Tech / Technology

Twitter users still resisting X name change months later

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Months after Elon Musk changed Twitter’s name to X, users fight to change the name back. Stephen King is speaking out. Now what?
A woman wearing a Twitter logo in the style of the mockingjay from Hunger Games fires an arrow at a giant X atop a skyscraper.

It’s three months since the official change, and reports of the death of Twitter — as a name, that is — have been greatly exaggerated.

“This X shit’s got to go,” author Stephen King tweeted Thursday. That post received 71,000 likes by the end of the day. Elon Musk, creator of “this X shit,” responded to King with a “XX” and a winking-kiss emoji. Musk’s reply had a relatively tiny 7,300 likes at time of writing, despite the fact that Musk has 150 million more followers than King.

It was another humiliation for Musk, who has frequently tried to bring King, one of his favorite writers, on board with his controversial plans for the service. But it was also a crucial temperature-taking of the Twitter community. “Everyone literally still just calls it Twitter,” said one of the most popular replies. “I cannot explain to my friends what X is,” said another.

These are no mere anecdotes. A Harris Poll/Ad Age survey in mid-September found that some 69% of U.S. adults still refer to the platform as Twitter. A Chrome extension that scrubs all mentions of X from Twitter.com has more than 100,000 users. All of which raises an interesting question: If Elon Musk is trying to make fetch happen, and fetch doesn’t seem to be happening, and a significant chunk of his users say that fetch is never, ever going to happen … what happens next?

Musk owns the service, of course, and can call it whatever he likes. The company providing the service is legally known as X Corp. But the English language is a democracy, and if most of us are still calling the service Twitter, then Twitter it is. English itself is on the side of the 69% — or, to give them a more appropriate name, the Twitter resistance.

Musk is, as in many things, his own worst enemy here. The slapdash nature of the name-change rollout means that uses of “Twitter” and “tweets” are still all over the website, the app, the email communications. Most representations are beyond his control. The bird logo is embedded so many places on the internet and IRL, scrubbing it out would take years of work by more employees than … well, than Musk has already fired.

Ironically, given Musk’s propensity for media bashing, the media may be his biggest ally in making X happen. Some outlets such as Wired have changed their style guide to call Twitter X. Others use the “X, formerly Twitter” construction. If enough people over enough time read enough news about Twitter that calls the service X, and it rubs off on them, then you may not have to explain to your friends what X is anymore. The linguistic vote would start to tilt in Musk’s favor.

Twitter vs. X, round 1

Let’s recap, because you may still have a hard time believing that “this X shit” even happened. Reality sounds like a bad movie pitch: World’s richest man, having massively overpaid for one of the most beloved brands on the internet, kills it. World’s richest man has long been obsessed with the letter X, ignoring everyone who has tried to tell him how shady it sounds.

To drive the point home, this guy also thinks it looks cool to stick a massive “X” on the roof of the beloved brand’s office building (whose owner, by the by, says the world’s richest man has been stiffing him on the rent). It’s a brutal-looking X made out of lights so bright it blinds tenants in the apartments opposite.

At this point, a seasoned Hollywood executive might look incredulous. C’mon, this is like Biff Tannen from Back to the Future meets Mr. Potter from It’s a Wonderful Life! You’re making it too obvious what will happen next: some plucky group of underdogs restores the brand, because he can’t actually force people to use his name! No one is that much of a cartoon villain, surely?

Musk, by accident or design, was determined to make himself seem like a supervillain: “X Luthor,” as more than one Twitter user dubbed him at the time of the name change. Lex Luthor actor Jon Cryer tweeted about the similarity of X corp to that of the fictional LexCorp.

It was almost as if he was begging for a resistance movement to rise against him, as they so often do on Twitter. After all, Musk had handed his foes a perfect ready-made symbol — a bird, just like the Mockingjay worn by Katniss Everdeen in the Hunger Games series. “The bird is freed,” Musk tweeted when he took over a year ago; a Twitter resistance could use that very slogan.

