“Fly on the Wal” by Charles Platt, New York Post 2.7.09
At first, I thought Charles Platt’s “Fly on the Wal” was another piece of his fiction writing. Then, I thought it was possibly a brilliantly conceived satire. Unfortunately, it is none of these things.
The piece is about Platt going undercover as a worker at Wal-Mart only to discover that working there is the best thing that has ever happened to him. In reality, it is a shameless advertorial.
Controversial view of Wal-Mart aside, the writing is sophomoric at best. The article is a stream-of-consciousness rant filled with clichés, poor word choice, contradictions, and lies.
I know many people who have worked at Wal-mart. The summer-before-last I applied at Wal-Mart. None of my personal experience or experience of my peers re-enforces what Platt claims. There is no diabolically ingenious quiz, the store does not run as a Timex watch, not once have I ever been greeted by anyone pope-esque.
The main question I’m left with after reading this piece, and I’ve read it multiple times, is how much Wal-Mart paid Mr. Platt and the Post for this story?
Now that would be a Wal-Mart story worth reading.
-Allen Reed