Outside? For GameCube's launch I waited inside Walmart, at the electronics section, with fifteen or twenty other people at midnight. By 12:05 we were all out the door. That was a case not of me being worried about finding a system later in the day but just wanting to play it as soon as possible. I had already driven three hours that day after a huge football game, so I managed to get about two or three hours of playing in before I collapsed.
Obviously I'm very anti-pre-ordering, but I don't want that to be taken as an attack on people who do it. What I'm ridiculing is the practice itself, particularly in this situation of large launch shipments, and the corporations like GameStop which create mass hysteria for their pre-order programs based on unknown allocation numbers and their general, greedy fervor to have people pre-order absolutely anything. As I've said in this thread and elsewhere, if you have a pre-order already, you might as well keep it, and I just hope you didn't suffer too much to get it. My words are more to encourage people who could not get a pre-order before the program was stopped, or people who are on the fence about whether it's really necessary. Those are the people with potential to create unfounded Wii shortage hype, which would be misleading and unfortunate. Those who pre-ordered give no cause for worry in this regard.
The question in the podcast was "Should people who didn't get a pre-order be worried about getting a system on launch day?" And as you heard, we all thought not. That question is the basis for this discussion, not "Are people who pre-order just stupid?"