GENERAL DISCUSSIONS

Firefly the complete series for under 5 bux

POSTED BY: MELCROSE
UPDATED: Saturday, December 3, 2005 16:26
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VIEWED: 2567
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Friday, December 2, 2005 4:38 PM

MELCROSE


Not trying to spam or anything here, just too good a deal to not mention.
Go to buy.com, search for firefly dvd
add to cart, click on the "buy.com visa - 25 dollars off this order"
Apply, and, if your credit is good, :) you're approved.
Get firefly, pay the 4.97 on your new visa card when you get the bill. Call the 800 number and cancel the card.
I've done stuff like this before and never had a problem.
IF YOU'RE REALLY DARING, there is an additional FREE 25 DOLLAR offer (sign up for something using the card you are going to cancel, and then cancel as soon as you recieve the information)
So, in theory, you could get 2 boxed sets for under 10 bux.
Again, I have nothing to do with buy.com, but just wanted to pass this along for anyone that needed a cheap christmas present and for anyone that wanted to share firefly. . .
jeff


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Friday, December 2, 2005 7:00 PM

ERINBC


You wanna be careful with that, it can actually make you have bad credit. "If you open a number of credit accounts with retailers just to get the discounts or freebies, these seemingly harmless accounts may linger in your credit file and end up costing you money the next time you get a loan or insurance," warns David Lafleur, an FDIC Policy Analyst on consumer matters. Also suggested, by the same person, if you do cancel a card do it in writing and request that the statement from the credit card company says you requested the cancellation, otherwise it could look like you have had many cards but kept having to cancel them, maybe because you didn't have enough money to pay 'em. Also, constantly applying for new credit may hurt your credit score because while checking your own credit won't impact your score, when other agencies check it (for example to determine whether or not to give you credit) it can lower your score if it's done all the time. Of course, there are several systems used for determining the status of your credit. So, just be sure you are careful with how many times you do that. Sounds like a really good deal though...$5 for the whole thing.

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Friday, December 2, 2005 9:12 PM

MELCROSE


Quote:

Originally posted by ErinBC:
You wanna be careful with that, it can actually make you have bad credit. "If you open a number of credit accounts with retailers just to get the discounts or freebies, these seemingly harmless accounts may linger in your credit file and end up costing you money the next time you get a loan or insurance," warns David Lafleur,



ACK, actually never thought of that. Well, I've only done it twice in the last few years, so I don't feel too badly.

OK, revision:
IF you need a new credit card, and want the series for under 5 bux.. :)

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 6:35 AM

ERINBC


I think twice in a few years isn't a big deal, I think the main idea is just not to do it too much. The way they determine your credit score is really weird anyway, like they want you to have some cards,but not too many, and have some credit, but not too much...how're you supposed to know what they want????? They sound like FOX executives.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 7:24 AM

FIREFLYFAN278


You can do the same thing through Amazon, only it's free because you get $30 off.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 7:46 AM

MELCROSE


Quote:

Originally posted by fireflyfan278:
You can do the same thing through Amazon, only it's free because you get $30 off.



Yep, that's actually the one I cancelled about a year ago. I honestly didn't set out to, but get this:
YOU COULDN'T MAKE AN ONLINE PAYMENT. Period.
I talked to two supervisors. They were actually going to require me to send in some piece of paper.. I think they called it a "check" . . to make a payment. In the.. let me think, they called it.. uh.. "mail". .
How strange of them.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 8:32 AM

RUSHLOCK


Note on credit aspect. As long as you close those accounts you'll be fine. But indeed, leaving them 'open' is a bad idea. Every open line of credit is a negative against you, regardless of it being in 'good-standing' or not.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 10:00 AM

DONCOAT


Quote:

Originally posted by Rushlock:
Note on credit aspect. As long as you close those accounts you'll be fine. But indeed, leaving them 'open' is a bad idea. Every open line of credit is a negative against you, regardless of it being in 'good-standing' or not.

And yet, I've also heard that your credit score can be damaged by closing idle accounts. Apparently that is a sign you may be trying to artificially reduce your credit exposure.

These things tend to get pretty arcane, it seems.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ain't about you, Jayne. It's about what they need.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 10:29 AM

RUSHLOCK


That depends on who'd doing the credit check. No credit scoring system is going to drop points b/c you closed lines of credit, even if they were closed soley to improve credit rating/appearance.

If that were happening, odds are they're trying to deny you and using this as an excuse.

Not trying to be a know-it-all :p , just happen to be a finance major ;)

Having 2 credit cards open is probably fine, though I'd think 1 is better. Having none ofcourse limits your ability to establish credit, which even though I've had teachers argue it, is worse than having bad credit :p

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 2:56 PM

DONCOAT


Quote:

Originally posted by Rushlock:
That depends on who'd doing the credit check. No credit scoring system is going to drop points b/c you closed lines of credit, even if they were closed soley to improve credit rating/appearance.

If that were happening, odds are they're trying to deny you and using this as an excuse.

Well, this is theoretical -- my own credit is ultra-shiny.

My claim that closing accounts can hurt your score is based on this advice (from the August 2005 Consumer Reports article about credit scores):

Quote:

Think twice before canceling cards.
The more companies you owe money to, the worse it looks for you. But if you close accounts to boost your score, you'll end up making things worse. That's because you gain points if you're tapping only a small percentage of the total credit available on all your credit cards. Eliminating accounts can reduce that ratio. Also, if you bail out of older credit cards, you will reduce the average account age, which makes up a good portion of your credit score.



Obviously if you close a newly-opened account (as suggested by the OP), neither of these factors will have any net effect. But in general, just closing card accounts doesn't necessarily improve your credit score, and may hurt it.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ain't about you, Jayne. It's about what they need.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 3:56 PM

RUSHLOCK


That is true. I just didn't think that many people would go close their long standing accounts instead of their newer or unused ones. My fault for not factoring in stupidity/ignorance ;)

I was suggesting that if you have 6+ credit lines open, but only ever use 1-2 of them, then you should close the others (unused) b/c you will get a higher rate or not get approved for having too many lines of open credit. However, if you use all your lines frequently and keep them paid up, then ofcourse it's going to help more than hurt.

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Saturday, December 3, 2005 4:26 PM

ERINBC


See all this goes to prove my point that credit score calculating people are just as weird and the FOX network people. Nobody really knows what they're thinking or how they make their decisions!

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