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Friday, August 15, 2014

3 Myths Comcast Is Telling The FCC About TWC Merger

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Comcast has been justifiably criticized for blatantly trying to curry favor with the FCC by trying to spend $110,000 to sponsor a fundraiser honoring FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn, but while the Kabletown Krew shrugged off those allegations, Comcast EVP David “The Merger Whisperer” Cohen was meeting with the FCC to push the company’s slate of semi-truths about its pending acquisition of Time Warner Cable.


In a letter posted to the FCC’s docket on the merger, Comcast recounts the details of an Aug. 11 meeting between Cohen and various FCC officials.


Much like Cohen’s risible appearances before lawmakers, he tried to bolster the merger argument with several truthy facts, including:


Myth #1: Comcast’s broadband domination will be nowhere near as bad as people say


In the meeting, Cohen took issue with merger opponents’ claims that a combined Comcast/TWC would control around 50% of the national broadband market. He cited an earlier letter submitted by Comcast calculating that the number would be closer to 35.5%.


In a particularly ballsy move, Comcast uses the FCC’s own data to make this point. Surely Big C wouldn’t dare try to pull one over on the FCC with its own numbers, right?


But look at the title of this chart that Comcast uses:

broadbandchartcomcast1


Yes, this chart lumps in every form of fixed-line broadband with downstream speeds of 3Mbps or more. So Comcast is lumping itself in with all those cruddy DSL lines that don’t even meet the FCC’s current — and already-outdated — definition of broadband as 4Mbps downstream.


So yes, if you include all the various regional telecom companies offering Internet service that will barely allow you to stream a Netflix movie, a combined Comcast/TWC might only account for 35.5%. If you were to move the bottom limit up to 4Mbps — or up to the more realistic broadband standard of at least 7Mbps — that number would certainly increase.


But honesty only hurts Comcast’s case.


Myth #2: Wireless broadband needs to be thought of as competition to Comcast


The above chart also makes the claim that a combined Comcast/TWC should really only be thought of as controlling 15.5% of the broadband market, since wireless broadband is a competitor.


Except it’s not.


Comcast charges around $50-70/month to most broadband customers, depending on bundles, speed, and region. This includes a monthly data threshold of a few hundred gigabytes.


Wireless companies charge a similar monthly rate (for just data; nevermind device costs or charges for voice) but most plans cap at between 2-5GB/month. So, in terms of per-GB costs, wireless data currently costs about 100 times what you get from fixed broadband.


This will inevitably change, but there are no indicators that wireless companies will open up their caps to allow for the same usage limits enjoyed by fixed broadband customers.


Additionally, broadband from pay-TV providers allows Comcast to bundle in TV service. Wireless broadband may offer live streaming of all sorts of video, and download speeds may be comparable — if not sometimes better — than cable, but no wireless companies are offering a live-TV over-the-top service with a channel lineup rivaling cable providers.


Until that happens — until a consumer could reasonably consider a wireless data plan as a replacement for fixed broadband — this is a nonsensical point that only makes Cohen and Co. look bad.


Myth #3: There’s nothing to worry about because Comcast & TWC are not currently competitors


This old gem again.


“[T]he broadband marketplace is competitive and dynamic, and consumers enjoy ample and growing choices of broadband providers,” reads the letter.


To quote every hack Jerry Seinfeld impersonator, “Who are these people?”


Please, someone show us this magic land where consumers have the choice of multiple broadband providers all offering high download speeds at a decent price, because most of us have the choice of broadband from our cable company and DSL from the phone company, and that’s it.


Just look at the FCC data from 2013, from the very report that Comcast tries to draw its pro-merger conclusions:

fccmap


In addition to the wide swaths of rural land with few broadband options (again, this uses the outdated definition of 3Mbps or better), many of the most densely populated metro areas in the country — Los Angeles, Atlanta, Miami, Chicago, St. Louis, Seattle, New Orleans, and basically the entire D.C.-Philly-NYC-Boston corridor — have few options for even barely acceptable Internet service.


