thursday - as long as they turned up in their underwear.  

    Luke MacGregor / Reuters

    Shoppers in their underwear shelter from the rain as they queue to enter a clothing store in London, England, on June 16. The Desigual shop offered the first 100 customers two items of clothing for free as long as they arrived at the store dressed only in their underwear.

    Luke MacGregor / Reuters

    Shoppers in their underwear search for items at a clothing store in London on June 16.

    Odd Andersen / AFP - Getty Images

    People in their underwear crowd a fashion store during a marketing campaign for the summer sale in Berlin, Germany, on June 16.

     

    1 comment

    I found a site where you can get coupons for restaurant called "Printapon" they are on all over the news, search online

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, europe, underwear, fashion, london, england, shopping, united-kingdom, berlin, desigual
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Meredith Birkett

Meredith Birkett is a senior multimedia editor for special projects at MSNBC.com. In this role, Meredith works with freelancers, picture agencies, and staff multimedia journalists to produce multimedia projects across all sections of MSNBC.com.

Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

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