To this day I don't know how to read Tweets in the right order. I always feel like I'm reading a Carnac joke.
I was curious about the "Philly cream cheese" campaign example they mentioned. I assume it's this post.
The top reply is trolling them, which is awesome. So much for increased engagement.
But even funnier is the next top reply, which seems sincere. But when you look at the user profile, almost all of u/sunshinedogger's comments in the last year are on sponsored posts. So even the positive engagement is manufactured?
Who would have thought, consumers and investors have competing interests.
He assumes an average monthly rental cost of $1354, and 3% rent increase annually. I have lived in apartments where they increased the rent 10% one year and 15% the next.
Even putting that aside, ok, by the time you're dead, say it works out to the same amount spent. But as an owner, you've now invested in a generational asset. Renting now means your kids and theirs will also likely rent.
Gtfo.
I will admit there was a time when he was pushing electric cars while traditional auto manufacturers seemed to be dragging their feet. It felt like he was on the right side of a big issue and shaking things up. I think it's important to admit when we get it wrong. And boy did I get it wrong.
I can also ask basic, repetitive questions framed exactly to my use case without getting yelled at that the question has been asked and answered before.
Especially now that many vendors are passing on the processing fee, it's not even a free/subsidized service for customers anymore.
I don't understand. I was told in no uncertain terms from many news outlets that "Reddit won."
Hey! Don't threaten people! Don't hurt anyone! Just move to Godot. That's it. Abandon ship, peacefully. These people care more about money than employee lives anyway.
By the time he gets out, he'll be That 70's Guy.
Would love to know the plan against this https://youtu.be/EySCQI3WEi0