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CrazyInAlabama

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Everything posted by CrazyInAlabama

  1. 22 April “Portal Kombat” New, Season 10, Episode (Madeline Lewis vs. Robyn Hastings ) From the show site: A tenant's roommate was behind on rent, so she decided to change the locks while her roommate was "out at the bars." The roommate takes issue with this characterization; she's a club promoter, so she was out working, not drinking. And furthermore, she claims kicking her out in this fashion is illegal. But since she never signed a lease, what are her rights? Plaintiff claims defendant/ former roommate owes her for unpaid rent and utilitieslocked her house. She wants $2840 for unpaid utilities, and rent. Defendant says she had challenges in paying rent, and plaintiff locked her out equaling an unlawful eviction, so she owes nothing. Defendant never actually signed the rental agreement. She claims she paid the rent on the online portal, and it went through, but has no proof. Landlord says he never received the rent, it was insufficient funds, but defendant says her bank never bounced her payments. Defendant also wrote a check for rent, but never signed it. Plaintiff says defendant (apparently out of rehab), was drinking constantly, and in her job as a club promoter was drinking constantly. Plaintiff says neither roommate was paying, and both were no longer sober, and landlord says since they hadn't signed lease, and weren't paying, that plaintiff should change the locks. Defendant says she received a text from plaintiff saying "I have a surprise for you", and it was that the locks have been changed. Plaintiff texted defendant that she should coordinate with hare to bring a police stand-by when she picked up her property. Corriero doesn't take the defendant's side, for once. Landlord issued a 3-day notice to quit to defendant, and that was when she was locked out. Defendant claims she didn't get proper notice, but never paid the rent anyway. After defendant was locked out, landlord was contacted by police, and told her defendant would have to be issues a 3-day to pay up or quit. Corriero says since defendant didn't sign the new lease, she owed 30-days notice. Even if defendant signed the lease, she already moved out, and no notice or payment, and never returned the lease to the landlord. Juarez says rent for two months, utilities, and not the security deposit. Tewolde and Corriero say one month rent is enough. Juarez dissents on rent for May, saying it's owed. Plaintiff receives $767 (security $600 was offset by the unpaid rent). “Long Live the Kyng” Rerun, Season 10, Episode p. 45, 4 January 2024
  2. I looked at articles about the Barry and Honey Sherman murders, and it was sad to see how the family has splintered apart over claims of being cheated. I don't see how anyone could be eliminated from suspicion either, even if you don't kill someone yourself, if you have the means to hire someone to do it for you, you're still a suspect. A truly baffling case. I find it mind boggling that they apparently died so long before they were found. If the real estate agent hadn't had a tour with potential buyers and found the body, who knows how long it would have been until the crime was discovered. I don't think the unlocked house is anything more than people who thought they lived in a safe neighborhood, and were leaving the house ready for visiting realtors and potential buyers. The fact that Barry was pressuring his son, and other business associates for payment was big red flag to me. Also, apparently the couple were working on wills, and the family trust, and were apparently changing bequests right before they were murdered, so that would give a lot of people incintives to make sure inheritance wasn't changed. I find it odd that there's only one long distance photo of a suspect. Because of the winter clothes, and the lighting, you can't tell if it's a man or woman. To kill two people, wouldn't there have to be more than one person to control them? A baffling case. It would be interesting to see Dateline's show about it.
  3. LVP is what I have in my entire home, and I love it. It's the full length glued version. A replacement someday will be click together, and can be put right over the current floor. There are no threshholds between rooms, it's not noisy like a lot of laminate is to walk on, and mine is a medium oak pattern. Just don't go too dark or too light, or it shows everything. Really quick to install too, at least the click together is.
