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mike92104
ParticipantI’ll second FLU’s comment. I got sued by someone who hit me (it WAS my fault) even thought she wasn’t wearing a seat belt and refused medical attention at the scene. Allstate took care of it all without bothering me one bit, and they didn’t just fold and give her the money. They fought her the whole way according to my agent.
mike92104
ParticipantI’ll second FLU’s comment. I got sued by someone who hit me (it WAS my fault) even thought she wasn’t wearing a seat belt and refused medical attention at the scene. Allstate took care of it all without bothering me one bit, and they didn’t just fold and give her the money. They fought her the whole way according to my agent.
mike92104
ParticipantI’ll second FLU’s comment. I got sued by someone who hit me (it WAS my fault) even thought she wasn’t wearing a seat belt and refused medical attention at the scene. Allstate took care of it all without bothering me one bit, and they didn’t just fold and give her the money. They fought her the whole way according to my agent.
November 11, 2008 at 4:07 PM in reply to: Just wondering where all the “Bring it on people” are at #302860mike92104
Participant[quote=afx114]
Then again, many of my clients are in creative/artistic fields, and some believe that creativity and artistry flourishes in bad economic times, so I’m not really sure what to think at this point.[/quote]
HA!! HA!! The art might flourish, but nobody will buy it. I work in theater, and if there is even a hint of a slowdown, we see our ticket sales drop considerably.
Art is the first thing to go. The only areas that do better in a slowdown are the repo business, booze, and cigarettes.
November 11, 2008 at 4:07 PM in reply to: Just wondering where all the “Bring it on people” are at #303223mike92104
Participant[quote=afx114]
Then again, many of my clients are in creative/artistic fields, and some believe that creativity and artistry flourishes in bad economic times, so I’m not really sure what to think at this point.[/quote]
HA!! HA!! The art might flourish, but nobody will buy it. I work in theater, and if there is even a hint of a slowdown, we see our ticket sales drop considerably.
Art is the first thing to go. The only areas that do better in a slowdown are the repo business, booze, and cigarettes.
November 11, 2008 at 4:07 PM in reply to: Just wondering where all the “Bring it on people” are at #303234mike92104
Participant[quote=afx114]
Then again, many of my clients are in creative/artistic fields, and some believe that creativity and artistry flourishes in bad economic times, so I’m not really sure what to think at this point.[/quote]
HA!! HA!! The art might flourish, but nobody will buy it. I work in theater, and if there is even a hint of a slowdown, we see our ticket sales drop considerably.
Art is the first thing to go. The only areas that do better in a slowdown are the repo business, booze, and cigarettes.
November 11, 2008 at 4:07 PM in reply to: Just wondering where all the “Bring it on people” are at #303250mike92104
Participant[quote=afx114]
Then again, many of my clients are in creative/artistic fields, and some believe that creativity and artistry flourishes in bad economic times, so I’m not really sure what to think at this point.[/quote]
HA!! HA!! The art might flourish, but nobody will buy it. I work in theater, and if there is even a hint of a slowdown, we see our ticket sales drop considerably.
Art is the first thing to go. The only areas that do better in a slowdown are the repo business, booze, and cigarettes.
November 11, 2008 at 4:07 PM in reply to: Just wondering where all the “Bring it on people” are at #303307mike92104
Participant[quote=afx114]
Then again, many of my clients are in creative/artistic fields, and some believe that creativity and artistry flourishes in bad economic times, so I’m not really sure what to think at this point.[/quote]
HA!! HA!! The art might flourish, but nobody will buy it. I work in theater, and if there is even a hint of a slowdown, we see our ticket sales drop considerably.
Art is the first thing to go. The only areas that do better in a slowdown are the repo business, booze, and cigarettes.
mike92104
ParticipantShe won.
mike92104
ParticipantShe won.
mike92104
ParticipantShe won.
mike92104
ParticipantShe won.
mike92104
ParticipantShe won.
mike92104
ParticipantI live right around the corner. It’s a nice house, but on a very busy street. New salem runs parallel to Mira Mesa and all the locals use it to avoid the major street. Glad to see something close for less that $300,00 though. I don’t understand why mira mesa isn’t cheaper. It’s a very boring area house wise.
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