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So trivial, yet it really ticks you off.

Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
When they ask you to push a number, say, "representative," that will often get you a real live person!

"We understand you want to speak to a representative, but first we need to get more information from you..."

I would have no qualms about giving the information first if, almost always, I didn't have to repeat it all when an actual person got on the line.

Reminds me of the financial aid office in college. Whenever I had a problem pertaining to them, it seemed like I had to go through my whole story umpteen times with everybody from the receptionist to the janitor before finally being passed on to the one person who actually had the power to do something for me.
 
Messages
17,224
Location
New York City
...I would have no qualms about giving the information first if, almost always, I didn't have to repeat it all when an actual person got on the line....

This. Time Warner, Fidelity and American Express are all guilty of this. I enter my information - account number, date of birth, etc. - with the automated system first, the system confirms it back and, then, 100% of the time, I have to do it all over again when the representative picks up. I'm with you, if the automated system can do basic functions to free up the representatives time and to make my time with him / her more efficient - then great, but that is not what happens.

While I agree with all this, my earlier post was about when these companies call you with an automated system and then tell you to push a number to talk to a representative and then you wait for that person to pick up. Time Warner does this. It obnoxiously reverses the "who waits for whom" equation that has always made the caller wait for the person called. It is so arrogant, so offensive that it makes me actively dislike the company.
 
Messages
12,021
Location
East of Los Angeles
Yes and a variation on the theme is the incredibly obnoxious practice of having a machine call you to do something or to push a number to wait for someone to come on the line which completely reverses, in the most arrogant way possible, the burden of who has to wait for whom. Time Warner Cable does this which only increases my loathing of that company.
And it only makes it worse when they finally come on the line and say, "Time Warner, how can I help you?" Seriously? You called me! How am I supposed to know how you can help me when I don't even know why I'm talking to you? lol
 

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
You know you’ve been on hold a while when you go through 4 different songs of “hold music”.

At times, not sure if it qualifies as “music” though .:p

Even worse, you are listing to the song, on hold, or in the elevator, and you suddenly realize it's Jimi Hendrix or Led Zeppelin, made into elevator music! Talk about feeling old.
 
Messages
10,941
Location
My mother's basement
I read a great suggestion for addressing our drug problem ...

1.) Legalize all currently illicit drugs, and, 2.) have all sales and distribution handled by Comcast customer service.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
And it only makes it worse when they finally come on the line and say, "Time Warner, how can I help you?" Seriously? You called me! How am I supposed to know how you can help me when I don't even know why I'm talking to you? lol


Some companies will call for a feedback on how they are doing with their service.
But when they do not provide a caller ID, I won’t answer the phone. I let the automated
voice-mail take over.


“Robbie the Robot”
553rlt.png



Greetings earthling,
if you do not speak English,
I am at your disposal with 187 other languages
along with the various dialects & sub-tongues .
How can I be of assistance.

I also added all the snap,crackle & pop sounds as well. :D
 
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Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
I was walking around a corner in a office building, when I was confronted by one of the most dreaded sights in the Western World, a plumber bent over working on a drinking fountain! Thankfully, instead of the dreaded Plumber Crack, this young guy was wearing the droopy pants, so all I saw was his plaid boxer shorts. Still not a fan of the style, but, if I had my druthers, I will take the eye full of boxer over a crack any day of the week! [video=youtube;5ZDbS39azbM]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZDbS39azbM[/video]
 
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Messages
17,224
Location
New York City
I was walking around a corner in a office building, when I was confronted by one of the most dreaded sights in the Western World, a plumber bent over working on a drinking fountain! Thankfully, instead of the dreaded Plumber Crack, this young guy was wearing the droopy pants, so all I saw was his plaid boxer shorts. Still not a fan of the style, but, if I had my druthers, I will take the eye full of boxer over a crack any day of the week! [video=youtube;5ZDbS39azbM]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ZDbS39azbM[/video]

Ever since "fashion" turned to low-rise jeans, at least in NYC, exposed women's butt cracks are everywhere, especially moms who bend over to pick up their kids, reach into the baby carriage, etc. And this is not some weird thing I'm looking for (believe me or not), as my girlfriend has said it to - it's ridiculous. When I first started to notice it, I asked my girlfriend why it was happening and she said its those "damn" low-rise jeans and low-rise pants in general.