  4. The don't send hate mail to JJ are always Pit Bull attacks.
  5. My guess is that the potter will build an entire work shed for supplies, creating pottery, and the kiln. I bet the garden room will be a display showcase for her work. I'm watching the Homecoming episode about Jones College. A lot of places where I've lived they used to have Junior Colleges like what Jones Junior College used to be. Everyone went to two years in the J.C., then transferred to four year colleges for the last two years. Of course, they did have two year degree courses and some students ended their education then. The courses were set up in conjunction with the 4-year schools to make sure that if students took the first two years in a transfer course, they didn't lose any credits, and graduated on time. It was a good system. Tonight's new episode is "English Country Cottage" From Titan TV: A woman who grew up in New York hopes to raise her kids in a cozy place just like the one she lived in as a kid, and enlists Ben and Erin's help searching for a home with a massive fireplace and at least two acres of land. Melina is a single motehr who grew up in Long Island, lived in Florida, and is now moving to Laurel with her two kids. Jeremaiah and Amaya. Budget is $225,000 max with rehab. Wilkinson House-3 bed, 2 bath, 1600 sq ft, $145,000. Repainting and adding character will make the house cute. Living room has a huge brick fireplace. I love the fireplace. Kitchen is small, but Erin has a great plan to remodel it, with a peninsula and bar stool seating. House used to have skylights, they were filled in, and it will get fixed to remove the last of the holes in the ceiling. LVT flooring in a wood-look pattern. Cased openings, and faux beams on the living and dining room. All in $225,000. Knight House, 2 acres, 3 bed 2 bath 1600 sq ft, $130,000. On a busy street but far back, fix the two front door issue. Interior living has a fireplace, looks like gas logs. Acoustic tile ceiling will have to go. Brick floor in the living room. kitchen feels bigger, but it's not really bigger. (It looks bigger to me). Ben says there is a lack of counter space, and though I love Ben, he's wrong. Erin will open a wall up, add a big peninsula, move the sink to the peninsula. House has a glassed in porch, with the washer screened porch. They will add a banquette with a long table in the dining room. $225,000 total for the rehab and purchase price. There is artwork on Masonite, which was invented in Laurel. Sorry, I can't stand Masonite. Melina chose the Wilkinson House. The kitchen demo is easy, nothing was attached properly. Kitchen demo was quick, and removing the sutters was too. Sam and Ben are going to Smith Brothers Sawmill, in Buckatunna, MS, for oak beams. Sam (Ben's brother) and Ben worked with the current owner at the sawmill. I love hearing how Allen the plumber will use sensors to find and reroute the water lines. Ben and Josh are making a replica of an apothecary cabinet as a sofa table with nine drawers. I love the cabinet. The window mullions look fantastic. I love the brown LVP flooring. Ben's sofa table is wonderful. The kitchen is so much more open, and easy to use. I love the finished house. Melina looks thrilled, and I'm glad she's so happy with the house. I hope the family has a lot of happy years in that house.
  6. I'm guessing that the Canadian episodes aren't really filmed with Dateline hosts, but the hosts do a separate shot with their questions, and then it's splice together. I've read that a lot of the filming is done with others doing the questions, and the hosts are in the separate shot to disguise that, and very little of the show is actually the host with the guests. Networks buy shows from other countries, rework it, and only have to put their hosts in the interview shots. It's a quick way to cover cases from somewhere else, where the U.S. network might not get access. It's also a way to expand the shows they produce in a year, without the production costs of sending hosts and crews to redo work that's already available.
  7. I thought it was interesting that the ballcap seller couldn't get a deal with Michael, and Fanatics has carries the ball caps. Seems like it would be a total conflict of interest for him to invest in a company that he buys and resells with already. I didn't see anything unusual or different with the ball caps either. Unless you carry a signboard around saying how much it costs and what the luxury material is, they just look like any other ball cap.
  8. FYI network is shows the Furious Face-Offs special (Season 5 Episode 7) today, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Central time. This is the one with #1 is the woman who drove off with the boot attached and trashed her car.
  9. I was shocked at the prices at Harvey House. But I guess it's partly the atmosphere. Also, they have several private dining rooms, with special menus, for private dining events, and I bet they do the supper club menus for that too.
  10. First aired 24 April 2024 (only the supersized with bonus scenes was new, the rest aired with the One-Ton Family season several years ago). Together weighing more than a ton, siblings Roshanda, Brandie, and Clarence set out to lose weight as a family. But the all-for-one approach may be hurting more than it helps when each of them shows signs of heading in the wrong direction after surgery. Dr. Now is listed as a participant, but Dr. Mike Dow is the narrator. (I'm suspicious this is a recut of the WATN about the family from their original episode which was several parts). The show says 1 year earlier, so this is from a few seasons ago, I'm guessing the ending episode of the short series about the Perrio family.
