iamsonotamused
IAmSoNotAmused
iamsonotamused

When I was in college, I was the one that decided whether or not I went to class. If there's a pile of snow...heh...the professor can go to frozen hell. I'm staying home and watching a movie. College snow days were a formality.

Lemme serve you some copypasta, since you didn't understand it the first or second time:

Not your place to decide Douchey McDoucheNozzle.

Your problem isn't your age. I don't even know (read: care) how old you are. You are a tiny screen name and a bunch of ranting, butthurt text to me.

I don't know, is the face larger than 2" or do you use it impress people?

I was thinking more along the lines of those smartwatches. I don't find those practical (yet), but they're not obsolete.

I don't shop for watches so I have no idea how much they cost. However, the fact that you use watches as a class indicator suggests you are precisely the kind of douchebag I'm trying to avoid...so goodbye.

You seem really butthurt. Might I suggest sitting on a soft pillow to ease your buttpain?

Grandpa died before cellphones were a thing. Just like how his grandfather traveled by horse because cars didn't exist. It's not pretentious to use something practical. Now, wearing an anachronism because you think it makes you look like anything, makes you a pretentious douche.

Got it. You wear a watch so strippers will think you have class.

It does depend on the watch.

Cufflinks are fine. Even tie bars. The wrong kind of people wear watches. Those assholes should keep wearing them as a warning to the rest of us to stay away. Non-assholes should avoid them.

Counterpoint: watches project the image of obnoxious douchebaggery. Not all watch wearers are douchebags, but it's HIGHLY correlated. The sole exception are people who aren't allowed phones at work (security restrictions or dirty work environment). Everyone else? The bigger the watch face, the worse the person wearing

Drew McWeeny

Doubt that BR release is coming soon. Apparently TNG has been a modest seller (looks AMAZING though). DS9 was always less popular than TNG...I don't think the business model is there, especially because DS9 would require the same level of painstaking reediting from dailies that TNG did, plus far more CG work since DS9

If you played Elder Scrolls you were playing because you enjoyed the quests,mods or just the atmosphere. Grind in those games involves 1-2 quests and then you have enough coins to buy the best set of items in the game, because not MMO.

That's an excuse/crutch for a lack of discipline. That's a problem with (figurative) you and it's something 100% within your control. The consumer financial world operates on a monthly basis. You can't control that. Not being able to absorb spikes if they land on the wrong day of the week is an actual problem which

Sorry to hear that. Capital One still caters to to those with less-than-perfect credit, so maybe try them? They might not lend a hand now, but they'll probably be the first to try at some point.

RE: Your last paragraph. Despite all the talk of saving here and there, the best way to ensure your financial security (by far, it's not even close) is to have a really good source of income. Time spent clipping coupons is better spent building a new marketable skill. You're not going to save $10K every year with

Credit card(s). Really. Put everything on plastic, budget based on what you charge when you charge it not when you transfer cash to/from your bank account. Pay your card off every month. Then it doesn't matter how often your paid, because your income always precedes the payouts and you can views things at the monthly