Approving the Comcast/TWC merger will do nothing to change this map. It will only change the name of the company that screws up the billing for the customers in these areas.


But Comcast’s argument that you can’t take away competition when no competition exists runs counter to its other core claim that the “marketplace is competitive and dynamic.” Cohen is trying to have his cake and claim it’s a hot dog.


Comcast has asked the FCC to focus on “protecting competition, not competitors.”


But what the company is really asking is for the FCC to allow Comcast to protect itself by buying its way into the nation’s two largest markets — L.A. and NYC — without ever having to compete or win over consumers.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Most U.S. $100 Bills Are Not In The United States Right Now

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$100 bills: what are they good for? Most Americans don’t use them, some stores won’t accept them, and their untraceability makes them tempting to steal. What you may not realize, though, is that two-thirds of all United States $100 bills aren’t in circulation in the United States. Instead, they’re the currency of choice in places where people have no faith in their own country’s government and the money it prints.


Well, that and illicit trade, like drugs and prostitution. What the Federal Reserve and the Secret Service have discovered, though, is that up to 2/3 of all hundred-dollar bills are circulating somewhere outside of the United States right now. (The Secret Service was originally founded to root out counterfeit currency, and only took on the task of protecting the President after the assassination of William McKinley in 1901. They still do the currency thing.) Twenty years ago, officials from both government agencies went to former Soviet countries and discovered that people were storing their money in U.S. dollars, with exchange posts located even in department stores so people could do last-minute exchanges for whatever the local currency was worth at the moment.


The argument for abolishing the hundred-dollar bill is as follows: most Americans don’t use them, many of the people who do use them are up to no good, and we have much easier ways to transfer cash around. The counter-argument is that each dollar bill in circulation makes the government a tiny bit of money, and criminals will always find some way to store and exchange money: after all, the European Central Bank has a 100 euro note that’s worth even more than the U.S. dollar.


Should We Kill The $100 Bill? [Planet Money]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Maker Of Nutella Buys Hazelnut Supplier To Keep The Choco-Spread Flowing

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What do hail storms in Turkey have to do with the supply of Nutella at your local grocery store? A lot, actually. Hazelnut prices are away up due to a worldwide shortage. Ferrero, the company that makes Nutella, uses about 25% of the hazelnuts in the world. It and simplified its supply chain this year by acquiring a major hazelnut processor, Oltan in Turkey.

Of course, it’s not just Nutella: Fererro also makes plenty of chocolates with hazelnuts. Ferrero Group is best known to Americans for making the unhealthy choco-hazelnut spread Nutella, or maybe for the Ferrero Rocher, a popular candy that also contains hazelnuts. They need a lot of hazelnuts, and with supplies low and prices more than doubling this spring, it makes sense to acquire secure a hazelnut source.


As we’ve told you before, the components necessary to make a single jar of Nutella come from all over the world. azelnuts are grown in the Middle East and parts of Europe, as well as some grown in the United States. Turkey has historically been a source for the nuts, and in a press release, Ferrero praised Oltan’s “historical, valuable, and consolidated presence in the Turkish hazelnut market.”


Nutella Hogs Hazelnuts to Meet the World’s Insatiable Craving for Chocolaty Goodness [Businessweek]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

T-Mobile Emphasizes: They’re Probably Not Going To Throttle You

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Imagine being part of a rarified group: your carrier’s top 20 gobblers of unlimited data. At T-Mobile, unlimited data is still a thing, and a recently leaked memo has customers panicking that using too much data will get them throttled. It won’t.

Some people interpreted the leaked message that way, because they apparently didn’t read the memo, or our coverage of it. Big Magenta’s Chief Marketing Officer, Mike Sievert, reached out to Recode to explain what the company’s new effort to stop “misuse” of data really means.