Would the bird logo catch on? Would Twitter’s millions of users protest the change by switching their avatar to the bird? Would they go dark, like Reddit during a summer of protest, and only log on the bare minimum of times necessary to stop Musk seizing their accounts (which is, apparently, once every several years)?

And a King shall lead them

Well, no, not exactly. Twitter has certainly seen a decline in its daily active users, but what is remarkable is that it hasn’t declined further. More than 200 million people still use the service daily. A majority still call it Twitter, sure; they tweet (rather than post) jokes and memes about Musk’s weird X obsession and dead birds in cages. But they’ve also blithely accepted all the X imagery creeping in around the edges — the horrible faux-marble app icon, the design-school-reject logo — because what can you do, right? Just try not to pay attention to it!

Which is why King’s sudden intercession is so interesting. It’s not that the author was previously unaware of the “X shit”; he still posts very frequently, like many a Musk opponent who once claimed they would quit the service. In fact, he’s not going anywhere. King is taking a stand, pun very much intended, and he may well be the right leader for the moment. He’s folksy. His work is extremely popular in middle America and around the world, including with Musk and friends.

Why now? No reason necessary. We all get it, that moment when you’ve just had enough and vow that an intolerable thing cannot go on (certainly, this has happened to more than a few of King’s characters). The fact that the moment has come three months in makes it that much worse for Musk. King cannot be accused of rushing to judgment.

Whether King continues the charge against X, and whether other high-profile users will join him, remains to be seen. But by calling it out as he sees it, he’s already given the nascent Twitter resistance a powerful weapon in their fight for the old brand. Advertisers, always wary of a New Coke situation, may run away even faster from a service described by the world’s favorite horror writer as “X shit.”

Your move, X Luthor.

Tech / Technology

Boys World reveal their internet obsessions: Bada Lee, manifestation, Petra Collins, and more

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Girl group Boys World shares their latest obsessions, including Bada Lee, Petra Collins, perfectly cooked salmon, and manifestation.
The five members of Boys World surrounded by thumbnails of their favorite videos.

For the past three years, Boys World have made moves as a modern-day pop group remixing the sounds and aesthetics of ’90s and 2000s-era R&B. The quintet’s new single, “Gone Girl,” comes on the heels of a national tour, during which the girls admitted they were too busy, you know, being pop stars to do much else.

“I haven’t watched shit, to be honest with you,” Makhyli confesses to Mashable when we ask for her recent watches, “The second I get home I just want to talk with these girls or knock the fuck out.”

But Boys World — Olivia, Lillian, Elana, Makhyli, and Queenie — deliver nonetheless, gushing for over an hour about their favorite artists, recipes, and online obsessions. These pop stars, it turns out, are the sweetest, most candid pop culture junkies around.

Olivia

Olivia: I’ve followed Petra Collins’ work for a while, and I think her visuals are always incredible. The way they executed this whole music video was just so refreshing and very pleasing to my eyes, and I love them working together. The Glee reference of a slushie being thrown on her… I love it when people use stuff that happened in movies and put it in music videos. I love the song. It grew on me a lot.

This is kind of rhetorical, but do you guys want to work with Petra Collins ever?

All: Yes!

Were you into Petra Collins when she was at Rookie?

Olivia: Yes! Rookie mag! I am so upset it’s gone. I have three copies of each volume of Rookie: two I cut up for my journals and one I didn’t touch.

Makhyli: She’s a big collector.

Olivia: You know Mini Brands? I love them! I collect the Disney ones, the food, the little fashion ones. I got so lucky, I got a bag with tiny makeup brushes and a blush. I also have a tiny grand piano on the shelf in our living room, and it has a little stool and sheet music and it opens up. It’s adorable.

What do you love about this Bodies Bodies Bodies edit?

Olivia: It’s one of my favorite movies of all time. I’ve gotten to the point where I can quote it like “Mean Girls.” All of Rachel [Sennott’s] lines, the way she delivered them, make me crack up every single time. If I was ever an actress, I would want to have that kind of role.

A lot of you acted as kids, right?

