COLUMBUS, OH—Finally closing the doors on its last remaining outlet after getting rid of an unwieldy stockpile of variety goods, the discount retailer Big Lots ceased operations Wednesday following a therapy program in which the company’s roughly 30,000 employees confronted their self-destructive hoarding tendencies. “In retrospect, it’s almost funny that I had so many throw pillows,” said Big Lots CEO Bruce Thorn, letting out a long sigh of relief in a now-empty store that was finally free of the dusty, disorganized piles of junk he had been hanging onto “just in case.” “Now I know there’s just no reason to hold onto that massive collection of birdseed, kitchenware, cordless hair clippers, patio furniture, and ladies’ pajama sets—even if it all was an unbeatable deal. During my third month working with my therapist, Dr. Bloom, I had a breakthrough: I realized my mother would always grow distant after offloading boxes of bargain goods she’d acquired from nearby manufacturers’ excess inventory sales. After that session, I was finally able to step back and see I had 901 stores full of stuff I just didn’t need.” At press time, manic Big Lots employees were spotted rushing to dumpsters around the country and insisting they had to keep all of those seasonal decorative wreaths.
Trending
- Elon Musk’s SpaceX officially acquires Elon Musk’s xAI, with plan to build data centers in space
- Fintech CEO and Forbes 30 Under 30 alum has been charged for alleged fraud
- Waymo raises $16B to scale robotaxi fleet internationally
- What Snowflake’s deal with OpenAI tells us about the enterprise AI race
- Ring brings its ‘Search Party’ feature for finding lost dogs to non-Ring camera owners
- UpScrolled’s founder says the social network has zoomed past 2.5M users
- These AI notetaking devices can help you record and transcribe your meetings
- Ikea assembles China strategy with closure of 7 big stores
