Enjoy this trip down TV memory lane with this morning’s TODAY show. It’s pretty funny!
Category Archives: All the news that fits
All the news that fits – restaurant coupon use on rise
Restaurant patrons boost use of discounts and deals, report says
The use of coupons, discounts and meal deals is on the rise this year after tapering off in 2011 and 2012, according to a study by the NPD Group. While full-price restaurant traffic flattened out, coupon transactions grew 2% and buy-one-get-one bargains accounted for 14% more transactions than last year, the report said. “In my view, the industry tried to move away from heavy discounting last year but found it was just not feasible with consumers still closely watching their spending,” said NPD analyst Bonnie Riggs.
To read the entire article, click here.
All the news that fits – liquids alert
Eagle-eyed Rachel sent me this link – she has apparently solved the time & space continuum because she manages to fit 29 hours into every day – almost as good as Jill’s 37 hours (inside joke) … but I digress… This 10/16 post from The Ugly Volvo was pretty hysterical, which means it hits way too close to home. Blogger only posts a few times a week, which means she possibly has a real life. i filed her in the Abominable Snowman/ Yeti, Loch Nessie, men finding stuff in the refrigerator category – you know, Urban Legends
10 Quick, Easy Meals for Moms!
So I signed up to have a kid and even that, really, did I have any idea what I was signing up for? Of course not. No one does. But I am doing it. I will put in a lot of time to help my kid learn how to be a good person. BUT, I am not yet eight months into the process and already I am getting mind-numbing e-mails with headlines like, “Easy, Last Minute Meals!” and “10 Super Quick Dinners for Moms.”
Reser’s Fine Foods, Inc. Recalls Refrigerated Ready-to-Eat Products Due to Potential Health Risk
Here’s a huge list of Reser’s products involved in their recall. Funny, but I don’t recall seeing this on the news…
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – October 22, 2013 – Reser’s Fine Foods of Beaverton, Oregon is recalling approximately 109,000 cases of refrigerated ready-to-eat products because it may be contaminated with Listeria monocytogenes. Listeria is an organism which can cause serious and sometime fatal infections in young children, frail or elderly people and individuals with weakened immune systems. Healthy people may suffer only short term symptoms such as high fever, severe headache, stiffness, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhea. Listeria infection can cause miscarriages and stillbirths among pregnant woman.
The recalled refrigerated ready-to-eat products were distributed nationwide and Canada. Click here for the entire list, which also includes recently-expired products.
McDonald’s revamped Dollar Menu: Dollar Menu & More = $$
Interesting article in yesterday’s AdvertisingAge about changes to the McDonald’s Dollar Menu starting in November. Dollar Menu items are what we grab during infrequent visits to Mickey D’s.
McDonald’s is revamping its Dollar Menu and renaming it Dollar Menu & More — a move that will add pricier items to its value offering.
The new menu will keep “some elements of the dollar menu, [while] adding two more tiers for our customers,” said the spokeswoman. The Dollar Menu & More lineup includes sandwiches that range from $1 to $2. The third and priciest tier will see items like a 20-piece McNugget around the $5 mark. Read the entire article here.
All the news that fits…money woes
This bit appeared last week on Yahoo.com. It was found on the Anchorage, Alaska branch of the National Weather Service.

Does this image contain a thinly veiled message from the National Weather Service? (Yahoo News)
All the news that fits…funny
Here’s solution for people who complain about having to clip all those coupons. It’s a commercial for Sears(!), called Squirrel Revolt – be careful what you wish for…
Apres moi, le deluge
Whenever I encounter one of you, dear readers, the first question is almost always “Is everything back to normal now?” Maybe it’s ’cause I haven’t been posting publicly about the level of sheer incompetence I encounter almost daily, but the answer is a resounding NO!!!
Case in point #1: Commonwealth Edison – although I hear Tom now wants his name taken off the letterhead. The flood wiped out the meter – totally blank. I start calling Com Ed to replace the meter because each month I pay a bill estimated on a household of two upright freezers, two OLD refrigerators, an older dishwasher, washer and dryer. Finally I get one person who says the meter has been replaced. Sure it has…go out and it’s still old Mr. Blanky. The meter was actually not replaced until the beginning of August and only when an extremely rude “customer service” woman made snide remarks that I was basically too stupid to know if I was using electricity prompted a call to the Illinois Commerce Commission. ICC took my complaint and promised that Com Ed would be contacting me within 14 days of their receipt of the ICC electronic filing.
It actually took about an hour…ComEd calls and they have never gotten the paperwork that there’s a new meter to read. But the fact that there have been duplicate billings, billings every 10-12 days and all on an estimated reading since March obviously never sent up warning flags, either. They set up an appointment for a meter reader. who doesn’t show. They set up a second appointment for a meter reader. who doesn’t show. I call the ICC. Third appointment set with supervisor from another district who assures me his reader will be there at the stroke of noon or else. and he is (EXACTLY!). ComEd says that I will be billed either historical usage or usage from the August reading (neither of which is, obviously, acceptable).