Makhyli: I did musical theater

Elana: I was on a show called SuperWings. And I was also on an American Girl doll YouTube show.

Olivia: We need to all act together.

Makhyli: To be on a show together in general.

Did you guys ever watch S Club 7? They were a British pop group that had their scripted TV show in the early 2000s.

Olivia: No! We’ve never heard of them.

I highly recommend it. Makhyli, what musicals were you into?

Makhyli: Everything. Beauty and the Beast, The Little Mermaid, Dear Evan Hansen, Annie, Hamilton, Freckleface Strawberry.

Elana

Elana: I love SZA’s new music video.

Makhyli: Ah! I can’t even talk about it.

Elana: I love that album, that got me through winter. SZA has such a unique voice. She’s so talented, and I love her music. So I love watching her music videos. And this one features Justin Bieber.

Queenie: His fine ass.

Makhyli: He was my first CD.

Queenie: My ex-girlfriend has a blanket of him. She has a toothbrush that sings his songs.

Olivia, I read you ran a Dolan Twins Instagram fan page.

Olivia: Yeah, I would tweet as if I was this one pink hat they wore. And then the Dolan Twins were like, “Oh, this is cool.” They will notice me a lot, retweet my tweets, quote them, whatever. When they had a tour I went, and that’s when I was like, “OK, this is when I’m going to show my identity. I’m going to make this my moment. Today’s my reveal. I want you to know who the pink hat is. Now come find me.” And then they knew who I was. Then I started promoting my singing and covers to my fan page audience, and it turned into a career.

Elana: Ice Spice is doing so well. And her personality intrigues me. And she’s from New York. And I just love that. She seems so down to earth. So I was like, “Hey, why not put this on while I do my makeup?”

Queenie: Her personality is showing a lot more now.

Elana: She’s so cute, she seems sweet. I think we’d be friends. It’s so nice to see people around our age doing so well, it’s exciting. And I just like the way she talks, the sound of her voice. It reminds me of home because I’m from Queens. [In this interview] she talks about how she’s touring so much and she’s in different countries so it gets hard to stay in touch [with family and friends].

Do you guys relate to that?

Makhyli: Oh, yeah.

Elana: At the moment definitely [because we are on tour ourselves]. And we also live in LA and some of us have family in different places. So I relate to that.

Is there anything else you’ve been loving lately?

Elana: My favorite YouTuber right now is Monet McMichael. I freaking love her. I found her on TikTok, and now I watch her on YouTube. She should just she seems so sweet. I love to watch people and I’m like, “Oh, I probably would be friends with them.”

Queenie

Queenie: OK, so this salmon. We were preparing for our first week of tour rehearsals, and every day was, like, five hours. I was like, “OK, I need to meal prep.” And I also wanted to save a little bit of money so I wouldn’t have to order anything. I was just scrolling on TikTok, and I found this recipe. I have never made salmon, ever. And so I was like, “OK, fuck it. Let me try something.”

It took me three hours. I was just locked the fuck in — in the kitchen mashing the potatoes, putting it in the oven while setting up the oven, boiling it, and all of a sudden now the salmon’s sizzling, and now I have to make the soy glaze for it. I’m like a fucking chef running around. And then I keep forgetting things. When I tell you the best fucking salmon I ever ate in my entire life. This recipe is insane. I was like, this is illegal. And then the girls’ reactions to it gave me so much confidence.

Olivia: This is the best thing I’ve ever had.

Queenie: And Elana doesn’t even like salmon.

Elana: I don’t but I would eat that every day.

A screenshot from a "Cooking With Tammy Live" video.

‘This recipe is insane.’
Credit: YouTube/@CookingWithTammy

Do you cook for the girls often?

Queenie: Not often but I make them Filipino dishes sometimes. The most important one that these girls love is my Filipino spaghetti. And like if I don’t make it my mom usually comes [over] and she’ll make it.

Olivia: What’s that soup?

