Those pants are rad.
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norton ash wrote:I had a couch-surfing transient friend who made out like a bandit in the late 80's/early 90's ripping off the Columbia Record Club by making up fake names and info and using friends' apartment addresses to get the free introductory 10 discs... the demands from Columbia would keep coming to the apartments, but they could do nothing because the 'club member' didn't exist and neither did the phone numbers the dude gave Columbia. I think he scammed about 50 CD's that way.
Did anyone really, really take advantage of those introductory offers?
Joseph Parvin of Lawrenceville, NJ, was undoubtedly the patron saint of anyone who ever wanted to stick it to a music club for receiving an unwanted record.
In March 2000, the 60-year-old Parvin admitted that he had used 16 post office boxes and his own home address to fleece Columbia House and BMG out of 26,554 discs during a five-year span in the '90s. He pleaded guilty to a single count of mail fraud.
Oddly, the New York Times story on Parvin’s plea included a story of another scammer who was nearly as prolific. Just five months earlier, David Russo pleaded guilty to stockpiling 22,000 CDs using a similar scheme. He then sold the booty at flea markets.
lucky » Thu Sep 08, 2016 11:16 am wrote:In the UK up to about 1980's we had x3 TV channels then x4 in 82 and around the same time all the channels shut down about midnight and the BBC use to play the national anthem.
In offices now, nearly everyone works with a PC what did they all do pre-computer age?.
IN the 70's it was quite normal for starters at a restaurant to include a small glass of bottled fruit juice.
gnosticheresy_2 » Tue Jan 10, 2017 11:21 pm wrote:lucky » Thu Sep 08, 2016 11:16 am wrote:In the UK up to about 1980's we had x3 TV channels then x4 in 82 and around the same time all the channels shut down about midnight and the BBC use to play the national anthem.
In offices now, nearly everyone works with a PC what did they all do pre-computer age?.
IN the 70's it was quite normal for starters at a restaurant to include a small glass of bottled fruit juice.
TV used to shut down in the afternoon in 70s. Test card + the the BeeGees for a few hours
semper occultus » Thu Jan 12, 2017 2:16 pm wrote:...well clearly computing is an activity done standing up - not entirely unlike steering the Titanic...an imaginative fail by Rand though I have to say....the future actually looked look this...and may very well still do so....
Iamwhomiam » Thu Jan 12, 2017 3:20 pm wrote:Jeeze, Elvis, I thought you would have found it obvious, but only because there are two steering wheels, one for the X axis and one for the Y axis! In other words, it was the conceptual mouse!
norton ash » Mon Jan 09, 2017 4:14 pm wrote:^^^ This. The 'so' beginning to a statement ... interviewers and interviewees, very noticeable, and I have friends who concur that it really is a new thing.
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