  11. On the Boise Boys HGTV show the host talked about Boise having super high prices, because of the influx of people moving from California, and other high cost areas. It's been happening for a few years pre-pandemic, but really accelerated then because of the remote worker increase. One thing I don't like about Boise is the new subdivisions look just like anywhere else, and just another over-priced suburb. People can't afford to retire in L.A. or San Francisco, or even Seattle, so they go to places like Boise, and Palm Springs for retirement homes too. I'm watching some reruns on HGTV. Scott & Emily, the engineers in Houston are delusional. She's decided she either wants to change careers to a non-profit job, stay at home mom eventually, and talks about having a quarter life crisis. Scott is worried about the budget on the house, but will his income support the mortgage and the family? Then, they buy a home that needs a lot of work, including foundation work. Then, she annouces she got another job at the same salary, so they can now pay for the remodel, and foundation work. That was a strange storyline, that apparently was just a story. Then, the foundation issue? I wouldn't touch a house with foundation issues.
  12. "Family Bonds" After inheriting money from their late brother, Lenny, sister Marlene found a home in Palm Springs, while Kenny, enlists David's help locating a place of his own amidst a desert oasis in the Coachella Valley. Marlene was season 15 episode 3, and bought in Desert Hot Springs. David, Kenny and partner Jim meet at Marlene's home, and her artwork is beautiful. (I remember the sister buying a fabulous house in Desert Hot Springs. I was hoping the brother would buy, and I would get to see the houses.) Wishlist-Pool and spa, Turnkey, $600,000 to $650,000, close to Marlene. 3 bed 2 bath. House 1-Cactus Court in Desert Hot Springs -3 bed, 3 bath, 1918 sq ft, $699,000 fully furnished. Very modern. Fantastic pool and spa in the courtyard. Living is fantastic, great kitchen, great dining area. Lots of huge windows. 2 guest bedrooms with an ensuite, one has door to the pol. Main bedroom is huge, with a slider to the pool, and huge ensuite. House 2-Scorpion Basin in Cathedral City -3 bed,2 bath,2,000 sq ft, $630,000 Spanish style with tiled roof. huge living room, kitchen is gigantic, attached to family room with fireplace. stove is 6 burner with a griddle. Main bedroom is huge, with a slider to the pool, ensuite is gorgeous with a big jetted tub, and a big shower. 2 guest bedrooms and bath are nice. Pool and spa are fantastic with a covered area, and trees. House 3-Diamondback Ridge in Desert Hot Springs -4 bed,2 bath, 2300 sq ft, $575,000. Nice living and dining room, with a fireplace. Kitchen is nice, but not as big as #2. Bedrooms are nice size, with a slider, other two bedrooms are big, one with an ensuite. Main bedroom is big, ensuite and clost are nice, pool and space is fantastic. Not furnished. Kenny buys #2. They fooled me when #1 was sold furnished. I suspect with the prior episode featuring Marlene, that Kenny felt like a third wheel. So, this time he felt more comfortable on camera, and with David.
  13. Sharks-Guest Shark Michael Rubin (Founder and CEO of Fanatics, and other direct-to consumer companies) , Mark, Kevin, Barbara, Lori. Roboburger-Robotic vending machine, a robotic vending machine selling custom hamburgers cooked when ordered, and ready in four minutes. A 12 sq ft hamburger vending machine. Asking $1.5 million for 5%. The machine requires no special venting. It can cook anything ground. You customize condiments, toasted buns, cooked fresh. They do it well done, for food safety. They’re a robot restaurant company, with multiple patents, and want to do them for other companies. There is a lease program, $3,000 a month per machine. They can do multiple proteins, for breakfast or lunch/dinner sandwiches. Burgers are $5.99 to $6.99, food costs are less than $2.00. Kevin and Mark aren’t convinced this is viable for the valuation, or profitable. They only produce 20 machines this year. $7 million in revenue, and make $1.6 million. Mark says a licensing idea may be the best, and doesn’t like vending machines, and he’s out. Michael Rubin is out, with more work. Barbara is out. Lori is out. Michael says $1.5 as a loan for the machines, at market rate interest, for 10% of the company. Kevin says he’ll partner with Michael, 4.5% each. Michael and Kevin make the deal, $1.5 million in loans at market rate, and 4.5% equity each. Hood Baseball Hats-hats designed to display hometown pride. Asking $500,000 for 5% equity. Customizable luxury hats. They use merino wool, velvet, cashmere and other luxury fabrics, customized. $1.9 million lifetime sales since 2018. Since customizing in 2020 sales have soared. $1 million for 2023. They are not net profitable yet. Hats are about $90 customized. Margins are great. Michael owns Lids Hats which is competitor, but not customized. The Sharks hate the valuation. Kevin won’t do the valuation, and he’s out. Michael is out, too similar to other companies, and hates the valuation. Lori is out. Barbara is out. Mark is out. (I see no reason that anyone would spend $90 on a ballcap. You can get personalized