For a while, I was putting in guesses for the weekend numbers… since neither B.C. nor Alberta publish anything until Monday. I was further extrapolating that to give a good guess for Canada overall.
I’ve stopped doing that, because as good as my guesses were (sometimes), it’s effectively false advertising and could lead to false assumptions, so what’s the point. Let’s wait 2 days; no big deal.
Unfortunately, false advertising is all around us. I actually fell for it… something popped up on my Facebook… a radio-controlled near-indestructible plane. Surprisingly inexpensive. Cool, that’ll be fun to play with over the summer. For my son, of course, not me…
What arrived was nothing like what was promised. A tiny, very cheap single-layer Styrofoam cut-out stencil of a plane… that barely flew. No radio control of course. Nothing at all like the pictures or video. And, for the price-point, not worth pursuing, not worth sending back, not worth complaining. They know; just enough to grab your money and run. Not enough for any consumer silly enough to fall for it… to care. Had I done the tiniest bit of research, like read the comments below the item, I’d have seen plenty of entries like “Don’t fall for it!!” and “This is a scam!!”. Oh well, lesson learned.
Indeed… as a result of falling for it, my FB feed is now flooded with offers. Some are, I must say, really cool. Most, if not all, are scams. I fell for it once, and FB has decided I’m a sucker and, accordingly, tries to sucker me in one more time. The latest one that almost got me was a self-solving Rubik’s Cube for $12.99. Wow, cool… except, upon reading the comments, I learned it was a useless, cheap knock-off cube that did nothing special… least of all, solve itself.
Somewhere along the line, slim credibility went to zero… probably right around the time accountability did the same thing. With zero repercussions to just “making shit up”, here we are. Advertisers, politicians, whatever. Say whatever you want… to sell whatever you’re dishing out.
"Caveat Emptor" — it's been around so long that "Buyer Beware" originated in Latin, back in the Roman era. You remember, that great Republic of centuries past, that indestructible centre-of-the-universe Empire that would last forever.
What's the relevancy of all this? Ask me in a few weeks.
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A self-solving Rubik’s cube?? Doesn’t that defeat the purpose??
I’ve got a good false advertising story. Last year Sleep Country was advertising a pillow that made the temperature “30% cooler”. If you looked at the screen, it said something like with a split screen 26 degrees and now 19 degrees. First of all the math is wrong. The math is 26.9%. Secondly and more importantly you cannot measure % change in Celsius. (2 degrees is not twice as hot as 1 degree), but rather you must use degrees Kelvin to measure absolute temperature. So a 7 degree change would be 7/273 K, or 2.56%. Anyway I sent my thoughts to the Advertising Standards Council (the ones who advertise on TV all the time). Yes! They wrote me back and agreed and told me they had taken it up with Sleeo Country. It must have had an affect as I’ve never seen Sleep Country make such a claim again!
False advertising isn’t new. Years ago I met someone that was selling 9 x 12 rugs for $19.99 each. A great deal at that time, but when the rug arrived it was 9 x 12 inches. Buyer beware!
I totally want a self-solving rubik’s cube. Oh no……..if I post this, FB will know!
A few months ago I ordered a hair dryer from Amazon and wasn’t too happy with it so I tried to return it…and “they” wouldn’t let me! They gave me a full refund and said, basically, give it away if you really don’t want it. I’ve been having issues with my concept of value ever since. Another one of these “wtf is going on” experiences.
That last sentence begs to be followed by: MWWWOOOOHAHAHAHHAHAHA!!!
My hubby ordered one of these too good to be true orders, a set of cookware, and received a pair of sunglasses! Of course no point sending it back, but he complained to Amazon, got his money back and the seller was marked. Of course they just pop up the next day as someone else, but at least our money was refunded.
I’ve bought a few things on my Facebook feed and quickly learned it is all garbage and not like what is advertised. Just got sucked in by the slick ad and reasonable price. It’s not even possible to contact the maker/seller in most cases. Never buying from Facebook ads again.
Cliffhanger!