I received a bunch of clothes for presents--until my grandfather walked down the hall and came back with a hefty package.

I knew what it was, of course, but I was thunderstruck just to know he'd even got it.
Speaking of that: my grandmother had been out early, dropping someone off for work. She had heard the night before at Circuit City that they'd get a new shipment, so she got in line around 7:00 AM, and when my grandfather finished his heart checkup, he took her place in the freezing cold. Right before opening, they gave out tickets to the first 24 people, of which my grandfather was 20. He would have been 24, had two families in front of him been allowed to more than one Wii.
Circuit City allowed you to leave any time and claim the Wii. Nobody else could buy it if they didn't have a ticket. Furthermore, the tickets were actual
laminated tickets--not slips of paper with a number written in marker, like at Wal-Mart. It was definitely more organized. And indeed, one man did pull up and offer $1,000 to anybody for their ticket.
As far as the system itself: it's small, easy to set up, and the remote is quite responsive. Wii Sports is nice (especially the tennis game), but it can't hold a candle to
Mario Galaxy, which is the most fun I've had with a Mario game since
Super Mario 64.
I'm looking very forward to
Super Smash Bros. Brawl. And you just know they'll make a new Zelda for the Wii.