The company is starting small: they know exactly who the top 20 users of data on the network are, and the company will call them up for a friendly chat. They don’t plan wide-scale throttling…especially now that the Federal Communications Commission is taking a closer look at mobile companies’ policies when it comes to imposing limits on their customers’ data use.


However, that officially only means unauthorized data use, like peer-to-peer downloading or running a live 24/7 webcam. Unlimited means unlimited, Sievert explains. T-Mobile’s throttling should be transparent, because heavy users will receive a warning phone call before the carrier drastically dials back their speeds to slow down their data hogging.


T-Mobile Says It’s Not Planning to Throttle Unlimited Customers [Re/Code] (Thanks, theblackdog!)




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Creator Of Pop-Up Ads Apologizes For Doing His Part To Ruin The Internet

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Along with auto-play video and auto-refresh webpages, pop-up ads make up the unholy trinity of browsing the Internet. Now, the man who wrote the code for the first ever ad to come out of nowhere and spoil your reading experience is saying he’s sorry to the world.

In a lengthy piece for The Atlantic, Ethan Zuckerman talks about spending the early days of the Internet working for the shapeshifting Tripod.com, which started as content company marketed to recent college grads and eventually became a web-hosting service acquired by Lycos in 1997.


“The model that got us acquired was analyzing users’ personal homepages so we could better target ads to them,” he writes. “Along the way, we ended up creating one of the most hated tools in the advertiser’s toolkit: the pop-up ad.”


The idea, explains Zuckerman, was a way for advertisers to put some distance between their ad and the content on a web page.


“Specifically, we came up with it when a major car company freaked out that they’d bought a banner ad on a page that celebrated anal sex,” he recalls.


Of course, pop-up ads quickly became a way for advertisers to be more intrusive, forcing you to interact with their ad, if only to make it go away.


And while things like pop-up blockers and tab-based browsing have made pop-ups less of a nuisance than they once were, the idea still lives on in countless forms of advertising that put up a roadblock between the user and the content they want to reach.


“I’m sorry,” writes Zuckerman. “Our intentions were good.”


[via The Verge]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Salmonella Is Not A Flavor, So McCormick Recalls Ground Oregano

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oreganoOregano is a very tasty spice, but do you know what’s not so tasty? Potentially fatal foodborne illness. Routine tests at McCormick spice company turned up salmonella contamination, which may have affected as many as 1,032 cases of the ground herb.


Contamination of spices can be an especially insidious form of foodborne illness because we often apply spices right before eating, eliminating the possibility that any disease-causing organisms could be killed by cooking.


Potentially contaminated jars of ground oregano were sold in forty states and ten countries other than the United States. Look for .75 ounce jars with “best buy” dates of August 21 or 22, 2016.


Instead of returning the container to the store, you should call McCormick directly for a refund or replacement. You can contact them at 1-800-632-5847,




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

McDonald’s Employee Who Left Daughter At Park Suing TV Station For Revealing Personal Details

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When someone is arrested, it’s not uncommon for local media reports to say something like “Bob Smith, of the 1900 block of Main St. was charged with…” but you don’t usually get that person’s full home address and Social Security number. Yet that’s what happened when a TV station in South Carolina posted the full, unedited police interview with a McDonald’s employee who’d been arrested for leaving her 9-year-old daughter at a park while she worked.

Earlier this week, the website for WJBF-TV in North Augusta, SC, posted 13 minutes of police interview footage with the woman. The station had obtained the video through a Freedom of Information Act request, but didn’t edit out the portion of the video where she tells police her personal information, including spelling out her name, giving her full address and Social Security number.


The unedited video was on the site for at least an hour, reports the Washington Post, while people pointed out in comments on the story and on the station’s Facebook page that the video included information that should not be there.


The station soon replaced the full clip with one that is slightly shorter and doesn’t include the woman’s personal data, but in her eyes the damage was done.


Her lawyer says she is filing a lawsuit against the station and the reporter for revealing the irrelevant but highly sensitive information in the police interview tape.


