Sales of Crappy Christmas
Gifts Reach Record High

If it's lame and cheap, you're getting it for Christmas  
BY
IVAN NACUTCHACOKOV U.S.A.

SNAPPER McGEE
Actually, the Grandpa shirt is starting to look pretty good in comparison.

A collective Charlie Brown-style “Auuuuugh!” sounded around the world upon the release of the newest economy figures Friday. In addition to the disappointing early returns for the Christmas season, and spending figures falling below already-low projections, initial reports suggest that one industry not suffering this year is lousy Christmas gifts.

Lousy Christmas gifts, a sub-industry all its own, is notorious for maintaining steady sales from year to year, apparently never suffering from the effects of recession. However, 2003 marks the first year, if early indicators are correct, that crappy Christmas gifts will actually be on the uprise.

“The old adage about the recession,” said some hobo who claimed to have a background in economics as we fed him a can of creamed corn, “is that the fluff industries are all the first hit. Luxuries, things like that. But there are rock-like reliables in all areas of the economy, and Christmas gifts are no exception. When the country hits on hard times in the yuletide season, cool gifts are the first things to go. No one’s going to shell out for costly electronics when cheap, affordable, crappy gifts are available. Most Americans are tightening the belt—which, ironically enough, is one of the first crappy gifts to see a boost in sales.”

Most holiday shoppers bear those theories out.

“I would have liked to bought my son that MP3 player he’s been talking up all year,” said Syracuse, New York-area housewife Mabel Donner. “But with things looking so bad for the economy it doesn’t look like a good time to buy some new-fangled radio. So I’m getting him that book of inspirational sayings I saw in the mall.”

Books of contrived sentimentality are not the only Christmas gifts with a sharp rise in sales this year. Also seeing an increase are socks, underwear, courderoy slacks, snow pants, gay sweaters, suspenders, and T-shirts and hats certifying they were purchased by grandparents.

Outside of clothing, food is also seeing a sales boost, especially cheese and sausage gift packs and giant tins of caramel-covered popcorn. Sales of advent calendars featuring dried, nasty chocolate alone have provided a much-appreciated lift to the German economy. In addition, minor sales increases have occurred in virtually every area of the economy for crappy gifts; even crappy video games like Pokémon Pro-Skater and Mary Kate & Ashley Olsen Virtua Fighter are seeing a sales spike.

Most kids have yet to experience the nightmarish reality of Christmas morning, 2002 as of yet; but some, like Craig Sharmet of Ledervehn, Pennsylvania, have already seen early warning signs.

“Grandma gave everybody their Christmas gifts yesterday,” said Sharmet. “I got a Jesus calendar. It’s a calendar. And it has pictures of Jesus on it. For every day of the year. All next year. Jesus.”

Alice Keeler of Tumasca, Arizona, can sympathize.

“Aunt Sandy showed up Wednesday with presents for everybody and said we could open them, and we were all flipping out ‘cause we were so happy. Then we opened them. I got a glitter puff T-shirt with the American Idol logo on it. I’m not sure what’s worse—that people would think I like American Idol the TV show enough to wear a T-shirt of it or that people who don’t know the TV show think I’m saying I’m an American idol or something. The possibilities are terrifying. And I had to thank her for it.”

On the brighter side of the story, all forecasts indicate that shopping traffic will increase significantly just after Christmas, when the stores fill with the countless consumers attempting to return Shania Twain CDs and subscriptions to Teen People.

the commune news will hold onto its rare Star Trek collectible plates it received in 1995 until they show some increase in value, even microscopic. Disaster-prone Ivan Nacutchacokov is usually our foreign correspondent, but seemed perfect for this yuletide catastrophe—the lack of life-threatening danger is our gift to him.

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