Queenie: Sinigang. I can’t wait to take them to the Philippines, both on tour and for fun. It’s a different world. I’m not the type to like to go [to places] as a tourist, go to resorts. I feel like if you’re gonna go to another country, experience the local parts, the actual neighborhoods. It’s important to see those things when you go to another country, and not just like the rich areas.

Where would you suggest someone go for their first time in the Philippines?

Queenie: Manila, just because that’s the [main] city. Then [go] anywhere that you can go island hopping because it’s the most beautiful thing. And I feel like you get both worlds there. Because anywhere you travel for island hopping you have to go through mountains and you have to see nature, sometimes you have to fly to it. So it’s just a whole experience. Also, go to the Mall of Asia, one of the biggest malls in the world.

Queenie: I started “Street Woman Fighter” because it’s huge in the dance community in general. JAM Republic is one of the groups that have joined who are like from the U.S. And then there’s this one girl Bada Lee, who everyone’s geeking over saying that she’s fucking fine, and I can abide by that because she is. The way she dances… chef’s kiss.

[Watching her] I am mesmerized. I wish I could dance like that. Looking at people who are at that level is just mind-boggling to me. I love staying updated with the dance battles, and I wish I could be there one day.

Lillian

Lillian: I’ve been a fan of Ari since she came out with this album. And so it was so fun to see her do this 10-year anniversary and remake it as she would do it now. The difference in her vocals… they’re in their prime time right now. Even her tone is a little bit different, I think because of filming Wicked. And people are saying “I can understand what you’re saying now.”

Lillian: I love to put [videos] on when I do my makeup and hear other artists talk about their experiences. You can always learn from it. I just love Victoria, like she’s just the sweetest, and her voice is so nice to listen to. She’s so soft-spoken and was talking about how she grew up shy, and I relate to that a lot. But she’s done all these amazing things and been in all these crazy rooms with crazy artists, and she’s worked on some of the biggest hits. Now she’s finally honing her artistry, which is cool because I love her music, too. Her new album is really good.

Queenie: If I were a solo artist in the future, she’s like the epitome of what I would love to do for a video, like the masc/femme of “On My Mama.” That’s literally what I want to do,

She was also talking about manifesting, that she had been doing it since she was little.

Lillian: She also talks about new motherhood. I love it when people talk about pregnancy or postpartum, what you can go through that’s not so fun. Because I feel like people don’t talk about that much. And then women get pregnant, and they’re like, “This is like the worst time of my life but also the best,” and it’s just very confusing.

Victoria notes how it’s really important to always go up to the mother and give them attention and ask about how they’re doing because most people will just go straight to your belly or the baby. So you just feel invisible, [even though] being the mother to this child is like the best thing in your whole life. So it’s conflicting feelings, and people need to understand because it happens every day.

Makhyli

Makhyli: I’m super into affirmations and manifestation. It’s been big for me since I was tiny. It’s kind of like I grew up on my mom’s side with spirituality and affirmations, and it always just stuck with me. My dad was religious but my mom was spiritual, so I felt I grew up just hating what my mom believed because my dad would be talking in my ear, right?

But then I was like, “Oh, wait, this is sick. I love this. Give me the sage, give me the crystals.” I found what I believe in, who I am at my core. And now I just take it with me everywhere because I feel like [it resonates with me] more. It’s the one thing in life that can always give you hope. Manifesting is something that I can always look forward to no matter where you are in your life, even if you’re at your lowest of lows, you can always manifest something better. That’s what always gets us through.

Religion is finding faith in something else. And manifesting is finding faith in yourself. You’re like a renewable resource. What age were you like, ‘I feel confident that this is actually who I am.’

Makhyli: I think we all manifested being here, but I don’t think I knew that’s what it was like. When I was tiny, like seven, my mom was like, “OK, so when you’re older and go to college…” and I was like, “I’m gonna be on tour.”

And she was like, “OK! I won’t ask you again, I won’t push you.” And she helped me get where I am now. I owe it all to her. She used to be our house mom for a while because I was the youngest. And she’s always been pushing me to work hard and she likes me to be independent, too. But I also call her if I’m like, “What brand of toothpaste do I get?” Ever since I was small, she’s been my best friend. My dad was never really involved. Man, what’s in the air! The last two days we’ve been getting so much closer.

