Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Xmas Season Predictions
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November 30, 2009 at 12:57 AM #488994November 30, 2009 at 10:13 AM #488146sdduuuudeParticipant
I have a 8+ year old Panasonic plasma. Still looks great, but I took the HD plunge this weekend with new 42″ LCD and up-converting yamaha A/V receiver. I ordered everything online.
TG – online is the way to go for you. Shipping is often free and you pay no sales tax. Plus, you don’t have to load and unload it. Get an account on nextag.com and pricegrabber.com, set up lists of the units you want to buy and watch the prices for a while. You’ll see a deal somewhere in there.
The only exception may be Costco, if they have what you need. There is a 50″ LG plasma at costco that is pretty nice for $699 but I had to have a 42″ to fit my existing space.
November 30, 2009 at 10:13 AM #488313sdduuuudeParticipantI have a 8+ year old Panasonic plasma. Still looks great, but I took the HD plunge this weekend with new 42″ LCD and up-converting yamaha A/V receiver. I ordered everything online.
TG – online is the way to go for you. Shipping is often free and you pay no sales tax. Plus, you don’t have to load and unload it. Get an account on nextag.com and pricegrabber.com, set up lists of the units you want to buy and watch the prices for a while. You’ll see a deal somewhere in there.
The only exception may be Costco, if they have what you need. There is a 50″ LG plasma at costco that is pretty nice for $699 but I had to have a 42″ to fit my existing space.
November 30, 2009 at 10:13 AM #488695sdduuuudeParticipantI have a 8+ year old Panasonic plasma. Still looks great, but I took the HD plunge this weekend with new 42″ LCD and up-converting yamaha A/V receiver. I ordered everything online.
TG – online is the way to go for you. Shipping is often free and you pay no sales tax. Plus, you don’t have to load and unload it. Get an account on nextag.com and pricegrabber.com, set up lists of the units you want to buy and watch the prices for a while. You’ll see a deal somewhere in there.
The only exception may be Costco, if they have what you need. There is a 50″ LG plasma at costco that is pretty nice for $699 but I had to have a 42″ to fit my existing space.
November 30, 2009 at 10:13 AM #488783sdduuuudeParticipantI have a 8+ year old Panasonic plasma. Still looks great, but I took the HD plunge this weekend with new 42″ LCD and up-converting yamaha A/V receiver. I ordered everything online.
TG – online is the way to go for you. Shipping is often free and you pay no sales tax. Plus, you don’t have to load and unload it. Get an account on nextag.com and pricegrabber.com, set up lists of the units you want to buy and watch the prices for a while. You’ll see a deal somewhere in there.
The only exception may be Costco, if they have what you need. There is a 50″ LG plasma at costco that is pretty nice for $699 but I had to have a 42″ to fit my existing space.
November 30, 2009 at 10:13 AM #489014sdduuuudeParticipantI have a 8+ year old Panasonic plasma. Still looks great, but I took the HD plunge this weekend with new 42″ LCD and up-converting yamaha A/V receiver. I ordered everything online.
TG – online is the way to go for you. Shipping is often free and you pay no sales tax. Plus, you don’t have to load and unload it. Get an account on nextag.com and pricegrabber.com, set up lists of the units you want to buy and watch the prices for a while. You’ll see a deal somewhere in there.
The only exception may be Costco, if they have what you need. There is a 50″ LG plasma at costco that is pretty nice for $699 but I had to have a 42″ to fit my existing space.
November 30, 2009 at 12:31 PM #488197AecetiaParticipantCostco and Sam’s Club both have great deals as did some of the other larger electronic stores. I think you will be able to get great deals for the next couple of months. We bought our tv on Tweeter before they went out of business last year.
November 30, 2009 at 12:31 PM #488363AecetiaParticipantCostco and Sam’s Club both have great deals as did some of the other larger electronic stores. I think you will be able to get great deals for the next couple of months. We bought our tv on Tweeter before they went out of business last year.
November 30, 2009 at 12:31 PM #488745AecetiaParticipantCostco and Sam’s Club both have great deals as did some of the other larger electronic stores. I think you will be able to get great deals for the next couple of months. We bought our tv on Tweeter before they went out of business last year.
November 30, 2009 at 12:31 PM #488833AecetiaParticipantCostco and Sam’s Club both have great deals as did some of the other larger electronic stores. I think you will be able to get great deals for the next couple of months. We bought our tv on Tweeter before they went out of business last year.
November 30, 2009 at 12:31 PM #489064AecetiaParticipantCostco and Sam’s Club both have great deals as did some of the other larger electronic stores. I think you will be able to get great deals for the next couple of months. We bought our tv on Tweeter before they went out of business last year.
