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  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #317

    @salacious-crumb Advertising is bullshit. Shock, horror... 🙂

    Salacious CrumbS 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    replied to Chris B. on last edited by
    #318

    @chris-b said in Interesting reads:

    @salacious-crumb Advertising is bullshit. Shock, horror... 🙂

    Are you getting paid to shill on TSF? Is that what I’m supposed gto expect — that any comment I see in a forum or a review board is likely a paid advert? I could be an outlier, but I don’t think that’s what most other people think, either.

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by Chris B.
    #319

    @salacious-crumb

    "Dear Sirs,

    I recently had the exquisite joy of experiencing a Curved Air concert and was most impressed by the exceptional talent of their new drummer...."

    Stewart Copeland admits to writing that and a raft of other letters to music magazines in 1975 in the book I just mentioned on the "What are you listening to" thread.

    Find that Japanese guy who markets his incredible abs regime (for a while it popped up on half the sites I clicked on) and every comment is an obvious fake - "Wow sounds great, I'm going to give it a try", "Me too....".

    I can't readily locate him - he's possibly in jail.... 🙂

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    wrote on last edited by
    #320

    Yep I would never have "liked" Chris' post above if there wasn't something in it for me

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    wrote on last edited by
    #321

    The Serial Killer as a Marketing Genius

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by Salacious Crumb
    #322

    Long fascinating read about a young female grifter in the Big Apple. Very deceitful con artiste, but you kinda admire her chutzpah. Good chance this gets made into a movie.
    ——————————————————————————————————————-

    Maybe She Had So Much Money She Just Lost Track of It

    Somebody had to foot the bill for Anna Delvey’s fabulous new life. The city was full of marks.

    [...]

    Why this girl? She wasn’t superhot, they pointed out, or super-charming; she wasn’t even very nice. How did she manage to convince an enormous amount of cool, successful people that she was something she clearly was not?

    She saw something others didn’t. Anna looked at the soul of New York and recognized that if you distract people with shiny objects, with large wads of cash, with the indicia of wealth, if you show them the money, they will be virtually unable to see anything else. And the thing was: It was so easy.

    [...]

    Jessica Pressler  /  Feb 8, 2022  /  Crime

    How an Aspiring ‘It’ Girl Tricked New York’s Party People

    How an Aspiring ‘It’ Girl Tricked New York’s Party People

    Somebody had to foot the bill for Anna Delvey’s fabulous new life. The city was full of marks.

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #323

    @salacious-crumb Good on her. A fool and their money are easily parted.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #324

    The Gambler Who Cracked the Horse-Racing Code

    Bill Benter did the impossible: He wrote an algorithm that couldn’t lose at the track. Close to a billion dollars later, he tells his story for the first time.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-05-03/the-gambler-who-cracked-the-horse-racing-code

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    wrote on last edited by Tim
    #325

    What happened to Gary Taubes $40M Nutrition Science Initiative?

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #326

    https://amp.businessinsider.com/highway-closing-city-transformation-2018-5?__twitter_impression=true

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4lifeM Offline
    mariner4life
    wrote on last edited by
    #327

    Interesting opinion piece about how the media system is playing both sides for suckers, and how we just buy in to it.

    A Cracked article worth reading

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to mariner4life on last edited by
    #328

    @mariner4life Yeah. Was discussing with a friend a few weeks ago whether an experiment to unplug the internet and the television for a couple of months might yield significant benefits.

    It's typical that these great inventions would be fucked up by c#nts!

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • No QuarterN Online
    No QuarterN Online
    No Quarter
    wrote on last edited by
    #329

    @mariner4life that was a great read, thanks for posting.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #330

    Read this and you’ll probably want to retire to a seat in front of the fire with a large scotch and a loaded revolver

    John Lanchester  /  Jul 4, 2018  /  Politics & Economics

    John Lanchester · After the Fall: Ten Years after the Crash

    John Lanchester · After the Fall: Ten Years after the Crash

    Remember that remark made by Robert Lucas, the macroeconomist, that the central problem of depression prevention had...

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #331

    @Snowy have you heard of this?

    Mack Hogan  /  Jul 19, 2018

    London's Heathrow Airport Sometimes Hosts 'Ghost Flights' With No One On Them - Jalopnik

    London's Heathrow Airport Sometimes Hosts 'Ghost Flights' With No One On Them - Jalopnik

    Six times per week, an empty plane used to fly from London’s Heathrow Airport to Cardiff, Wales. The next day, the plane would make the return trip without a single passenger. Half As Interesting, the second channel from Planelopnik-approved Wendover Productions, details why ghost flights like this...

    taniwharugbyT SnowyS 2 Replies Last reply
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  • taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugbyT Offline
    taniwharugby
    replied to jegga on last edited by
    #332

    @jegga makes sense...especially when you have some of the bigger airlines will use means to stop a smaller airline gettign off the ground (both literally and metaphorically)

    jeggaJ 1 Reply Last reply
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  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    replied to taniwharugby on last edited by
    #333

    @taniwharugby hadn’t thought of that angle , airlines are ruthless in that regard.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to jegga on last edited by
    #334

    @jegga Yeah. Slots are far more valuable than you might think and once you lose it you are stuffed, probably never get it back at a busy airport. Home carrier airlines often use smaller planes, not just to increase frequency, but to use up slots to stop the opposition getting them. If you take up all of the slots with a 737 it stops someone coming in with an A380 and providing cheaper seats.

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • barbarianB Offline
    barbarianB Offline
    barbarian
    wrote on last edited by
    #335

    This is a great piece:

    us-news

    How Ex-Cop Jerome Jacobson Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game and Stole Millions

    How Ex-Cop Jerome Jacobson Rigged McDonald’s Monopoly Game and Stole Millions

    Jerome Jacobson and his network of mobsters, psychics, strip-club owners, and drug traffickers won almost every prize for 12 years, until the FBI launched Operation ‘Final Answer.’

    1 Reply Last reply
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  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #336

    Stories about weirdos like this interest me , I’ve met a few similar scumbags but not as bad as this one.

    Literary ambition. Fabulous parties. A hidden past. Who is Anna March?

    Literary ambition. Fabulous parties. A hidden past. Who is Anna March?

    Anna March came to L.A. a spunky, unapologetic feminist ready to raise hell. But in her past there were other cities, other names and a judgment against her for $380,000.

    1 Reply Last reply
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