Are all of you guys getting closer?

Makhyli: We’ve been talking so much. I feel like we’re together all the time and sharing a room, we’re up at night. We share a house, but this has brought us back to when we first joined the group and we had bunk beds and we shared one room.

Tech / Technology

Best robot vacuum deals Oct. 2023: New Shark and Roombas on sale

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Get the Shark Matrix with smart mapping for $199.99 or the Roomba s9+ for $599.99 ahead of Black Friday.
White Roborock vacuum and dock sitting against wall with living room furniture in background

UPDATE: Nov. 2, 2023, 5:00 a.m. EDT This story has been updated to include the best deals on robot vacuums from top brands like iRobot, Roborock, and Shark.

Best robot vacuum deals this week:

Best budget deal

Shark Matrix RV2300

$199 at Walmart
(save $100.99)

Gray Shark robot vacuum and smartphone with map of home on screen


Best self-emptying deal

Shark Matrix RV2310AE

$299.99 at Amazon
(save $200)

Black Shark robot vacuum with dock and smartphone with home map on screen


Best vacuum-mop combo deal

Roborock Q7 Max+

$499.99 at Amazon
(save $370)

Roborock Q7+ and smartphone with home map on screen

Only three things are certain in life: Death, taxes, and a few days each month when you need to vacuum but just don’t have time. Whether you detest the chore or hope to make your home upkeep a bit breezier, a robot vacuum is a lifesaver.

Robot vacuums under $200


Our pick: Shark Matrix

$199 at Walmart (save $100.99)



Why we like it

Now that Prime Day has passed, the robot vacuum deal torch has seemingly been passed from Amazon-owned iRobot to Shark. For a solid cheap Shark option, skip the outdated $129 Shark ION and opt for the Matrix instead. For less than $200, you’re securing LiDAR-powered smart home mapping and virtual boundaries, plus Matrix technology, which attacks debris from multiple angles in a crosshatch pattern to grab anything that was missed on the original pass.

Shark itself claims that the Matrix dishes out 50% more suction power than the Roomba i3 — and when the Roomba i3 costs $100 more even on sale, we’d understand if that’s an experiment you’re willing to test.

  • Spot cleans in a thorough grid pattern

  • 120-minute battery life

  • Schedule cleanings in the app

More robot vacuums on sale for under $200

Robot vacuums under $500

Why we like it

Shark released several iterations of its flagship robot vacuum in 2023. This chic black and silver RV2310AE model is on sale at Amazon for less than $300 — a 40% price cut and a record-low price (according to camelcamelcamel) by far. Home mapping and virtual boundaries guided by 360-degree LiDAR are present here, plus Shark’s newest claim to fame: its Matrix cleaning technique that vacuums in a crosshatch pattern to grab any debris missed from the first angle.

  • HEPA filter

  • 120-minute battery life

  • XL self-emptying dock holds at least 45 days’ worth of debris

More robot vacuums on sale for under $500

  • Roborock Q5$279.99 $429.99 (save $150 with on-page coupon)

  • Roborock Q5+$449.99 $699.99 (save $250 with on-page coupon)

Robot vacuums under $800


Our pick: iRobot Roomba s9+

$599.99 at iRobot (save $400)



Why we like it

The s9+ hasn’t been the latest or greatest Roomba since iRobot started rolling out its j Series robot vacs in 2021. But it should still be a serious contender if you have pets or lots of thick carpeting in your home — especially when on sale for $599.99, which is just $100 away from the $499.99 it hit during Prime Big Deal Days. For reference, the only Roombas with stronger suction power than the s9+ are the j9+ and Combo j9+, which go for $899.99 and $1,399.99, respectively.

