Back in the last century, I could not feature what people saw in
Macy’s, and my opinion has not changed much since then.
Their merchandise is unexceptional and it’s put out on the sales
floor with all the élan of Kohl’s. A friend of mine in the Valley They Call
Silicon used to pick up some extra cash around the holidays by putting clothes
that customers had pulled out—refolding sweaters and jeans, and hanging dresses
and the like on the racks. After the Cupertino store closed, she was sent to
the Stanford Mall one, and I don’t know how she found the strength to come in
to work: the two times I went there, clothes were jammed into the rounders and
actually just tossed on the floor.
Stanford Mall is one of the snootier shopping centers in the
Valley.
Anyhow, a month or so ago when I was in Tysons Corner mall, I
wandered through the Macy’s and was reminded why I don’t even like to go in
there. These are louvres on fitting room doors:
They haven’t been dusted in donkey’s years.
And here’s the floor of the fitting room:
I was there around 30 minutes after opening time. They obviously
don’t vacuum between store closing and opening.
And I remember that, back in the 90s, I saw the same thing.
I do not comprehend how this is the department store left standing over Wanamaker's, Marshall Field, Hecht, Bullock's and the rest.
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