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Posted by hobnoblin@hotmail.com on 02/23/06 14:24
Derek Janssen wrote:
> >>>>AAMoF, "Very Long Wait" is now pretty much ONLY used to denote
> >>>>out-of-print or acquisition-pending copies--
> >>>>The tactful version of "We ain't got one/yet."
"As a matter of fact", Derek, you are completely and utterly wrong.
Keep reading....
> Because...now, follow me on this...given a day or two to print labels,
> sort stocks, update data, etc....NOT ALL TITLES ARE AVAILABLE AT 7 AM ON
> THE DAY THEY HIT SHELVES!!
Such an obnoxious answer. All I did was politely ask you to explain
what you meant, and you respond by acting like a jerk. Keep
reading.....
> Major movies might arrive at their centers early and be ready for street
> date; smaller movies (with fewer customers "reserve" top-queueing them
> ahead of time) might arrive at the office on Tuesday and need till
> Wednesday or Thursday to be incorporated into rental stock--
Dererk, if "AAMof" Netflix ONLY uses "very long wait" to denote
"out-of-print" or "acquisition-pending", could you please explain why
ALL of these movies I mentioned earlier.......
> >>>"Ultimate Avengers", "Aliens Gone Wild", "Ant: America's Ready", and
> >>>"Lie With Me".
......are STILL coming up "very long wait" on my queue?
> Put a 48-hour grace-period moratorium on all conspiracy theories if this
> week's movie happens to be showing a "Short Wait" the day it opens.
Okay, 48 hours are up, and all four new releases still say "very long
wait". Now what? Does this mean I can criticize Netflix without
dealing with your obnoxious "AAMoF I have no idea what I'm talking
about, but will babble condescendingly anyway" responses?
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