  • 40 times the suction power of 600 Series Roombas (the j7+ offers 10 times the suction)

  • 120-minute battery life

  • Self-emptying dock holds at least two months’ worth of debris

More robot vacuums on sale for under $800

Robot vacuum and mop hybrids


Roborock Q7+ and smartphone with home map on screen

Credit: Roborock


Our pick: Roborock Q7 Max+

$499.99 at Amazon (save $370)



Why we like it

One of Roborock’s 2022 vacuum releases — and potentially the best value of that bunch — is just shy of 50% off. Of the Q Series, the mid-range Q7+ is the cheapest robovac that self-empties and mops. It vacuums with more-than-decent suction and simultaneously mops, lifting the pad when carpet is detected.

  • No-go and no-mop zones can be designated in the app

  • 180-minute battery life

  • Self-emptying dock holds at least seven weeks’ worth of debris

More hybrids and robot mops on sale

Tech / Technology

Best Advent calendars of 2023: Bonne Maman, LEGO, Barbie, Lovehoney, and more

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Many Advent calendars have sold out already at this point in the season, but if you hurry, you can still order one.
a collage of advent calendars available for 2023

Anyone who grew up in a Christian household knows two truths: One, you can learn a lot about biblical themes from a talking cucumber. And two, no holiday season is complete without an Advent calendar.

A religious custom that stems from 19th-century Lutherans in Germany, Advent calendars traditionally mark each day of (you guessed it) Advent — the hopeful season that spans four Sundays leading up to the birth of Jesus Christ, celebrated on Dec. 25. They typically contain compartments or pockets that can be filled with tiny trinkets for kids, which are designed to be opened one at a time as a fun way of counting down the days until Christmas.

In a moderately blasphemous twist, recent adaptations by big-name brands have given Advent calendars secular appeal as a seasonal holiday indulgence for people (and even pets) of all ages. After hitting a mainstream stride in the mid-2010s, Google search interest for the phrase “advent calendar” reached an all-time high in late 2022. It’s on a similar upward swing as we head into the 2023 holiday season.

Much of Advent calendars’ modern popularity can be credited to TikTok, where they’ve starred in myriad unboxing videos that are suspenseful and addictive to watch (in a similar vein as fashion hauls). But it’s also because they’re easy ways for retailers to tempt cagey, inflation-weary consumers into sampling products they may not have purchased otherwise: everything from fancy French jams to LEGO sets. Advent calendars are a prime example of “needing a little treat” culture (treatcore? being treat-pilled?) at work.

Some Advent calendars have sold out already at this point in the season. (The brand-new Squishmallow calendar appears to be the most popular option so far.) But if you hurry, you can still order one before carolers start lining up on your doorstep. Keep reading for our curated list of the best Advent calendars for 2023.

Tech / Technology

Best mattress deals Nov. 2023: Black Friday events are here

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Check out the latest mattress sales from Casper, Nectar, and other bed-in-a-box brands as of Nov. 2.
People on Bear mattress

UPDATE: Nov. 2, 2023, 3:00 a.m. EDT This list has been updated to reflect the best mattress deals of the week.

Featured picks:

Best budget mattress deal

Nectar memory foam mattress


Best organic mattress deal

Avocado Green mattress

$1,799 with code HOLIDAY
(save $200)

Avocado Green mattress

Splurging while online shopping isn’t always advisable — unless you’re shopping for a mattress. In that case, we recommend worrying less about the price tag and more about the quality of what you’re buying. That doesn’t mean you should scoff at a solid discount, though, and that’s exactly why we’re bringing you the best deals on mattresses. Every week, we’ll be rounding up all the best mattress sales from across the web. Time for some sweet deals and sweet dreams. (Note: All prices are for queen-sized mattresses.)

Best budget mattress deal

Why we like it

Paying $699 for the Nectar memory foam mattress is an absolute steal. The five-layer design features a cooling cover, gel-infused memory foam, a dynamic response layer for support in whichever position you sleep, a base layer for stability, and a slip-resistant lower cover. Save $400 during Nectar’s fall sale.