South Carolina mom who left daughter at park sues TV station [Washington Post]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

New Target CEO Promises To Not Turn Retailer Into A Grocery Store

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Several years back, we started hearing complaints from Target shoppers that their local stores were eschewing large chunks of floor space that had been dedicated to things like home furnishings and housewares in order to make room for more groceries. Many expressed concern that their beloved quirky-but-affordable retailer was going to become a supermarket chain that also sold towels and sweatpants. The company’s new CEO is now trying to convince those worried customers that Target is not undergoing some radical shift.

“I’m not going to turn Target into a grocery store,” Brian Cornell, who just took over the gig a few days ago, tells the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. “Style, fashion, apparel, it’s core to the DNA of this company.”


Cornell, who coincidentally earned his stripes as an exec at food-oriented businesses like Safeway and PepsiCo, is the first Target CEO to come from outside the company.


Some might think that, being the new guy, he’d be eager to prove his worth by introducing sweeping changes right from the start, but Cornell doesn’t appear to be in any rush.


“I wouldn’t expect any changes in the next few months,” he explains. “I’m going to take my time to learn, to be really thoughtful. I’m going to spend a lot of time listening… I’m going to be a really good student over the next few months.”


Translated, that seems to mean let’s just get through this holiday shopping season without a hugely embarrassing incident like last year, and then we can figure things out.


If Target can make it through the rest of the year without the website issues or credit card hacks that plagued its last few holiday seasons, that would probably be seen as a huge triumph.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

The Annual Obligatory Post About The Return Of Starbucks’ Pumpkin Spice Latte

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psl Perhaps it’s the (thankfully) unseasonable fall-like weather today in these parts, but there is a sense of autumn in the air. Or maybe it’s just that Starbucks has begun the annual ritual of dangling its Pumpkin Spice Lattes in front of everyone’s noses.


The ‘bucks recently announced on the drink’s Twitter account — yes, a beverage that is only on sale for a couple months out of the year has its more followers than most humans — that the limited-time gourd-flavored hot beverage will go on sale Aug. 25 this year, which is earlier than usual for the PSL.


And if history has taught us anything, it’s that some Starbucks stores will just go ahead and start selling the pumpkin-y, spicy, latte-y drink whenever they damn-well feel like.


So now is the time for PSL fans to start hassling their local Stabucks to just start making the drinks already and save customers the apparent agony of having to wait.


As for me, I make my own PSL at home by shoving an entire can of pumpkin, some clotted cream, a handful of cloves, some cinnamon sticks, and a few tablespoons of recycled coffee grounds in my Mr. Coffee. It’s a work in progress, and only four of my friends have gotten ill after trying it.


[via Eater]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

SeaWorld San Diego Pledges To Double The Size Of Orca Environment, Spend $10M On Research

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What’s a company that makes its money off captive marine life to do when a documentary stirs up controversy? If you’re SeaWorld, you start coming up with ways to quell the critics: SeaWorld San Diego announced today that it’s going to double the size of its orca environment and spend $10 million in research on killer whales, as well as setting up an independent advisory committee with scientists to supervise its orca program.


The Blue World Project will basically double the current area where the orcas hang out, spanning 1.5 acres with 50-foot deep waters and stretching 350 feet in length, reports the Los Angeles Times. There will also be a viewing window down below for visitors to see the whales from underwater.


“Through up-close and personal encounters, the new environment will transform how visitors experience killer whales,” Jim Atchison, chief executive officer and president of SeaWorld Entertainment Inc., said in a statement. “Our guests will be able to walk alongside the whales as if they were at the shore, watch them interact at the depths found in the ocean, or a birds-eye view from above.”


The 10 whales in San Diego will have to wait until 2018 for the project to be finished, while other SeaWorld Parks in Orlando and San Antonio will also introduce similar improvements, officials said.


The advisory group will be put in place to maximize the “health and well-being” of the orcas, and includes an emeritus professor at the UC Davis veterinary school, a researcher at UC Santa Cruz, a physiologist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, and more.