ballcaps everywhere. I certainly wouldn't get a cashmere or velvet one). No deal. HYPE Footwear-customizable footwear. Asking $125,000 for 5%. Started with slides. Customizable for whatever team you support, totally custom. Sell direct-to-consumer, Fanatics and two other retailers. They have a patent. You buy the bases, and straps separately. $500,000 is sales over 4 years. Slider pro is the version with the two components. You personalize online. Margins aren’t wonderful. Lori is out. Kevin says data is missing and he's out. Mark is out. Michael is out, business is too small. Barbara says use social media more, and offers $125,000 ½ cash and ½ credit line for 25%. They counter at $100,000 cash and $250,000 credit for 25%. Barbara makes the deal. $100,000 cash, and $250,000 credit, for 25%. She’ll be a great partner for them. K3 Shooting Band for Jump Shots-a resistance band to perfect jump shots. Asking $100,000 for 20%. Mark tries it, and likes it. She's applied to Shark Tank for 15 seasons before making the show. She has a patent. Margins are fantastic. Dick's Sporting Goods, and Walmart online, $43,000 last year in sales. Kevin doesn't like the lack of reorders and sales. Mark says he has a conflict, and he's out, but gives the seller great advice. Kevin is out. Barbara is out. Michael says sell online direct to consumer, believes in the seller, and he makes an offer, $100,000 for 50%, and will give part of his shares to basketball players, and influencers. Lori will partner with Michael. They offer $100,000 for 50%, and settle for 40%. Deal with Michael and Lori $100,000 for 40%. Update: Lose 12 Inches workout-Daymond made the deal for the workout, still haven’t made a profit, but he’s still friends with the seller, Ryan. Iconic Moment: A look back at the iconic moments highlighted this season. Bombas is the first $1 billion dollar Shark Tank company.
  14. The Harvey House also has private dining rooms, and might have the supper club menu for events too. A lot of their regular menu is supper club items, like the relish tray, and they look yummy.
  15. I suspect the 'supper club' aspect was to get people in the door, and guessing that people would become regular customers, and buy a lot of drinks. Profit is huge in liquor sales. Since they started in the 1920's I bet that was also a way to have liquor with dinner, since it was a private 'club'.
  16. June's never had any morals, she's not starting to having any now. My guess is that June will try to parlay the custody of the granddaughter into another season on the show. How any judge could give that girl's custody to June totally stuns me.
  17. I wonder if taking things off wasn't in the rules this time? It wouldn't surprise me if they had it in the rules that once you checkout, no changes, for the drama to ramp up.
  18. Titan TV says for 22 to 26 April Monday-“Beer Can Battle" 10/10/2017, Season 21 / Episode 27 Tuesday-“Victim of a Vicious Dog" 10/11/2017, Season 21 / Episode 28 Wednesday-“Truck Driver Tussel" 10/12/2017, Season 21 / Episode 29 Thursday-“Dog Fight Fiasco" 10/13/2017, Season 21 / Episode 30 Friday-“Shared Driveway Dilemma" 10/16/2017, Season 21 / Episode 31
  19. Most stores don't allow filming, so for the grocery trip the visits have to be at places that will allow the camera crew. They changed the first few scenes with the personal care assistant we'll never see again. The remark about the state paying his bill to buy burgers, fast food places aren't legal, but lots of big box and convenience stores have microwave burgers too. And pizza, and all kinds of stuff. First Bonus Scene (at least that I noticed) is Charles doing foot exercises. I'm sick of seeing the outside of the town house, and Charles' brown t-shirt. I still can't believe how rude Charles is to hang up on the video call with Dr. Now. This is after the reams of excuses about why he hasn't gone for a local weigh-in, the protein shakes not on the diet, and his total defiance of everything. Bonus scene-Charles and brother eating out. Large taco salad, and Fanta orange is Charles' order. Definitely not on the diet. Month 7-Flight to Houston. Of course Charles will be stared at, he has a camera crew with him. I can't believe he thinks Dr. Now will be happy to seem him without an appointment, or without any contact except hanging up on Dr. Now. His visit to Dr. Now's office is interesting. The look on Charles and the brother's face when he weighs in at 677 is stunned. Did I fall asleep and miss the B-B-Q stop? Or did they cut it? (Last night, it was followed by Happy Farmer B-B-Q, and I bet epic amounts of carry out food and desserts. That place does have grilled options too.) Then, after the clinic weigh-in Everett when Charles and Bradley say they'll never move to Houston is so wrong. But Charles still claims he will lose 40 lbs., and thinks Dr. Now will let him fly down to Houston and back immediately after surgery is bizarre. Then, Charles tells Dr. Now that he should get surgery in Seattle, which was the logical thing to do anyway. I wonder if he's already been refused for local programs? There's nothing Dr. Now can do to get another surgeon to take Charles in their program. (I can't believe I'm watching this tonight).