Best organic mattress deal


Our pick: Avocado Green mattress

$1,799 at Avocado (save $200) with code HOLIDAY



Why we like it

Avocado’s fully organic mattress is comfortable yet super supportive thanks to its muti-zone coils. Its heavy-duty construction will also increase the longevity of your mattress, which is a necessity when you’re paying a premium like this. Right now, you can save $200 on any size mattress with the code HOLIDAY.

More mattress deals by brand

  • Amerisleep — Save $450 on any mattress with code AS450

  • AwaraBlack Friday Sale: Save up to 50% on eco-friendly hybrid mattresses

  • Bear — Seasonal Deals Extended: Save 30% sitewide + get 2 free pillows

  • Birch Black Friday Sale: Save 20% sitewide + get two free Eco-Rest pillows

  • Brooklyn Bedding — Fall Sale: Save 25% sitewide with code FALL25

  • CasperLast Chance Sale: Save up to 20% sitewide

  • Cocoon Flash Sale: Save 35% on all mattresses + get free pillow and sheets

  • DreamCloud — Black Friday Sale: Save 40% on all mattresses

  • Helix — Black Friday Sale: Save 20% sitewide + get two free Dream Pillows

  • Layla Sleep — Fall Savings: Save up to $200 on mattresses + get two free pillows

  • Leesa — Black Friday : Save up to $400 on mattresses + get two free pillows

  • Molecule — Fall Sale: Save up to 30% sitewide with code FALL2023

  • Saatva — Extended Halloween Sale: Save up to 15% sitewide

  • Tuft & NeedleBlack Friday Sale: Save up to $800 on mattresses and bedding bundles

  • Zoma — Save $150 on all mattresses

Tech / Technology

Walmart announces two Black Friday sales 2023

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Walmart announced its plans to host two Black Friday Deals events Wednesday. Find out when they start and what deals will be featured.
a close-up, over-the-shoulder view of a woman shopping for black friday deals on the walmart app

UPDATE: Nov. 1, 2023, 2:00 p.m. EDT This story has been updated.

Black Friday sales that begin in late October and continue throughout November with multiple waves of deals have become the norm at many major retailers. But this year, Walmart is taking a chiller approach to the holiday season.

The big box store has announced that it will run a pair of “Black Friday Deals” events later this month: The first sale will kick off online on Wednesday, Nov. 8 before it continues in stores on Friday, Nov. 10 at 6 a.m. local time, while the second will launch online on Wednesday, Nov. 22 before it goes IRL on Friday, Nov. 24 (or actual Black Friday). Both events will include three hours of early access for paid (non-trial) members of its Walmart+ program starting at 12 p.m. before their deals go live for all shoppers at 3 p.m. ET.

The Black Friday Deals events at Walmart will be succeeded by its online-only Cyber Monday event on Monday, Nov. 27, which, unlike previous iterations, will also have an early-access period for the Walmart+ crew.

walmart's 2023 black friday calendar


Credit: Walmart

Walmart’s press release for its holiday plans name-dropped top brands like “Apple, Dyson, LEGO, LG, and Samsung” and teased a handful of deals that will drop during the first Black Friday Deals event:

As part of its announcement, the retailer has also shared that one-year Walmart+ memberships are on sale for $49 (or 50% off) in the lead-up to its first Black Friday Deals event from Nov. 1 through Nov. 8. The program unlocks benefits like free shipping with no order minimums, fuel discounts, and a free Paramount+ subscription in addition to early access to certain Walmart sales throughout the year.

While this early-access formatting is a repeat of what Walmart has done during past Black Friday sales, the overall vibe of its 2023 holiday programming feels different — more specifically, less hasty. Black Friday Deals for Days events at Walmart in 2020, 2021, and 2022 were three- to four-part events, and they were all set in stone by mid-October, giving the retailer a leg up over other stores that waited longer to share the dates of their sales.

This year, Walmart is the third major retailer to unveil its 2023 Black Friday after Best Buy and Target, which released their first waves of early Black Friday deals on Oct. 27 and 29, respectively. Amazon’s should be coming any day now.