I think it's just part of a decades-long trend (with the last fifteen years seeing an acceleration) toward overt sexuality in dressing (and conversation and actions) becoming, not only acceptable, but prevalent in society. I know I live in NYC, which isn't always representative of the country writ large, but I also live in the "regular" people area of Manhattan, where people do their own shopping and cleaning and pick up and drop off their own kids, etc., and the shift to overtly sexual clothes and conversation has been striking (as noted) in just the past fifteen years.

So, plumbers aren't the only ones whose butt cracks are hanging out in this city. What's going on in the rest of the country - is the low-rise-pants thing happening everywhere?

N.B. My grandmother passed away in 1976. I can't image her even being able to process regular women blithely showing their butt cracks in public - our society has moved very far, very fast.
 
Messages
17,224
Location
New York City
I'm a plumber for a living. I got some of those low rise jeans but the end result wasn't too good. [emoji14]

I been working with a plumber now as we are restoring an old apartment and the head plumber is a gym junkie - great shape - and dresses well, even his roll-up-his-sleeves work clothes have a sense of style and fit - no butt crack there. But he has a junior guy on his team who is scripted out of central casting with a disheveled look and, yes, the butt crack does show up.
 
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sheeplady

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
4,479
Location
Shenandoah Valley, Virginia, USA
Ever since "fashion" turned to low-rise jeans, at least in NYC, exposed women's butt cracks are everywhere, especially moms who bend over to pick up their kids, reach into the baby carriage, etc. And this is not some weird thing I'm looking for (believe me or not), as my girlfriend has said it to - it's ridiculous. When I first started to notice it, I asked my girlfriend why it was happening and she said its those "damn" low-rise jeans and low-rise pants in general.

I think it's just part of a decades-long trend (with the last fifteen years seeing an acceleration) toward overt sexuality in dressing (and conversation and actions) becoming, not only acceptable, but prevalent in society. I know I live in NYC, which isn't always representative of the country writ large, but I also live in the "regular" people area of Manhattan, where people do their own shopping and cleaning and pick up and drop off their own kids, etc., and the shift to overtly sexual clothes and conversation has been striking (as noted) in just the past fifteen years.

So, plumbers aren't the only ones whose butt cracks are hanging out in this city. What's going on in the rest of the country - is the low-rise-pants thing happening everywhere?

N.B. My grandmother passed away in 1976. I can't image her even being able to process regular women blithely showing their butt cracks in public - our society has moved very far, very fast.

Yes, that happens here. Some of it isn't just the fact that women wear lose rise jeans, but that they wear them much too tight as well (as in tighter than they are manufactured to be worn). Then they slide down. They also create a muffin top effect at the waist, which is hideously unattractive.

Personally, I hate low rise pants. They're designed for women without vintage figures and rather the tube shape. My rule is that if I can pull a pair of pants that has a zipper off without undoing the button and zipper, I don't buy them. That leaves me with very few choices in pants.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas

​You’ve Come a Long Way Jeanie !

1918.
Colleges students at a farm where they were working as replacements
for the men called up to the military in WW1.
No one was making jeans for women back then, so ....
j5hwmw.jpg


The dirty 30s !
9jziw7.png


Here we come 40s !

2u70ztu.jpg


Fabulous 50s !
10shcnd.jpg


​“For the Times..they are a-changing “ 60s
mlma1k.jpg


Bell-bottom mania ! 70s
nd7v3l.jpg


Here tie-dye...gone tomorrow ! 80s

2v93yiv.jpg
 
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GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,801
Location
New Forest
Would I be committing Lounger heresy by admitting that I don't possess a single pair of jeans? Worse, I don't really want a pair either.
 

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