  20. 18 April 4 p.m. episodes- p. 517, 10 November 2023 Don't Show Up Drunk! ; Mutual Combat Cruise?! p. 518, 19 January 2024 A History of Violence? ; Bad Check Bailout! 5 p.m. episodes- p. 482, 1 January 2021 Dual Driving Disaster ; Aggressive Accounting (JJ doesn't understand, if a tax company finds out a customer lied on their return, they have to either refile it with the correct information, or notify the IRS fraud group. The accountant should have notified the IRS about whatever made them refile). Emotional Vandal Pulls a Knife?!-This is the memorable case of the man who had a room rented in the defendant's house by his father, and landlord/defendant claims months before the eviction that the tenant/plaintiff damaged his house with a knife.) Plaintiff (actually his father) (son) Josh Garver and (father) Gerald Garver wants the entire rent back, and all kinds of damages, and return of security deposit from defendant/former landlord Jason Weismann. Plaintiff was driving to school, slid off of the road, and decided he needed to move closer to school where he could walk to school. So, right after the accident, he couch surfed, then bought a car (actually daddy bought the car), and found another apartment. Plaintiff lived in his room for a week or two, then moved to the apartment, and paid rent through the end of the lease, and paid security deposit. I wouldn't give a penny to plaintiffs, Joshua decided to move out, Gerald decided to prepay the lease, so they relinquished their right to a refund. Defendant / landlord didn't return the security deposit. Did defendant get a police report, and file charges about Joshua hacking the kitchen up? Defendant had three other roommates, and I would be worried about Joshua's temper, and the tenants' safety. In my view, landlord/defendant should never have rented to the plaintiff, and was nuts for not pressing police charges when the vandalism happened. JJ has a text from Joshua admitting ripping the kitchen wiring apart, but discounts it because she feels sorry for Joshua. Plaintiff gets $475. (At least the show pays the $475, not the landlord). Birthday Corvette and Abandoned Dogs?!-Plaintiff Whitney Bonaparte suing defendant/ex-boyfriend John Logiudice for theft of a Corvette, and abandoning his dogs when he moved out of the house (after six years living together), and return of property. When defendant left, he took some property, but left the dogs. Almost all of the cars owned by the defendant are unregistered. Plaintiff claims he gave her a Corvette to her for her birthday, but took it. Defendant has no titles to the cars, and plaintiff claims he buys the cars cheap, fixes them up, and then sells them and the buyer registers them. Plaintiff and defendant don't have titles for the cars, and the cars all have to be repaired, and then apply for titles then. My guess, they’re salvaged cars, or junked. MV-50 (New York State) you repair the vehicle, prove to DMV that you repaired it, and I bet pass inspection, then it gets a title. Plaintiff claims she doesn't have title or keys to the Corvette. You call a locksmith and they change the locks and make keys or key fobs, then you hire someone to get the Corvette running, and do the MV 50 form, and get a title. JJ tells plaintiff to forget the Corvette. Plaintiff wants dogs taken by the defendant, (Bullies, and Cane Corso mixes). Cano Corsos are one person dogs, so I bet the dogs do miss him. JJ says when defendant gets a place to live he can have the dogs back, but he needs to support them. I bet plaintiff had the dogs for years. The Court Can't Help You?-Plaintiff Phyllis Charde suing defendant Shannon Hemmertfor value of a car, or return of a car plaintiff registered, or sold to defendant. Plaintiff can't get a license, or drive or register a car legally. She claims that's because she was pulled over for driving without insurance (bull pucky). She claims she has priors from 2002, and the one no insurance ticket. Car was in defendant's name, and defendant sold the car registered to her, but plaintiff says it was really her car. Plaintiff bought a car, it was registered and insured in defendant's name, and plaintiff drove it. Plaintiff's grandson took the car, it was impounded, and defendant paid the $162 to get it out of impound. Defendant sold the car, and gets to keep the money. 19 April 4 p.m. episodes- p. 518, 6 February 2024 Pit Bull Attacks Man's Face! ; Trespassing Landlord? p. 518, 18 January 2024 Handyman Squatter? ; Hazardous Waste of Space? 5 p.m. episodes- p. 482, 1 January 2021 Stealing Workers and Money?! p. 516, 12 October 2023 Winner Winner Chicken Dinner! ; Those Are Not My Texts!