November 30, 2009 at 7:40 PM #488351RicechexParticipant[quote=temeculaguy][quote=Ricechex][quote=Aecetia]Go buy the biggest television they have and enjoy it. No one I know deserves it more. You need to do this. [/quote]
Aecetia–were you being sarcastic? I have never quite understood this “you deserve it” mantra. Who says a person “deserves” anything? My basic philosophy is: if you can’t afford to pay in cash, then you don’t deserve it.[/quote]
She wasn’t being sarcastic, she actually has known me in the real world long before piggington existed and knows my quirks, one of them being that I am overly conservative financially. It’s a personality flaw, she knows it and her advice only applies to me, it is far from what she was taken to task as ecouraging a consumerism mentality. Without boring you with the details of my financial situation, I suffer from buyers remorse, I’m afraid that if i buy big tv’s, they will become cheaper, even though I’d benefit from one, even though I can easily afford to pay cash, even though that cash has no other purpose, I have no debts, no cc bills, no car payments and a 401k that I’ll never live long enough to spend, yet I still can’t bring myself to spending money on something I can live without. I’m an inverted shopaholic, I find happiness in eating hot dogs on a steak budget, she knows this and thinks I would benefit from letting loose a little and buying something I want, not just need. At some point I’ll realize I can’t take it with me, but black friday came and went and I didn’t buy anything for myself, still have the little cheapo t.v., still can’t read the score of the laker game on it.
We all have our issues, that one is mine, it could be worse. I did pretty good, I went to three stores, measured the space where it would go, compared prices, looked at the screens, but ended up wussing out. My daughter teased me in the store as i toiled with the decision, she remarked that I’ve spent more on picking up the tab for a birthday party, buying cars or college funds for my kids, but $600 for a t.v. and I almost have a seizure. Who says we have to make sense all the time? Who on these boards can say that they don’t have at least one personality flaw that they rationalize?[/quote]
I get it TG. I suffer a similar condition. I once spent 2 hours in JCPenney sweating over buying a $700 sofa! The choices, the price…it was just too much, and my old sofa was beat down. However, going for a weekend in Palm Desert and dinner at LG’s causes no stress whatsoever. Go figure. It is priorities for sure.
Hey, you have done gender analysis/dating/relationships with exceptional proficiency and insight; have you ever considered money analysis? It is quite weird about therapy/counseling—training is all about family dynamics, risk factors, etc etc etc, but no money theory. The elephant in the room.
November 30, 2009 at 7:40 PM #488518RicechexParticipant[quote=temeculaguy][quote=Ricechex][quote=Aecetia]Go buy the biggest television they have and enjoy it. No one I know deserves it more. You need to do this. [/quote]
Aecetia–were you being sarcastic? I have never quite understood this “you deserve it” mantra. Who says a person “deserves” anything? My basic philosophy is: if you can’t afford to pay in cash, then you don’t deserve it.[/quote]
She wasn’t being sarcastic, she actually has known me in the real world long before piggington existed and knows my quirks, one of them being that I am overly conservative financially. It’s a personality flaw, she knows it and her advice only applies to me, it is far from what she was taken to task as ecouraging a consumerism mentality. Without boring you with the details of my financial situation, I suffer from buyers remorse, I’m afraid that if i buy big tv’s, they will become cheaper, even though I’d benefit from one, even though I can easily afford to pay cash, even though that cash has no other purpose, I have no debts, no cc bills, no car payments and a 401k that I’ll never live long enough to spend, yet I still can’t bring myself to spending money on something I can live without. I’m an inverted shopaholic, I find happiness in eating hot dogs on a steak budget, she knows this and thinks I would benefit from letting loose a little and buying something I want, not just need. At some point I’ll realize I can’t take it with me, but black friday came and went and I didn’t buy anything for myself, still have the little cheapo t.v., still can’t read the score of the laker game on it.
We all have our issues, that one is mine, it could be worse. I did pretty good, I went to three stores, measured the space where it would go, compared prices, looked at the screens, but ended up wussing out. My daughter teased me in the store as i toiled with the decision, she remarked that I’ve spent more on picking up the tab for a birthday party, buying cars or college funds for my kids, but $600 for a t.v. and I almost have a seizure. Who says we have to make sense all the time? Who on these boards can say that they don’t have at least one personality flaw that they rationalize?[/quote]
I get it TG. I suffer a similar condition. I once spent 2 hours in JCPenney sweating over buying a $700 sofa! The choices, the price…it was just too much, and my old sofa was beat down. However, going for a weekend in Palm Desert and dinner at LG’s causes no stress whatsoever. Go figure. It is priorities for sure.
Hey, you have done gender analysis/dating/relationships with exceptional proficiency and insight; have you ever considered money analysis? It is quite weird about therapy/counseling—training is all about family dynamics, risk factors, etc etc etc, but no money theory. The elephant in the room.
