Blockbuster’s Late Fees

I was told by a friend that not all the Blockbuster stores are implementing corporate “No Late Fee” policy. I checked and sure enough there was a sign at my local Blockbusters saying that they were not participating in the “no late fee” policy. Corporate stores are participating, but privately owned franchise stores, like all the stores in the Nashville area, may or may not be participating. So what do you do when your corporate company implements a policy which you as a franchisee do not plan on participating? The situation is mass confusion. Disgrunted customers. Do they allow for a grace period due to this confusion? Can you imagine the situation the past few weeks at franchise (non-corporate) stores across the country?
No late fees is sorta a misnomer because eventually they charge you for the movie. So instead they lengthened their rental time and increased their charges.
I do not rent movies at Blockbuster. Tivo solved that for me.

Shame and Guilt

Todd led a prayer Sunday night. He said, among many other things was “Help us to forgive ourselves.” I think many of us are putting too much pressure on ourselves and not being able to forgive ourselves or others. Too many people are keeping score on us making us feel guilty for no apparent reason at all. Can one feel guilty for not doing anything wrong?
There is a difference between “Shame” and “Guilt” Being shamed is being made to feel guilty without actually feeling like one has done anything wrong. “Everyone is watching you, Jeff.” I’ve been told that before.
I’ve found an interesting site for those who have left the church. While much of the site is arguing schemantics, unfortunately I tend to indentify with some of what is mentioned on the site. Such as never being sure that one is saved. The old VBS song “Happy and You Know It” comes to mind. Are you saved and you know it? From some of the sermons that I’ve heard, you never would have thought that any of the audience members are saved. One has to constantly re-examine themselves to ask have they done anything or thought anything within the past week to know if they are good enough to be saved? I disagree with this doctrine. If we are earnestly trying to be as good as we can humanly be, then we should be able to say we’re saved. Period. There should be no guilt or shame presented in a worship service. Yet for some reason we are constantly told to get right with God or go straight to hell. Guilt is a reoccuring theme to worship, instead of praising God.
This isn’t “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” God is willing that none should perish. God wants everyone to be saved. We need more sermons on hope and less on pain and guilt.

Fear Factor Sued

File this under “Lawyer has too much time on his hands…”
‘Fear Factor’ sued for rat-eating episode

Aitken’s handwritten lawsuit contends the rat-eating made his blood pressure rise, resulting in being dizzy and lightheaded — and vomiting.
Asked why he didn’t shut off his television before the rat-eating segment, Aitken said he couldn’t do it quick enough.


If you don’t like what you’re watching, change the channel. No one is forcing you to watch it. You knew it was coming up in the previews.

Snow in Chicago

This is an email my friend sent me who just moved to Chicago. He was raised in the south, but has lived all over including LA, Arizona, and China.

Hey everyone, I hope all of you are doing well. I just thought I’d check in on my lunch break and give an account of how things have gone so far.
Day one, I arrived uneventfully to a nice, sunny day — about 60 degrees outside. “This cold weather thing is overrated” I thought to myself, as I took off my jacket and headed into the rental car office. I proceeded to get settled into the new apartment and await my first day of work, with the temperature progressively dropping each day. By Tuesday it was downright FREEZING outside as I headed into the grocery store. I emerged 45 minutes later to find a 1/4 inch thick sheet of ice on the road. I made the 1/2 mile trip back to my place with lots of unintentional swerving and turning. Not one to panic I figured the army of 1 million snow plows (that Corey and Kent had vividly described to me when telling me snow wasn’t a big deal up North) were all waiting to swarm the streets and meet it head on.
The first sign that something was wrong was when my regularly scheduled TV program was interrupted to bring a severe snow storm alert. Hmm, I thought, Corey and Kent had said that upcoming snow barely even gets a mention during the news. I awoke the next morning to 6 inches of snow. I trudged out into the cold and chiseled, shoveled (with a dust pan), and scraped my way into the car, and cautiously drove to work, taking an extra 30 minutes to get here. Okay, not so bad, I thought as snow continued falling. I went about my day at work, but then at about 3 pm the “white noise” makers suddenly stopped, leaving us all in an eerie silence. Then a voice piped in over the loudspeaker … due to inclement weather, home office is closing.”
Not being one to argue with home office about inclement weather, I rushed to my car, where I proceeded to once again chisel, scrape and dig my way into my car and pulled out of my parking spot. I then sat there inexplicably for 30 minutes in a line of cars and didn’t move an inch. (not one inch) Realizing I may go through a tank of gas just sitting in the parking lot, I pulled back in and waited it out for a couple of hours inside. Then went back out, chiseled, scraped, and dug my way to my car and joined the line of cars going home. This time it took nearly an hour to get home, across ice, snow and sludge, but somehow I made it back alive and settled in for the night.
This morning when I woke up, 12 more inches of snow had fallen during the night, putting the total now at 1.5 – 2 feet of snow in two days. By this time it was lucky that I remembered where I parked, otherwise I would not have known which car shaped snow pile belonged to me. I went out and chiseled, scraped and dug my car out and began the trip back to work. I’d like to think I catch on to things quickly, but keep in mind that on the third day of work, it’s nice to still be able to see the road signs along the way telling you which lane is a turning lane, or for that matter be able to see if you’re driving on the road or in someone’s yard. Luckily the good people of Chicago set me straight with a friendly tap of the horn and then they’d point me in the right direction. (For some reason people point with the middle finger in Chicago.)
But once again I averted disaster I made the trip to work. This time about an hour and 15 minutes. I’m now sitting here at my desk thinking over a cost/benefit analysis report of why we should move home office to Nashville. I’ll turn that in to Ed Liddy next time I see him. By the way, did I mention it’s still snowing outside? Take care….

Yellow Ribbons

I’m glad someone else ( http://www.antimagnet.com/ ) doesn’t like them either. For me, it is not the fact that they are made in China. It’s that putting a magnet on your car has somehow become “trendy” in today’s society. I hereby refuse to follow the crowd just because something is trendy.
I fully support our troops. I know that their work is hard and difficult and is not something that I could do easily. I just think something else could be done rather than putting a magnet on your car. I wonder how many of these magneted cars have drivers who write to their soldiers…I’m talking a real personal letter (not email) or sending a care package to their troops. And I’m not saying that they don’t already. I’m just saying that this trend will soon end and where will our troop support be then? Are people still going to be supporting our troops in the DMZ in Korea who have been there for 50+ years? Or is the Iraqi War just trendy enough to put a ribbon on your car?

Who’s Your Daddy

Tonight I watched “Who’s Your Daddy” on Fox. Basically a reality show where a woman has to guess who her long lost father was from a group of men. If she guesses correctly, she gets $100,000. I really think this show was going on the wrong direction from the start. They shouldn’t play emotional games with someone in regards to finding someone’s long lost father and then turning it into a game show. This is personal.
Surprisingly the daughter took part in it. If it were me, I would have stomped off stage and demanded to know who my real father was. The $100,000 wouldn’t have mattered. Yet, somehow it did for this woman. She jumped through Fox’s hoops to get there.
This is not what reuniting is all about. Fox is the same network which gave us “Who Wants to Marry a Millionaire?” which was an udder disaster for the young lady involved. Don’t play games with us, Fox.