The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Fans bring boon to business

- ByAndreaSm­ith

PALMETTO, GA.>> Soon after Netflix released “Stranger Things,” fans of all ages came into Bradley’s Big Buy grocery store in Palmetto, Georgia, dressed like characters from the show, and wandered toward the Eggo waffles aisle, cameras in hand.

They sought out the exact spot where “Stranger Things” star Millie Bobby Brown filmed a scene as the character Eleven, and they’re still coming three years later, even after the store changed its name and became part of the Piggly Wiggly franchise.

Palmetto is a town of barely 5,000 people about 25 miles southwest of Atlanta where the grocery store cashiers greet customers by name. But after “Stranger Things” premiered in 2016, it became routine for employees to also welcome fans from around the globe. Fans have visited daily since the store reappeared in the third season on July 4, said Piggly Wiggly managerDav­id Johnston. About 50 fans showed up on one particular­ly busy Saturday in mid-July, he said.

“You can spot them in the crowd when they come in here,” Johnston said. “The girl the other day was dressed like Eleven, all the way to the blood running down her nose.”

Eleven is a main character of the series known for her mysterious mind powers and the subtle nosebleed she gets after activating those powers.

The nostalgic ‘ 80s scifi series broke Netflix records with its third season. Within four days of release, 40.7 million accounts had started watching it and 18.2 million had already finished it entirely, Netflix announced on Twitter.

Creators Matt and Ross Duffer set the series in fictional Hawkins, Indiana, but filmed in Georgia, which offers tax breaks and other incentives to moviemaker­s andwhose economy in return reaps $9.5 billion annually from the film industry, according to a 2018 GeorgiaDep­artment ofEconomic Developmen­t report.

A building on Emory University’s Briarcliff Campus in Atlanta served as the show’s Hawkins Laboratory, where all sorts of suspicious activity occur. In Duluth, crew transforme­d a vacantwing and food court inGwinnett PlaceMall into Starcourt Mall, a bustling hangoutwhe­remuch of the third season takes place.

The mall remains open to shoppers but has disappoint­ed fans who visit for a “Stranger Things” experience: A guard posted outside the wing used in filming shoos away anyonewho attempts to enter or take a photo. Fans can take photos of the exterior, which looks similar to the building that appears in the show.

Johnston said he’s happy to give quick tours of Piggly Wiggly and explain where fictional events took place. He’ll point out the path Eleven took through the store when she stole a few boxes of Eggo waffles and recall how she strutted away from the refrigerat­or aisle, ignoring the employee chasing after her.

Fans like to re-create this scene onsite, and some ask Johnston to play the baffled employee and chase them out of the store, he said. He usually obliges.

“We’ve had a ball with it overall,” Johnston said. “Everybody here goes out of their way to accommodat­e them.”

Employees started encouragin­g fans to write about their experience in a notebook they keep at the store.

“Loved coming here to get some Eggos and Coke,” said one note signed by Julia, Mike andDaniell­e from New York.

Johnston said the store’s Eggo waffles sales have tripled. Employees don’t require visitors to make a purchase, but most buy something anyway, including themed T-shirts with the phrase, “The strangest things happen at Bradley’s Big Buy.”

Businesses in Jackson are also benefiting from new customers in town. Throughout the series, downtown Jackson was portrayed as the town of Hawkins, where key characters played by Winona Ryder and Sean Astin worked.

Lucy Lu’s Coffee Cafe opened downtown in 2017, about a year after the first season’s release. Within months, the cafe had created a “Stranger Drinks” menu. Popular beverages include the Sheriff Hopper, a hazelnut and vanilla coffee drink, and the Demogorgon, a frappe with blood-red food coloring named after the monster that rampages through Hawkins.

Head barista Jayci Fitzmayer said the menu has been a hit with visiting fans and locals.

“A lot of our regulars get the Stranger Drinks too,” Fitzmayer said. “They love that they can be a part of that too because, just like us, they didn’t think that our town was anything special until this came out.”

 ?? ANDREA SMITH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ethan Curtis, a 10-year-old “Stranger Things” fan from San Antonio, eyes the Stranger Drinks menu while sipping on a Sheriff Hopper specialty drink at Lucy Lu’s Coffee Cafe in Jackson, Ga. Behind him, family members Emilynn Guthrie, 9, and Layla Curtis, 13, are dressed like characters Mike and Elle from “Stranger Things.” Lucy Lu’s employees said the themed menu is popular among locals and fans who visit to see filming locations.
ANDREA SMITH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ethan Curtis, a 10-year-old “Stranger Things” fan from San Antonio, eyes the Stranger Drinks menu while sipping on a Sheriff Hopper specialty drink at Lucy Lu’s Coffee Cafe in Jackson, Ga. Behind him, family members Emilynn Guthrie, 9, and Layla Curtis, 13, are dressed like characters Mike and Elle from “Stranger Things.” Lucy Lu’s employees said the themed menu is popular among locals and fans who visit to see filming locations.

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