  21. First case-Who cares? Not me. Second case, monogram on right sleeve, but defendants put it on the shirt pocket. If plaintiff had checked the order form that had a box on where to put the monogram, then it would have been done correctly. Sorry, I see no reason to embroider your initial and last name on your shirt cuff. Unless they're work shirts, and you need your name on it, why do this? J. Barber doesn't even have a receipt for the price of the shirts, but still wants $1700 for his shirts. The most he should get is used shirt price, not new. So, plaintiff gets $1,000. Defendant gets the shirts. Third Case-Plaintiff suing mechanic shop, for $5221, this was after an accident. Weeks after repair on the car rear end, plaintiff needed the front end repaired. Then, plaintiff gives a list of damages, that she has zero proof for. She wants $2,000 for the 'damages'. Plaintiff gets $1,000 for nothing she can prove.
  22. 18 April “Rentally Incapable” New, Season 10, Episode (Kenyada Ellsion vs. Phyllis Goldsmith) From the show site: The house was in "perfect" condition when this tenant and her four kids moved out, according to her. But the landlady says floors were scratched, appliances were broken, and cabinets were glued shut. The tenant may have an imperfect definition of "perfect," but do the landlady's actions entitle her to her deposit back? Plaintiff/former tenant suing defendant/former landlady for return of $4300 security deposit. Defendant is counter suing for $5,000. Plaintiff claims right after move in the house was a nightmare, and they stayed five years. Defendant claims the perfect house was trashed by plaintiff and her four children, including severely scratched floors, appliances destroyed, cabinets glued shut. Plaintiff says house was Section 8, so there was a move-in and move-out inspections by the housing authority. Defendant says she didn't know about an issue with the stove until move-out. Also, defendant says water heater went out, but after four years, and defendant had it replaced immediately, and spent $1600 on it. Security deposit was $5,000, but plaintiff paid $4300. After four years (not five the way plaintiff claims) defendant gave 90 days notice to plaintiff to vacate, because defendant was selling her current home, and moving into the house occupied by the plaintiff. Defendant is sleeping on a relative's couch, because she can't afford to fix the damages to her own house to enable her to move back in. Defendant claims the video from plaintiff of the walk through on move-out is altered, and the audio has been deleted. Landlady says move-out video of the walk through was when the cousin and plaintiff were there, and landlady was asking questions. (I'm sure Corriero will take plaintiff's side, but I believe the landlady). (This was in Gardena, CA). Corriero takes plaintiff's side. Hosing authority failed plaintiff on the move out inspection, the move in inspection passed the defendant's property. Hardwood floors are trashed, tile looks bad. L.A. Country Housing Authority did the move-out inspection. A company called Open Doors paid some of plaintiff's bills, the rest was Section 8. Judges compare the move-in inspection, and everything passed. Move-out inspection is horrible. Juarez says neither side have proof, and Tewolde agrees. Corriero wimps out again. Decision is plaintiff didn't prove her case, per Juarez and Tewolde, so $0. Correiro would have given plaintiff $1500, so he dissents. “Can't-strucion” Rerun, Season 10, Episode p. 45, 19 December 2023 19 April “Father Nos Best"” Rerun, Season 10, Episode p. 45, 23 January 2024 “Sick and Tires of You” Rerun, Season 9, Episode p. 45, 23 December 2023
  23. The Goldman and Brown families have waited 30 years, so waiting any more time is ridiculous.
  24. I would split the money evenly, have everyone buy what they can with their own money, and if other team members want to donate left over money they can. It's totally unfair for Laura or Season 20 Tom, to take a lot more than their share.
  25. Krystal S. success, Rose great success, Abi success, Delana success. However, William, Shakyia, and Charles all failed.
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