ComEd doesn’t get around to calling me for about 1 1/2 weeks. And it’s a new person; the first person isn’t in. This person claims that ComEd can only give me a billing based on historical usage. So because they were completely unresponsive to my numerous requests for a new meter, I should be charged either based on double the number of older appliances or August usages (central air) for the period starting in April. Sure, that makes perfect sense…if you’re brain dead.
Which leads me to case in point #2 – Chase: Flood insurance check is issued jointly with mortgage company – standard procedure with insurance checks. Amount is pretty much covering personal belongings, clean up and repair of the front porch, no major structural damage (thank god for small mercies). I take FEMA check to local Chase branch to ask what to do – insurance division computers down. Go back in an hour to be told the check must be deposited with them; Chase will issue a partial payment in my name and overnight it via Fedex. Couple of weeks and still no check so I call. Check was sent somewhere else. No tracking information and please call back tomorrow.
Today I go to the Chase branch loaded for bear… Pull out my book and let them deal with their own lackwits. Bottom line was they were going to reissue the check, which would take about 5 business days, and then overnight it to me (stop if you’ve heard this before). I took the phone. She assured me that they didn’t blame me for the misdirected check. seriously? I told her that it was her own incompetence that lost the check and no, I did not exclude her, because the entire company was incompetent. Ask to speak with her supervisor; I would be handing the phone to Chase man to deal with. Poor Chase guy kept asking for her supervisor and lackwit kept insisting she could handle it. So frazzled over the amount of the check – why they could probably pick up a used double-wide for that kind of money – that it took forever before a supervisor picked up…
Whose position was that Chase had the original check and since it was live, they had to put a stop payment on it and reissue it and then send the second check out. Must be something in the Georgia air. I said “Since you have the original check and it’s “live,” why don’t you put it in a Fedex overnight envelope and send it up to me?” Several repetitions before comprehension. Yes, they could do that and my overnight envelope would arrive on Monday. I ask if they were somehow unaligned with the Earth’s rotation and overnight didn’t mean the same thing. Chase’s Fedex overnight means business day overnight. Pay the extra two bucks and get me my money – Chase can afford it (who’s getting the interest on all these deposited checks, huh?).
Supervisor calls department that mails payments and returns to say the person who handles this claim is out to lunch (oh, the irony of that phrase). He doesn’t know when she’ll return because it’s a different department (it’s also 2:30 Central time). I say ask for her supervisor. He can’t because it’s a different department and he doesn’t know who her supervisor is.
Could point out that he must have a company directory ’cause they’re in the same building, but I just hand the phone back to the beleaguered Chase guy and gather up my stuff to await a return call – ’cause you cain’t fix stupid…still waiting
Al the news that fits – liquids alert: Surviving Whole Foods
Here is a little column by Kelly Maclean I found on today’s HuffPost. It’s called Surviving Whole Foods and starts like this:
Whole Foods is like Vegas. You go there to feel good but you leave broke, disoriented, and with the newfound knowledge that you have a vaginal disease.
Unlike Vegas, Whole Foods’ clientele are all about mindfulness and compassion… until they get to the parking lot. Then it’s war. As I pull up this morning, I see a pregnant lady on the crosswalk holding a baby and groceries. This driver swerves around her and honks. As he speeds off I catch his bumper sticker which says ‘NAMASTE’. Poor lady didn’t even hear him approaching because he was driving a Prius. He crept up on her like a panther.
As the great, sliding glass doors part I am immediately smacked in the face by a wall of cool, moist air that smells of strawberries and orchids. I leave behind the concrete jungle and enter a cornucopia of organic bliss; the land of hemp milk and honey. Seriously, think about Heaven and then think about Whole Foods; they’re basically the same.
The first thing I see is the great wall of kombucha — 42 different kinds of rotten tea. Fun fact: the word kombucha is Japanese for ‘I gizzed in your tea.’ Anyone who’s ever swallowed the glob of mucus at the end of the bottle knows exactly what I’m talking about. I believe this thing is called “The Mother” which makes it that much creepier.
Click here to read the entire column.
All the news that fits: doing the chicken dance with American Zaycon
By now you might have read about this new proposal by the USDA to allow US born and slaughtered chickens to be shipped to China for processing and then returned here. Yeah, you read that right. The country responsible for untold pet deaths due to salmonella chicken will now be in charge of processing the stuff for the humans. The kicker? No notification needed that your chicken fillet has been secretly accumulating frequent flier miles. As of now, they will be processing things like nuggets and patties, but since this seems to be a don’t ask, don’t tell situation, who knows where the trend will lead – – vegetarianism!
But justincase you aren’t a big chicken fan, how about the news that Smithfield’s gonna be bought by Shuanghui International Ltd.? Still not concerned?
All I can say is I still have a freezer full of American clearance chicken but once that’s gone I will be doing the chicken dance with Zaycon. And here’s a plug for them:
Zaycon is taking orders now for their semi-annual chicken breast event later this month. Zaycon won’t be back until sometime next Spring. Cost breaks down to $1.84 a pound for boneless, skinless chicken breasts. Zaycon chicken breast is:
• 100 % natural chicken with no added hormones, additives or artificial ingredients
• Comes directly from the processor and has never been frozen
• Sold by the case — 40 lbs in each case