That hefty chunk of change SeaWorld is pledging toward research will go to projects sponsored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, to study how orcas hear, reproduce and eat in the wild.


But will that be enough for critics, who decry the very fact that such animals are kept in captivity in the first place? Probably not, if the response from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals is any indication.


“This is a desperate drop-in-the-bucket move to try to turn back the hands of time when people understand the suffering of captive orcas, and it will not save the company,” said the group’s director of animal law, Jared Goodman. “A bigger prison is still a prison.”


Today’s announcement seems to be an effort to soothe worried investors on Wall Street, after SeaWorld’s economic fortunes took a turn for the worse after the documentary Blackfish. Shares of SeaWorld Entertainment Inc. dropped 33% this week, after the company’s earnings fell short of expectations.





Amid ‘Blackfish’ backlash, SeaWorld to expand orca environments [Los Angeles Times]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Alaska Airlines Employee Volunteers To Return Lost Cat To Owner 2,300 Miles Away

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14-year-old Itty Bitty was eventually reunited with his owner thanks to a helpful Alaska Airlines employee.

14-year-old Itty Bitty was eventually reunited with his owner thanks to a helpful Alaska Airlines employee.



Imagine losing your cat on the very day that you are planning to move thousands of miles away. And then, miraculously, someone finds your feline friend a few weeks later. But by that point, you’re so far away that you can’t afford to fly or drive back to bring him back.

This is exactly what happened to a woman from Seattle, whose cat ran away on July 4th weekend as she was packing the car for her move to Ohio.


The woman delayed her trip two weeks while searching in vain for Itty Bitty, her 14-year-old orange and white tabby pal. But eventually she had to leave.


Then a neighbor found the cat and called the folks at Seattle cat shelter Kitty Harbor, who wrote that Itty Bitty “was in poor shape, starving, a fresh deep gash in his neck and a bloody mouth with teeth missing.”


With the cat healing in the shelter, his relieved owner and Kitty Harbor went on Facebook trying to figure out a way for someone to help reunite her with Itty Bitty, who was still in too poor health to travel in the cargo section of a plane.


That’s how an employee for Alaska Airlines learned about the situation and figured she could work Itty Bitty’s return into her travel plans.


“We hadn’t seen Chicago yet, so I thought, why not,” she explains. “We can help out, and see the sights at the same time.”


But since Chicago is still many hours’ drive from Dayton, OH, where Itty Bitty’s owner had moved, the airline employee rented a car and drove out to Indiana to meet her halfway.


“We have two cats and I couldn’t imagine being without them,” said the employee. “They really are part of your family.”


[via SeattlePI.com]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

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Here are eight of the best photos that readers added to the Consumerist Flickr Pool in the last week, picked for usability in a Consumerist post or for just plain neatness.










Our Flickr Pool is the place where Consumerist readers upload photos for possible use in future Consumerist posts. Want to see your pictures on our site? Just be a registered Flickr user, go here, and click “Join Group?” up on the top right. Choose your best photos, then click “send to group” on the individual images you want to add to the pool.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Albertsons, Jewel-Osco, ACME, Shaw’s Supermarkets Hit By Credit Card Data Breach

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Welcome to the weekend everyone! What better way to kick things off than with the news that one of the nation’s largest supermarket operators has had its card payment system compromised at chains like Albertsons, Jewel-Osco, Shaw’s, and ACME.

According to AB Acquisition LLC, which operates these chains and others, the company “recently learned of an unlawful intrusion to obtain credit and debit card payment information in some of its stores.”


The company says that it has brought in the authorities and that it working with its IT services provider and third-party data forensics experts to investigate the cause and breadth of the breach.


It looks like the hack began on June 22 and ended by July 17.


As of this morning, AB Acquisition said it could not find evidence that any cardholder data was in fact stolen, or that any cardholder information had been misused.


In a statement, the company said it “believes that the intrusion has been contained and is confident that its customers can safely use their credit and debit cards in its stores.”


