Instagram posts
an Instagram post
stated on November 25, 2023 in an interview:

Video shows Black Friday shoppers “in Biden’s thriving economy.”

False

The days of Black Friday shoppers trampling each other at retail stores to find discounts may be over in this era of online shopping.

But one social media post misrepresents footage of a nearly empty store on Black Friday as an example of President Joe Biden’s effect on the economy.

A Nov. 25 Instagram video sharing a TikTok shows a worker — with a camera crew nearby — sliding open a store’s doors to find only one person waiting. Text above the footage says, “Swarm of Black Friday shoppers ready to spend their money in Biden’s thriving economy.” 

The post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

The video doesn’t reflect the state of the U.S. economy under Biden’s leadership. It was filmed six years ago in England.

Biden Black Friday screenshot
Figure 1: Biden Black Friday screenshot

(Instagram screenshot)

Using a reverse-image search, we traced the footage to a Nov. 24, 2017, report from BBC reporter Frankie McCamley. McCamley was at Currys PC World — now known simply as Currys — on London’s Oxford Street at 7 a.m. to catch the Black Friday crowd. Her video, which she shared in 2017 on X, formerly Twitter, and Instagram shows a lone shopper casually entering the store. She identified him in a second X post as Marcel, who she said came to pick up a pre-ordered laptop.

McCamley’s video also appeared on BBC’s website and in other news reports.

The way Americans shop for the holidays has changed in recent years, with more people choosing to go online for shopping deals. Still, U.S. shoppers set a record over this year’s five-day holiday weekend from Thanksgiving Day through Cyber Monday, according to the National Retail Federation, the world’s largest retail trade association.

The federation said 200.4 million consumers shopped — either in person or online — over the holiday weekend, breaking last year’s record of 196.7 million. That’s 18 million more shoppers than the federation had predicted.

On Black Friday only, 76.2 million Americans shopped in stores — 3.3 million more than last year — and 90.6 million shopped online.

We rate the claim that this video shows Black Friday shoppers “in Biden’s thriving economy” False.

Our Sources

Instagram post, Nov. 25, 2023 (archived)

Frankie McCamley, X post, Nov. 24, 2017

Frankie McCamley, Instagram post, Nov. 24, 2017

BBC, Black Friday a 'damp squib', Nov. 24, 2017

The Independent, Black Friday 2017: Assembled media on Oxford Street disappointed to find just one man waiting outside shop, Nov. 24, 2017

The Telegraph,  Black Friday damp squib as Oxford Street shop opens its doors to lone man  , Nov. 24, 2017

National Retail Federation, Thanksgiving holiday weekend sees record number of shoppers, Nov. 28, 2023

The New York Times, Black Friday isn’t what it used to be, Nov. 24, 2023