Great for investors, with the side effect of being good for customers. But we need harsher regulations at the federal level. Thankfully the insurance industry has stepped up their game over the last year but that market is softening a bit so the benefits made fade some.
As someone who works in insurance, this guy sounds like an otherwise ideal customer. The insurance company would be turning down easy profit if they really cancelled his policy for no reason.
This isn't like denying a claim for shitty reasons. If this company cancelled someone with no claims in a low risk area, they either had a good reason or fucked up.
Netflix is a publicly traded company, lying about something like a huge increase in subscribers would get them in legal trouble for lying to investors.
They made seasons shot for 4:3 into widescreen, puting things into shots that were not supposed to be there. They just plain didn't do color correction for some scenes. There's videos on YouTube highlighting how it was kind of a disaster. Unfortunately it's also the only way to stream it these days.
Yeah, but my point is obviously that In-N-Out doesn't have paid leave and is eliminating one of the few effective protections employees have to prevent the spread of disease.
Well that's good that it's already been fully re-mastered for streaming and this is just a formal physical release of those remasters. Whenever I see a new Blu-ray release for SD content these days I worry that they'll just run it through an AI upscaler and try to sell that. Or worse, they'll "re-master" it like they did on Buffy and and Angel.
This comment appears to be set as English, let me know if that changes anything. The previous comment appears to be set that way too. But I did set my profile to filter to english posts so maybe Kbin is auto-setting it now?
The reposts come rapid fire around here. I think this is already the 3rd time this has been posted since the reddit migration.