May 20, 2013

Save Email Print Bookmark and Share
A A
Reporter: Terri Russell Email

Bus Load Of Locals

Chances are if you caught the buy local midtown shopping bus today, you also caught the Christmas Spirit.

51 women from the Truckee Meadows signed up for a local shopping opportunity that included unlimited Mimosas, and stops in shops at Midtown--shops they may never have known existed.

Candace Worman came here four months ago from Atlanta.

While she's been in the eclectic 'Junkees" before for the Zombee Crawl with her mom, this time she says its more about serious shopping for herself and friends for Christmas.

"Just stuff you know, checking mainly. I'm trying to look at tall the different shops on town I don't know about. You know, I like to shop local wherever I am. And I just think this is really cool yea," says Worman.

Armed with stemmed glass in hand, Candace and 50-of her new friends had about an hour and a half here at Junkees

Junkees Owner Jessica Schneider who has helped organize these trips for about five years now says she was able to fill one bus with women who paid 48-dollars a piece for the experience.

"Ok bus tour women, if you are done with your purchases, come to the front and walk across the street to Craft," announces Jessica over the loudspeaker.

It's the equivalent of last call at the vintage clothing store with a line of women waiting at the cash register to check out.

A trip across the street to the wine store Craft,and then a half a block down the street to the Melting Pot for the Burning Man enthusiast on your list.

These are stores many of these women may have never visited on their own, but now can give them a second look.

Schneider hopes with a positive day, these women and their friends will come down to Midtown again if not for Christmas in the New Year.

ZOZO's is typically closed the day after Thanksgiving and not in Midtown, but they opened their doors to this group for lunch. The owner here obviously figured out shopping local doesn't just mean clothing and other items, it can mean restaurants as well.


US Business News

  • Yahoo Deal Shows Power Shift
    Yahoo has agreed to pay $1.1 billion for Tumblr, a six-year-old company with more than 100 million users but very little revenue, a deal that highlights the shifting balance of power in the technology business.
  • Wanted: Miners in Brazil for Anglo American
    While rising labor costs have become almost routine for global mining firms locals in Brazil have been willing to take lower-level jobs such as operating a conveyor belt or maintaining machines for less than $10,000 a year.
  • Chesapeake Taps Lawler as CEO
    Chesapeake Energy tapped Robert Douglas Lawler, a 46-year-old executive at Anadarko Petroleum, to succeed Chesapeake co-founder Aubrey McClendon as CEO of the nation's second-largest natural-gas producer.
  • Xbox Girds for a Smartphone Battle
    What's underneath the hood of the latest Xbox videogame console represents a multiyear odyssey of trying to figure out how to keep the machine "cool" in the age of smartphones and tablets.
  • States Bank On Online Sales Tax
    Congress hasn't yet agreed to end tax-free shopping on the Internet, but some states already are planning how they'll spend the money.
  • Dreamliner's Other Issues Get Attention
    Boeing and its customers are refocusing on fixing more technical issues that affect the reliability of the 787 jet, as the aircraft resumes commercial flights after battery woes that led to a global grounding.
  • Stephen King Says No to E-Book
    Stephen King has no plans for a digital edition of his new book, "Joyland," hoping to get more people to shop for it in a physical bookstore.
  • An Independent Scotland Risks Financial Shocks
    An independent Scotland would have banking assets worth more than 1,250% of Scottish gross domestic product, putting taxpayers at significant risk in the event of another banking crisis, the U.K. Treasury said Sunday.
  • For Multinationals, Europe Is Soft Spot
    Soft European markets were a consistent and negative theme of the first-quarter results from big U.S. industrial companies, and concerns about further deterioration are expected to be a key topic at the annual conference that starts Monday.
  • Sandy's Effects Likely to Lift Home Depot, Lowe's
    This week, when Home Depot and Lowe's report fiscal first-quarter results, the reconstruction phase from last year's superstorm Sandy will be looming large as cooler-than-normal temperatures delay spring selling.