Walmart.com. Who would have thought that the retail giant would emerge as a men's hair product and cosmetics source material chemicals supplier, at an appetizing scale, and with unexpectedly obscure reaches in to esoteric substances?
On one hand, news of Wal-Mart becoming a broad-economy merchant host of eCommerce had reached me, of some formerly dismissed news article publication sorts; or, perhaps, that I'd come across them in a web search while looking up product prices on Google.
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This cottage industry aspiration that I've acquired, this time around, has to do with a shopping outing to City Target in DTLA, at the FigAt7th Shopping Mall, which is a bustling center of shopping interest and activity, with other hot retailers, such as Nordstrom Rack, Bath and Body Works, Zara, and H&M (that I can recall, off-hand).
...? hmm. Maybe it was a different Target, that I went to, first. But the point is, is that I failed in procuring my favorite hair product, Murray's pomade.
Just check out these awesome classic styles, associated keywords, and cool-looking and popular men, from the Google Image Search on Murray's Pomade:
I've tackled all of my hair styling needs and former complaints about soggy goppy hair gels and stuff like that, by using this simple and cheap product, which I commonly find in-store at Target.
This time, though, I didn't quite catch it, at the first Target I went to, and I was all but out of any reserves of Murray's Pomade, from a couple of canisters I had purchased, and had on hand, for a couple of months, or so. I ended up purchasing Palmer's Shea Butter initially, this time around, just to give it a chance, since it was placed nearby the empty Murray's Pomade section, in the Target aisle.
It smells great, and I figured that I could let it cure and melt down, eventually, in to a hair pomade such that Murray's is: like no other, in thickness.
Somewhere amidst the compromise, and the aesthetic appeal of both of the products, while not having my first choice, I looked at an old canister of my Murray's pomade that I had on hand, and I longed for the staunch thickness and no jokes hairstyling hold of my common daily routine, in styling my hair with Murray's pomade, yet I had a bit of my Pandemic Unemployment Award money as a financial windfall, and with my enterprising notions sparked, having purchased an iPad Pro and Apple Pencil with the bulk of the funds, I was itching and eager to discover some entrepreneurial novelty commodity, of... well, it ended up being WalMart.com's merchant eCommerce hosting platform, of their online marketing and fulfillment shopping website.
It was tense AF. As soon as I discovered the nearest chem-ocoepia singular raw materials listed on the Murray's pomade ingredients on Wal-Mart's online mercantile hosting platform, I was quick to pull out my Pandemic Unemployment Award EBT card from my murse to input my payment information. The Wal-Mart fulfillment centers must have been banging bwamm, from coast to coast, with how the days in projected fulfillment times were hauling butt, down the calendar days, to come. Much like an urgent need to of on of of shitliness, of a desperation development of the near-butthole region, far from home, or retail offering; the nearest toilet.
But the chemicals are good, especially the 6-Methyl Coumarin - a particularly soft and fluffy powder, with a most yum-yum coconut and vanilla delicacy scent about it. There's no doubt that the chemicals are pure, and that Wal-Mart packs a reputable retail offering about itself - years since I'd last visited a Wal-Mart retail center, in-person. I was sold on a recent mineral supplement search find that placed Wal-Mart in my favored next-to-do place thing on my list, for the fact that they now stocked Humineral Humic and Fulvic Minerals, at a significantly competitive markdown, from the Hollywood boutique specialty and juice shop, which had closed down, unfortunately, as well; I'd discovered.
That's all, for this product review. Here's a pic of the merchandise.
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