OK. I did some reconnaissance work myself tonight. I had to run an errand, so I was near Wallyworld, the one I tried to get my shoelaces, shaving soap and razors a couple of weeks back (for the record, last visit, I got the last of the razors, had to buy an off-brand of the soap, and no shoelaces). I live in the South, a decent metro area, not as big as Atlanta but not podunk either.
First stop, beauty supplies. No double-edged razors, apparently not restocked since I bought them 3 weeks ago. Shaving soap situation still the same, two of the off-brand still on the shelf, and the regular brand slot still empty. But what was shocking was looking around at the shelves. The electric razors, the ones in the locked cabinets, were almost completely gone. There were about 8 feet of shelves, 6 shelves, that had a total of about 10 electric razors on it. So I started looking around other stuff. The cheaper mouthwash shelf almost completely empty. The row of allergy medicine was almost completely empty, as was the nasal decongestant. The aspirin and tylenol had a few boxes but they were spread into different little aisles, there was one or two boxes spread out to make it look like there was a lot. At the end, on the main aisle, there were about 1000 bottles of one item taking up 20 feet of shelf space, and maybe 6 total products filling 100 feet of shelving (full shelves but only 6 different products).
So, on to electronics: the battery section was almost completely empty. The TV section was *really* empty, with 3 or 4 tv's on the shelf and an entire bottom shelf with nothing at all. I looked for a couple of the TV's that were on the shelf and there were no boxed models to be had. The DVD section had 3 or 4 dvd players and nothing on 3 shelves.
Now off to get the shoelaces: the racks were *EXACTLY THE SAME* as they were 3 weeks ago. One rack completely empty except for 1 pair of shoelaces, the other rack with half a dozen boot shoelaces and nothing else. So much for restocking them in a day or two like the associate told me 3 weeks ago

. I strolled around the shoe and automotive section and there were big empty slots with nothing in them.
So I went to the food section: the sugar shelf, about 40 feet long, had maybe 15 bags of sugar on it. The Wallyworld soda shelf was almost completely empty over 50 feet or so. Bottled water had maybe 20-30 gallons on 30 feet of shelf, mostly one bottle deep. Meat looked pretty thin all the way around. I went to the produce section and things like tomatoes had 10 or 15 in each huge box. There was a produce guy putting some berries on the shelf and I asked him when do they restock the produce shelves. He told me they restock the shelves around the clock, they don't wait for any specific time. Apparently there wasn't much to restock with, because he only had a few things of berries on his cart and it wasn't even enough to fill the space he was stocking.
My last stop was the main drag, the big aisle that runs the length of the registers. This are had about 500 feet of *nothing* about 50 feet wide. It was downright weird. Usually there's all kinds of bins with different stuff here, since this is the main traffic area for people to buy their last-minute crap.
Bottom line for me is this really proves to me a lot of what 48th says. Was there still a lot of stuff in the store? Certainly there was; I wouldn't have left hungry. But there were a whole lot of empty spaces that, for years, have always been bulging to the seams with stuff. One of the main reasons I always hated having to go to Walmart was because you couldn't hardly get around. Well, that wasn't any kind of problem tonight. I ended up having to leave without shoelaces or razors, and no one could tell me when I would be able to get them.
I took a bunch of pictures, but unfortunately so far I haven't fgured out how to get them from my phone to the computer. When I do, I will post them.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.