The hack affected the following stores:


Albertsons: stores in Southern California, Idaho, Montana, North Dakota, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming and Southern Utah.

ACME: stores in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey.

Jewel-Osco: stores in Iowa, Illinois and Indiana.

Shaw’s and Star Markets: stores in Maine, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire and Rhode Island.


The company says it will be posting more information on albertsons.com, acmemarkets.com, jewelosco.com, and shaws.com within 24 hours.


Customers whose cards may have been affected are being offered 12 months of complimentary consumer identity protection services. Starting today at 4 p.m. ET, concerned customers from these stores can call AllClear ID at 1-855-865-4449 to learn about this offer.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Ford Recalls 83,000 Vehicles Because Losing Power Or Rolling Away Isn’t A Perk

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Another day, another round of cars that might roll away even if they appear to be in the “park” position. This time Ford is recalling more than 83,000 vehicles because a faulty part could cause them to lose power to roll away.

The latest recall affects nearly 83,250 model year 2012 to 2014 Edges and Lincoln MKX, model year 2013-2014 Flex and Lincoln MKT, and model year 2013-2014 Taurus and Lincoln MKS.


According to a notice [PDF] from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the recall was initiated because an improperly installed clip in the axle – the halfshaft – can disengage from the linkshaft. If that occurs the power won’t be transmitted to the wheels, in turn, making the car stop and increasing the risk of a crash.


Additionally, if the parking brake isn’t engaged before exiting, the vehicle may roll away despite being placed in the “park” position.


Ford will notify owners and dealers of the issue starting at the end of the month. The vehicles will be inspected and if the issue is present, the linkshaft and halfshaft will be replaced.




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Woman Burns Mouth On Sweet Tea Filled With Industrial Cleaning Chemicals At Restaurant

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There’s nothing quite like taking a big sip of a nice cold drink when you’re thirsty — unless that beverage is filled with chemical cleaners used to degrease restaurant deep fryers. Officials say a 67-year-old woman burned her mouth when she drank from a cup of sweet tea at a restaurant that was laced with lye.


According to the Associated Press, the woman took one sip from her drink at a Utah restaurant, after getting it from a self-serve station, and spit it out.


“I think I just drank acid,” she told her husband.


She had, police say, as the drink contained a highly toxic cleaning solution, similar to what’s in drain cleaners and strong enough to clean a deep fryer. She ended up in the hospital’s burn unit in critical condition, and has been there since the incident on Sunday.


Her lawyer says she’s fighting for her life right now, and unable to talk.


The restaurant’s manager and investigators say that a worker accidentally poured in the chemical thinking it was sugar, dumping a large amount of it into the iced-tea dispenser. No one else drank the chemical tea, as a worker tossed the rest after the woman burned her mouth.


“It’s disturbing that this kind of toxic, poisonous material would be in the food-prep area and somehow find its way into the iced tea vat,” the woman’s lawyer said. “I don’t know how something like that can happen.”


Police are still investigating, but believe it was accidental, a police representative said. And the woman’s lawyer is waiting until that investigation is finished before deciding on any legal action.


The owner of the franchise location said he’s praying for the woman, and cooperating with officials.


Chemical-filled tea burns woman at Utah restaurant [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

ReShare By @bbcnews: “15 AUGUST 2014: English Premier...





ReShare By @bbcnews:

“15 AUGUST 2014: English Premier League to kick off with scores of African footballers. #PremierLeague #Africa

Figures from the English Premier League. See more: bit.ly/africapremier #BBCAfrica #BBCShorts #pluggedinsports #premierleague #officialplugmag






via Tumblr http://ift.tt/1oAqabd

Why Ship Four Hockey Sticks In One Box When You Can Use Four?

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Reader Leeny placed an order from Amazon: four hockey sticks, because Amazon really does sell everything. We have to admit that hockey sticks pose a packaging challenge, but Amazon was up to the task with tall and spacious boxes. What prompted Leeny to take some pictures and send them to Consumerist was that each of her sticks was mailed in a box that could have fit a few dozen more.


