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At Fabulessly Frugal, savvy shoppers can find video tutorials and state-specific coupon lists. The site boasts nine bloggers, including the coupon class instructors Yoder and Knight, who specialize in specific grocery stores. Yoder started the blog about three years ago for family and friends. She knew Knight, who had also started to clip coupons, from her church, and the two started blogging together in November 2008. A few months later, Yoder learned that she was pregnant with her seventh child, and then her husband lost his job. Her family, however, had a reserve of food to fall back on thanks to coupons, Yoder said. During her best shopping trip, she purchased 165 boxes of cereal for about $14. It wasn't long before Yoder and Knight realized their extreme coupon website could make money. The site features advertisements, and they get paid per click on about 75 percent of the coupons found on the website, Yoder said. They made $35 the first month it featured the coupons, she said. "We make that in an hour now," said Yoder, who now supports her family with the website, which gets about 30,000 hits per day. The coupon craze is both good and bad, she said.
On one hand, she makes a living off it. "At the same time there's just an increased level of frustration for everybody," she said in reference to the long lines and sometimes empty shelves. Yoder and other extreme coupon cutters acknowledge some participants do cross the line. In Idaho, two newspapers reported this month that coupon inserts were being stolen from their racks. The state's largest newspaper, the Idaho Statesman, set up a sting in Boise and filed a police report after a woman was caught pulling the ads from more than a dozen copies. In nearby Nampa, a woman said she was banned from Wal-Mart stores because of an argument over her use of a competitor's coupon. "We should have accepted the coupon, and we understand that this could have been handled differently from both sides. I've since reached out to the customer and invited her back to our store," said Lorenzo Lopez, a Wal-Mart spokesman based in Arkansas. While some newspapers have reported thefts, several have also reported that sales are up with help from coupons. In Washington state, the Columbia Basin Herald reported single copies sales were up 12 percent in May, compared to the previous year. The newspaper reported that more than 800 newspapers were sold at its Moses Lake, Wash., offices on a recent Wednesday afternoon. While the coupon clipping trend is probably not a huge factor when it comes to newspaper circulation, the coupon business has been very healthy during the recession, said Rick Edmonds, a media business analyst at The Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Fla. "I think, particularly with unemployment rates what they are, the phenomenon is going to be around for a while," he said.
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