November 30, 2009 at 7:40 PM #488900RicechexParticipant[quote=temeculaguy][quote=Ricechex][quote=Aecetia]Go buy the biggest television they have and enjoy it. No one I know deserves it more. You need to do this. [/quote]
Aecetia–were you being sarcastic? I have never quite understood this “you deserve it” mantra. Who says a person “deserves” anything? My basic philosophy is: if you can’t afford to pay in cash, then you don’t deserve it.[/quote]
She wasn’t being sarcastic, she actually has known me in the real world long before piggington existed and knows my quirks, one of them being that I am overly conservative financially. It’s a personality flaw, she knows it and her advice only applies to me, it is far from what she was taken to task as ecouraging a consumerism mentality. Without boring you with the details of my financial situation, I suffer from buyers remorse, I’m afraid that if i buy big tv’s, they will become cheaper, even though I’d benefit from one, even though I can easily afford to pay cash, even though that cash has no other purpose, I have no debts, no cc bills, no car payments and a 401k that I’ll never live long enough to spend, yet I still can’t bring myself to spending money on something I can live without. I’m an inverted shopaholic, I find happiness in eating hot dogs on a steak budget, she knows this and thinks I would benefit from letting loose a little and buying something I want, not just need. At some point I’ll realize I can’t take it with me, but black friday came and went and I didn’t buy anything for myself, still have the little cheapo t.v., still can’t read the score of the laker game on it.
We all have our issues, that one is mine, it could be worse. I did pretty good, I went to three stores, measured the space where it would go, compared prices, looked at the screens, but ended up wussing out. My daughter teased me in the store as i toiled with the decision, she remarked that I’ve spent more on picking up the tab for a birthday party, buying cars or college funds for my kids, but $600 for a t.v. and I almost have a seizure. Who says we have to make sense all the time? Who on these boards can say that they don’t have at least one personality flaw that they rationalize?[/quote]
I get it TG. I suffer a similar condition. I once spent 2 hours in JCPenney sweating over buying a $700 sofa! The choices, the price…it was just too much, and my old sofa was beat down. However, going for a weekend in Palm Desert and dinner at LG’s causes no stress whatsoever. Go figure. It is priorities for sure.
Hey, you have done gender analysis/dating/relationships with exceptional proficiency and insight; have you ever considered money analysis? It is quite weird about therapy/counseling—training is all about family dynamics, risk factors, etc etc etc, but no money theory. The elephant in the room.
November 30, 2009 at 7:40 PM #488988RicechexParticipant[quote=temeculaguy][quote=Ricechex][quote=Aecetia]Go buy the biggest television they have and enjoy it. No one I know deserves it more. You need to do this. [/quote]
Aecetia–were you being sarcastic? I have never quite understood this “you deserve it” mantra. Who says a person “deserves” anything? My basic philosophy is: if you can’t afford to pay in cash, then you don’t deserve it.[/quote]
She wasn’t being sarcastic, she actually has known me in the real world long before piggington existed and knows my quirks, one of them being that I am overly conservative financially. It’s a personality flaw, she knows it and her advice only applies to me, it is far from what she was taken to task as ecouraging a consumerism mentality. Without boring you with the details of my financial situation, I suffer from buyers remorse, I’m afraid that if i buy big tv’s, they will become cheaper, even though I’d benefit from one, even though I can easily afford to pay cash, even though that cash has no other purpose, I have no debts, no cc bills, no car payments and a 401k that I’ll never live long enough to spend, yet I still can’t bring myself to spending money on something I can live without. I’m an inverted shopaholic, I find happiness in eating hot dogs on a steak budget, she knows this and thinks I would benefit from letting loose a little and buying something I want, not just need. At some point I’ll realize I can’t take it with me, but black friday came and went and I didn’t buy anything for myself, still have the little cheapo t.v., still can’t read the score of the laker game on it.
We all have our issues, that one is mine, it could be worse. I did pretty good, I went to three stores, measured the space where it would go, compared prices, looked at the screens, but ended up wussing out. My daughter teased me in the store as i toiled with the decision, she remarked that I’ve spent more on picking up the tab for a birthday party, buying cars or college funds for my kids, but $600 for a t.v. and I almost have a seizure. Who says we have to make sense all the time? Who on these boards can say that they don’t have at least one personality flaw that they rationalize?[/quote]
I get it TG. I suffer a similar condition. I once spent 2 hours in JCPenney sweating over buying a $700 sofa! The choices, the price…it was just too much, and my old sofa was beat down. However, going for a weekend in Palm Desert and dinner at LG’s causes no stress whatsoever. Go figure. It is priorities for sure.
Hey, you have done gender analysis/dating/relationships with exceptional proficiency and insight; have you ever considered money analysis? It is quite weird about therapy/counseling—training is all about family dynamics, risk factors, etc etc etc, but no money theory. The elephant in the room.
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