Did the four sticks come from different warehouses? We checked, and learned that they came from the same facility on the same day. There goes that theory.


four_boxes


“I put them in one box just to see if they’d fit,” Leeny wrote. “They did, with room to spare for about 30 more.” Of course, there’s a difference between just fitting in a box and shipping safely. Is it safer to let one stick jostle around in a box with some cushioning, or to send more than one to hit each other inside the box?


four_sticks


We don’t know, but apparently the experts at Amazon have this sorted, and “four boxes” is their solution.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Comcast Decides To Not Spend $110K On Party For FCC Commissioner

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Comcast — no stranger to lining the pockets of those who can help the company get what it wants (or rewarding them afterward with high-paying jobs) — was befuddled earlier this week when it and Time Warner Cable were heavily criticized for plunking down a total of $132,000 to sponsor a dinner honoring FCC Commissioner Mignon Clyburn… who just happens to be in the process of reviewing the two companies’ pending merger. Realizing that maybe this might look like something just short of bribery, the cable giants have decided to pull their money — sort of.

Deadline reports that Comcast (responsible for $110K of the total donation) and TWC will no longer be sponsoring the upcoming Walter Kaitz Foundation dinner, where Clyburn is being honored.


Comcast asked the Kaitz Foundation that “there be no recognition of Comcast at the dinner,” explaining that “We do not want either the Commissioner or Kaitz to fall under a shadow as a result of our support for diversity in the cable industry….By the same token, we do not want to punish Kaitz or detract from its important work.”


The company maintains that implications of buying Clyburn’s support “are insulting and not supported by any evidence.”


No evidence? We’d like to point to former FCC Commissioner Meredith Atwell Baker, who helped champion Comcast’s merger with NBC and was then rewarded with a job as a D.C.-based lobbyist for Comcast.


Time Warner Cable also gave a statement about how it pulled its piddling $22,000 contribution. Good for them.


The companies are still giving their money to the Kaitz Foundation, but will be doing it through different channels, instead of by sponsoring a party to honor one of the few people who has the leverage to shut down its merger plans.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Chain Storefronts With Slight Makeovers Continue To Not Fool Anybody

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Last year, we lamented the long hiatus of one of our favorite sites, Not Fooling Anybody, which featured makeovers of former chain storefronts that were, as the name states, not fooling anybody. What we didn’t know was that the site has been revived, in the form of a community on Reddit. Let the yellow-painted Pizza Huts roll!


We love tweaks to the American chainscape, so here are some of our favorite recent submissions to the subreddit.


This former Blockbuster Video can’t rent you any new releases, but they can help you achieve the latest hairstyles. Maybe.


(alexandrsalamandr -Reddit)

(alexandrsalamandr – Reddit)



This Subway that started out as an old-school KFC would look a lot better with a cupola. It could have a sandwich-shaped weathervane on top.



The windows make this a very recognizable former Taco Bell. Taco Bucks? Star Bell? It’s beautiful, anyway.



This former Burger King is actually quite lovely.


(KrispyKayak - Reddit)

(KrispyKayak – Reddit)



It even retained its square roadside sign with rounded corners.


oishii

(KrispyKayak – Reddit)



Happy Jack’s Biscuits and Gravy has lost its trapezoidal windows and signature roof hump, but everyone still knows that it used to be a Pizza Hut.


(KrispyKayak - Reddit)

(KrispyKayak – Reddit)



It’s hard to disguise a former Circuit City without extensive renovations.


lovelady_thrift

(Reddit – iamactuallyalion)



Really, really hard. Even if you put up a nice sign.


(Reddit - ltcarter47)

(Reddit – ltcarter47)



This Five Guys in a former Pizza Hut is an American treasure. Don’t let anyone tell you different.



NotFoolingAnybody [Reddit]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist