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#1
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The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on
HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. |
#2
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On Aug 26, 10:38*am, Ken wrote:
* * * * The prior message made want to ask the question. *I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. *I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. *Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. R |
#3
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Ken wrote:
The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. They got some real shoddy contractors in Canada it seems. -- LSMFT I look outside this morning and everything was in 3D! |
#4
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On Aug 26, 10:38*am, Ken wrote:
* * * * The prior message made want to ask the question. *I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. *I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. *Check it out. SWMBO loves it, so I DVR it and we watch it together sometimes. My pet peeve - which is the same with many other DIY shows - is how they repeat much of what you've already seen when they come back from a commercial. Do they think we're idiots and can't remember why they're fixing the house? H on H isn't as bad as some of the other shows, but the re- caps are still unnecessary. Who pays for the high-end upgrades? They take a couple who just got ripped off for $50K on a bathroom remodel and build them a custom bath that is far above what they were going for in the first place. Do the sponsors cover the full cost? "Take it down...take it all down." |
#5
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In article
, DerbyDad03 wrote: My pet peeve - which is the same with many other DIY shows - is how they repeat much of what you've already seen when they come back from a commercial. It's not just DIY shows. A lot of Discovery, Learning, and History channel shows are like that. It's a way of stretching 10 minutes of information into an hour show. |
#6
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Smitty Two wrote:
In article , DerbyDad03 wrote: My pet peeve - which is the same with many other DIY shows - is how they repeat much of what you've already seen when they come back from a commercial. It's not just DIY shows. A lot of Discovery, Learning, and History channel shows are like that. It's a way of stretching 10 minutes of information into an hour show. they also need to hook in channels surfers who may be scanning around during commercials. |
#7
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On Aug 26, 1:46*pm, "chaniarts" wrote:
Smitty Two wrote: In article , DerbyDad03 wrote: My pet peeve - which is the same with many other DIY shows - is how they repeat much of what you've already seen when they come back from a commercial. It's not just DIY shows. A lot of Discovery, Learning, and History channel shows are like that. It's a way of stretching 10 minutes of information into an hour show. they also need to hook in channels surfers who may be scanning around during commercials. That only works if a surfer hits their station just as their commercial ends so that they catch the re-cap. If I'm surfing during a commercial, I don't stay on another channel that is running a commercial and wait for it to end. If I wanted to watch a commercial, I'd have stayed on the channel I was originally watching. What are the odds that a surfer is actually going to catch the re-cap just as it is beginning? |
#8
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"Smitty Two" wrote in message
news ![]() In article , DerbyDad03 wrote: My pet peeve - which is the same with many other DIY shows - is how they repeat much of what you've already seen when they come back from a commercial. It's not just DIY shows. A lot of Discovery, Learning, and History channel shows are like that. It's a way of stretching 10 minutes of information into an hour show. Yup, and if you watch enough History Channel you'll see the same photos and film footage and animations used over and over, including when their use is flat-out wrong. "When the German army invaded France in 1940...."--umm, yeah, they apparently were equipped with Russki T-34 tanks, how surprising. |
#9
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"RicodJour" wrote in message
... On Aug 26, 10:38 am, Ken wrote: The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. R I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. |
#10
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"chaniarts" wrote:
Smitty Two wrote: In article , DerbyDad03 wrote: My pet peeve - which is the same with many other DIY shows - is how they repeat much of what you've already seen when they come back from a commercial. It's not just DIY shows. A lot of Discovery, Learning, and History channel shows are like that. It's a way of stretching 10 minutes of information into an hour show. they also need to hook in channels surfers who may be scanning around during commercials. Add NatGeo to the list of offenders. I think that probably *is* it-- But the cost, if they haven't figured it out yet, is that folks like me won't ever come back to watch a 20 minute [1/2 hour] show stretched out over an hour. I *might* DVR one and ff through the crap- but that doesn't help their sponsors much. Jim |
#11
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On 8/26/2010 12:58 PM, DGDevin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message ... On Aug 26, 10:38 am, Ken wrote: The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. R I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. well i think the biggest mistake people make is giving ANY money up front. There was a news article just a couple nights ago here in KC about some dum ******* who paid a roofer multiple thousand up front. When are people gonna learn? I pay NOTHING up front. (on the rare occasion i can't do something myself) -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#12
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On Aug 26, 2:54*pm, Steve Barker wrote:
On 8/26/2010 12:58 PM, DGDevin wrote: "RicodJour" wrote in message On Aug 26, 10:38 am, Ken wrote: The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. That's an interesting idea. Very. Instead of flapping your gums...errr, fingers...here, go sell the idea to a DIY network before someone else does! well i think the biggest mistake people make is giving ANY money up front. There was a news article just a couple nights ago here in KC about some dum ******* who paid a roofer multiple thousand up front. When are people gonna learn? *I pay NOTHING up front. *(on the rare occasion i can't do something myself) Is it simply that you don't like to part with the money any sooner than you have to? Do you take it as a shady practice when a contractor asks for money up front? Or is it that you're worried that you'll lose leverage, or the contractor may skip, if you pay some money up front? R |
#13
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On 8/26/2010 2:06 PM, RicodJour wrote:
On Aug 26, 2:54 pm, Steve wrote: On 8/26/2010 12:58 PM, DGDevin wrote: wrote in message On Aug 26, 10:38 am, wrote: The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. That's an interesting idea. Very. Instead of flapping your gums...errr, fingers...here, go sell the idea to a DIY network before someone else does! well i think the biggest mistake people make is giving ANY money up front. There was a news article just a couple nights ago here in KC about some dum ******* who paid a roofer multiple thousand up front. When are people gonna learn? I pay NOTHING up front. (on the rare occasion i can't do something myself) Is it simply that you don't like to part with the money any sooner than you have to? Do you take it as a shady practice when a contractor asks for money up front? Or is it that you're worried that you'll lose leverage, or the contractor may skip, if you pay some money up front? R It is my opinion that any reputable contractor shouldn't need my money up front. I would hope he's liquid enough or has good enough credit to get my materials out of the supplier(s) without having to pay for them HIMSELF up front. I have a very reputable HVAC man i use, and even the very first time we met, he didn't want but a third and that was only after he had the equipment on my property. Since then, he's not asked for a dime (seven more major jobs) until he was finished. So yes, to answer your questions: No i don't want to part with my money any sooner than necessary Yes, i take it as shady if they ask for money up front And yes, you lose ALL your leverage if you don't owe them money. And yes, they skip all the time when paid. Fencers and roofers are the worst. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#14
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On Aug 26, 1:58*pm, "DGDevin" wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message ... On Aug 26, 10:38 am, Ken wrote: * * * * The prior message made want to ask the question. *I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. *I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. *Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. *His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. *Makes good watching, though. R I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. *Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. * Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. H on H did *one* show - the only one I ever saw them do it on - where they went after the contractor. They blurred out the name on the window of his office, but they had the guy on camera, asking him when he was going to pay the cabinet maker so that cabinets could be released to the home owners. They also mentioned afterwards that the authorities had filed charges because other people who had been ripped off by the same guy came forward after the show was aired. I think the hardest part is actually proving liability in a timely manner. Some of these cases take years to prosecute and you have to prove willful wrongdoing for it to be illegal. As far as I know, shoddy workmanship is nothing more a civil matter. Many of the H on H shows are just that: shoddy workmanship and jobs not finished - but not necessarily paid for either. The kitchen show I mentioned above involved taking the client's money but not paying the subs or suppliers. At that point, I believe we enter the realm of legal, not just civil, action. I'm not a lawyer...not did I stay at a Holiday Inn last night. |
#15
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On Aug 26, 1:58*pm, "DGDevin" wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message ... On Aug 26, 10:38 am, Ken wrote: * * * * The prior message made want to ask the question. *I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. *I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. *Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. *His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. *Makes good watching, though. R I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. *Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. * Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. My husband has a fantasy of a companion show called "Mike's Friends", in which various members of the building trades show the shoddy contractor new and interesting ways to employ common tools such as pipe wrenches and pneumatic nailers. Cindy Hamilton |
#16
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On Aug 26, 3:18*pm, Steve Barker wrote:
On 8/26/2010 2:06 PM, RicodJour wrote: On Aug 26, 2:54 pm, Steve *wrote: On 8/26/2010 12:58 PM, DGDevin wrote: *wrote in message On Aug 26, 10:38 am, *wrote: The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. That's an interesting idea. *Very. *Instead of flapping your gums...errr, fingers...here, go sell the idea to a DIY network before someone else does! well i think the biggest mistake people make is giving ANY money up front. There was a news article just a couple nights ago here in KC about some dum ******* who paid a roofer multiple thousand up front. When are people gonna learn? *I pay NOTHING up front. *(on the rare occasion i can't do something myself) Is it simply that you don't like to part with the money any sooner than you have to? Do you take it as a shady practice when a contractor asks for money up front? Or is it that you're worried that you'll lose leverage, or the contractor may skip, if you pay some money up front? R It is my opinion that any reputable contractor shouldn't need my money up front. *I would hope he's liquid enough or has good enough credit to get my materials out of the supplier(s) without having to pay for them HIMSELF up front. *I have a very reputable HVAC man i use, and even the very first time we met, he didn't want but a third and that was only after he had the equipment on my property. *Since then, he's not asked for a dime (seven more major jobs) until he was finished. So yes, to answer your questions: No i don't want to part with my money any sooner than necessary Yes, i take it as shady if they ask for money up front And yes, you lose ALL your leverage if you don't owe them money. *And yes, they skip all the time when paid. *Fencers and roofers are the worst. -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "... they skip all the time when paid. Fencers and roofers are the worst" Fences are one thing, but skipping off of a roof is just plain dumb. |
#17
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On 8/26/2010 4:16 PM, RicodJour wrote:
On Aug 26, 3:18 pm, Steve wrote: On 8/26/2010 2:06 PM, RicodJour wrote: On Aug 26, 2:54 pm, Steve wrote: On 8/26/2010 12:58 PM, DGDevin wrote: wrote in message On Aug 26, 10:38 am, wrote: The prior message made want to ask the question. I get the program on HGTV, but it might be on other channels as well. I think it is a great program with not only shocking examples of work being done, but some interesting techniques and material for accomplishing tasks. Check it out. The guy's heart is in the right place, but he's no Tommy Silva. His construction experience on display has some deficiencies. Makes good watching, though. I'd like to see follow-up shows where they identify the contractor responsible for the shoddy or fraudulent work and take him to court. Too many such sleazeballs count on people not wanting to spend the money to go after them, and since many folks don't research before hiring there is always another sucker to be ripped off. Those clowns deserve some bad publicity. That's an interesting idea. Very. Instead of flapping your gums...errr, fingers...here, go sell the idea to a DIY network before someone else does! well i think the biggest mistake people make is giving ANY money up front. There was a news article just a couple nights ago here in KC about some dum ******* who paid a roofer multiple thousand up front. When are people gonna learn? I pay NOTHING up front. (on the rare occasion i can't do something myself) Is it simply that you don't like to part with the money any sooner than you have to? Do you take it as a shady practice when a contractor asks for money up front? Or is it that you're worried that you'll lose leverage, or the contractor may skip, if you pay some money up front? R It is my opinion that any reputable contractor shouldn't need my money up front. I would hope he's liquid enough or has good enough credit to get my materials out of the supplier(s) without having to pay for them HIMSELF up front. I have a very reputable HVAC man i use, and even the very first time we met, he didn't want but a third and that was only after he had the equipment on my property. Since then, he's not asked for a dime (seven more major jobs) until he was finished. So yes, to answer your questions: No i don't want to part with my money any sooner than necessary Yes, i take it as shady if they ask for money up front And yes, you lose ALL your leverage if you don't owe them money. And yes, they skip all the time when paid. Fencers and roofers are the worst. Agreed with the first - sound financial practice. Can't agree with the second. In fact, in some areas of the country, like mine, you're not supposed to mix money from different projects. They're supposed to be in separate accounts. You're not allowed to spend money from one project "just to tide you over" on another project. I'm sure you can see the logic behind that - to protect the homeowner from a contractor throwing the homeowner's money down another homeowner's hole and not getting their own project completed when the contractor goes belly up. As much as the first one is sound financial practice, the second is poor financial practice for the contractor. Costs are incurred from the moment work starts on the project. Any time spent on the project after the contract is signed is an expenditure for the contractor. The funny thing is that a contractor with good business practices - ones like not skipping out on the job, not going bankrupt, keeping their books in order, and not extending no-interest loans - are the practices that would keep such a contractor from working for you. It seems like you're shooting yourself in the foot, but the real story is you don't hire people because you do most of the work yourself. That's fine, but not everyone can do that, not everyone has the time or inclination to do that, and you are making it sound like the contractor - every contractor - is trying to get over on you. Which, of course, is simply not the case. Your comments about leverage are telling. Believe it or not, most people in business for themselves don't need you to hold a big stick to want to do a quick and clean job. Any type of threats, whether boldly stated or implied, are counter-productive. There are well-established customary practices in place for payment of contractors, that vary from area to area, but in general, you want to conform to what most people are used to and to what most people believe is fair. Some guy from Manhattan, buying a house in Indiana, and trying to get the guy remodeling his kitchen to go through the lawyers and sign the 20 page contract (plus addenda) that the owner's lawyer drafted up, is going to have a hard sell, even though that might be standard in Manhattan. R I must admit, you only hear the horror stories. The good ones don't make the news. And yes, the only thing i hire out is carpet laying, HVAC, and roofs. (i hate being on steep ones, i'll do the 4/12's G) -- Steve Barker remove the "not" from my address to email |
#18
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![]() I like the Holmes on Home, quite funny. -- Airport Shuttle Message origin: TRAVEL.com |
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