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Mollie

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Everything posted by Mollie

  1. Amy says that she has been planning this dress shop for over a year. The store is located in an industrial area and will probably never have walk-by traffic. The website is a mess and she doesn't even list fabric content. Her return policy states that if you buy something on sale or with a discount code, you can never send it back for a refund or exchange. That's no way to treat your customers, build a following or build a business. Most of the clothes on her website are just plain ugly. Walmart has better styles and selection than Amy's store right now. There is already an online store called shoppe 3130. https://www.shoppe3130.com/ What did Amy title her Facebook page for the store? Shop 3130. Amy's website: https://shop3130.com/ She should have done her homework before naming her store, or was she just deliberately plagiarizing and infringing on someone else's business? She's tried selling clothing online before and failed miserably. She tried running a kiosk store with Grandma Mary and failed miserably. This new venture will go the same way. Too bad she gave up/got fired from her job as a Youth Care Worker in the 28-patient psychiatric facility. She lasted three months. On second thought, those girls are probably better off without Amy's advice on how they could improve their lives. Crazy can't help crazy.
  2. No, No. She should model this one from Amy's site:
  3. Those are all Google AdSense display ads. You'll find the same type of ads on this website (previously.tv) as well. Those are all Google AdSense display ads. You'll find the same type of ads on this website (previously.tv) as well.
  4. It's impossible to have fluffy mashed potatoes if you don't peel the potatoes before you cook them. Jill is just too lazy to do that and doesn't care if the food looks appetizing or not.
  5. Jill is making money from the Google AdSense ads displayed on her website. She makes nothing from posting on Instagram, unless she is shilling a product and you buy that product using her commissions code. Posting on Instagram is just a way of trying to direct people to view her website. A website owner can make money from the Google ads even if nobody clicks on an ad. The owner is also paid based upon the number of people who just visited the website and viewed the ad. Jill is making $200 - $800 a month from this advertising income, no matter how bad her recipes are. The constant posting of ridiculous selfies and videos is to compensate these egomaniacs since TLC stopped filming them. They post more on social media than any other Duggar. They have an insatiable desire to remain in the public eye, probably for ulterior motives that will not be clear until after Derick leaves law school. You can be assured that Derick is up to something, because he always is. There are reasons why he wants to keep a fan base.
  6. There are 8,000 people walking to the U.S. from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, the three countries where Derick and Jill pretended to be missionaries, and they don't say a word about this humanitarian crisis. The Dillards might actually have met some of these people. At any rate, they used them as fundraising tools. At this particular time, how can they possibly post about the food they miss eating from Central America? Such hypocrites!
  7. Jill and Derick are refusing to comment on Derick's absence at John David's wedding. John David was a groomsman at Derick's wedding to Jill. How could Derick just not show up at John David's wedding? Jill and Derick flew back from 'missionary' duties in Central America to attend weddings and one of those weddings was for a Bates family member. How could he just send Jill off alone with the two kids and miss this wedding? It's only a 3 1/2 hour drive to Ada, Oklahoma. If Derick needed to study for law school, he could have studied while Jill did the driving. Something is definitely rotten in the Dillard household.
  8. The wedding reception was held in an airport hangar.
  9. Jill would never use that recipe. It's too much trouble for her to peel the apples.
  10. As advertised: "Only the Freshest Roadkill Used in Our Cannery!" But you are right; it's a gag gift. I'm tempted to order one sent to Jill. https://www.amazon.com/Creamed-Possum-Gravy-Garnished-Potatoes/dp/B00UGM9LHK
  11. That mess sells for $17 on Amazon. For only $6.49 you can have this:
  12. His name is Dillon, not Dylan. But you may call him Dork.
  13. This show registered a new low in number of viewers for a Duggar wedding: only 942,000 watched this episode.
  14. Jill should be helping Samuel learn to talk. The kid is 15-months-old and should be able to speak several words. Yet, he has never been videoed by Jill saying simple words like Mama or Papa. I know there were severe complications when he was born and maybe he is suffering long-term effects from oxygen deprivation during birth. Samuel seldom smiles, either. He always looks like he doesn't understand what is happening around him.
  15. During the wedding, Derick's brother Dan was giving Jeremy the evil eye. Something is definitely going on between the Dillards and the Vuolos. This could stem from negative remarks Jeremy once made in his sermon about self-appointed missionaries. In a sermon titled “Philippians: God’s Sovereignty in Establishing His Church,” Jinger's husband blasts “unqualified, uncalled, unconfirmed, unsent zealots” who “cause more damage than they do good” by deciding to become missionaries. “How many people have thought, ‘Well, there’s an open door, so I must run through it; there’s an open door for a church plant or mission endeavors, I’m going,’ when they’ve never been established by a local church, they’ve never been confirmed by the people of God as possessing certain gifts?” Jeremy said. “They’re just Lone Ranger types running around solo asking churches for money to support them.”
  16. Abbie's father appeared on the Duggars' special Raising 16 Children back in 2006. He was interviewed at Big Sandy ATI Camp with a bunch of other parents who were bragging about how many children they had. Clay Burnett had one of the smaller families at 5 girls and 3 boys. Clay and Cheryl Burnett and family also posed on advertising for ATI homeschooling. They also worked as chaperones or counselors at the Institute of Basic Life Principles Northwoods retreat center.
  17. The woman sitting behind Michelle is Jinger's mother-in-law, Diana Vuolo. The guy behind her is cousin Amy's dorky husband, who couldn't even be bothered to wear a tie to a formal wedding.
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