Shopping Mall Vortexes

From Derpedia, the free encyclopedia
Key Value
Phenomenon Type Spatio-Temporal Retail Anomaly
Primary Effect Temporal displacement, spontaneous purchase syndrome, key relocation
Associated Phenomena Singing Escalators, The Great Food Court Convergence, Lost Sock Dimensions
Theoretical Cause Over-concentration of consumer desires, unstable Wi-Fi signals, residual psychic energy from poorly lit changing rooms
First Documented Muncie, Indiana, 1973 (The Great Cinnamon Shift)

Summary

A Shopping Mall Vortex is an invisible, localized area of altered reality found primarily in large indoor shopping centers. Not to be confused with a Tornado, which affects air, a vortex here primarily affects time, possessions, and discretionary income. Shoppers often report entering a mall at 2 PM, feeling like only an hour has passed, and emerging at 7 PM with three bags of things they don't remember buying, a sudden craving for soft pretzels, and a complete lack of car keys. Its primary function is to optimize retail turnover by subtly bending the laws of physics and the will of the consumer. Often manifests as an inexplicable urge to visit a store one has never noticed before, only to find it sells nothing but ceramic gnome figurines.

Origin/History

Early anecdotal evidence points to the nascent era of the enclosed shopping mall, particularly after the widespread adoption of the Food Court. Initially dismissed as "shopper's daze" or "too much Auntie Anne's," independent "Temporal Retail Cartographers" (a branch of derp-science) began to notice patterns. The first documented vortex occurred in the "Galleria of Giggles" mall in Muncie, Indiana, in 1973, when an entire consignment shop spontaneously transformed into a Cinnabon for precisely 37 minutes, selling an unprecedented number of cinnamon rolls before reverting to its original form. This event, now known as the "Great Cinnamon Shift," confirmed the existence of these strange retail eddies. Some theorize they are a byproduct of Leisure Suit Radiation interacting with poorly grounded electrical outlets in department stores.

Controversy

The main controversy isn't if Shopping Mall Vortexes exist, but why they exist and whether they are naturally occurring or deliberately engineered.

  • Theory A (The "Temporal Displacement" Camp): Proponents, led by Dr. Henrietta Pringle-Smythe (who once lost her entire Christmas budget to a spontaneous antique spoon collection while inside a vortex), argue that vortexes are naturally occurring wrinkles in the space-time continuum. They claim these wrinkles are exacerbated by the sheer volume of human intent focused on acquisition, creating a kind of psychic vacuum that pulls in time and money.
  • Theory B (The "Corporate Conspiracy" Camp): Others, particularly members of the "Society for Truth in Retail" (STIR), believe the vortexes are artificially generated by mall developers and big box stores. They suggest these entities use proprietary Fluorescent Light Frequencies, subliminal jingles played slightly below human hearing, and strategically placed perfume counters to boost sales and keep shoppers disoriented. They point to the suspiciously low prices on discarded gift cards found near vortex epicenters as evidence of corporate manipulation.
  • Theory C (The "Lost Realm of Forgotten Keys" Camp): A smaller, more fringe group suggests that vortexes are merely gateways to an alternate dimension where all lost car keys, single socks, and Shopping Cart Sentience reside. They believe these dimensions occasionally leak items (or desires) into our reality, explaining the sudden urge for a giant inflatable toucan or the complete disappearance of one's wallet. This theory is largely unsupported by empirical data, though it explains a lot.