If you’re a banking junkie then Bankaholic.com is the site for you.  Find the best savings accounts, compare CD rates and get the latest on offers from banks.  You can also browse credit cards to find the best program or cash back card.  Click on the “Finance” tab to learn all about various aspects of mortgages, retirement and more. 

Invariably, the drugstores in the United States tend to put out competing versions of the more popular brand beauty products.  I’m a big fan of alpha hydroxy cleansers and toners since they tend to be great at brightening and clearing my skin tone.  CVS offers a knockoff cleanser called “pore cleanser” and invites you to “Compare to Neutrogena Pore Refining Cleanser.” With a $3 price differential (CVS’ version is $5.99 and Neutrogena’s is $8.99 where I shop), I was sold into taking them up on their offer.  Both packages offer identical descriptions with the exception of variations in capitalization (is that a legal thing?).  Read more

Have you ever had an experience with a company that’s so horrible at what they do that you are frustrated beyond belief and just can’t believe that a company that operates like that can stay in business? Here’s my own top companies that are so bad I had to put them on my “never again” list. First, let’s get the caveats out of the way. This is my personal list based on my own experiences with these companies. What makes a crappy company for me? Generally, it’s either one that puts out an inferior product and doesn’t stand by it, or a company that has a horrible customer service operation.

  1. Daimler-Chrysler

In 2003, this company sold me a Mercedes certified lemon. The 1997 c230, which Mercedes proudly touted as having gone through its “blah blah blah” point inspection program, was a dud straight out of the gate. The “check engine light” came on the very night I took the car home. The transmission dropped a few days later. The car was in the shop more often that it was out in the beginning. I tried to get the dealership to swap the car out for a reliable one which they refused. When I called Mercedes’ customer complaint hotline they rarely answered and when they did, the person complained how many complaints they were getting. Ever since the marriage to Chrysler, this formerly esteemed company has gone downhill. I had always envisioned myself a lifelong Mercedes owner but this was my second and last Mercedes.

 

  1. United Airlines

This no-service airline company has the lockdown on the cattle call of airlines. It’s the only airline that I’ve flown on that consistently overbooks their flights and refuses to give you a boarding pass until the absolute last moment before your flight takes off. It’s always great to be up in the air, not knowing if you’ll actually get to fly to your designation, while rude, frazzled gate agents try to squeeze 30 people also waiting into five available seats. Then the cherry on top, of course, is that they split you from your travel partner and place you both into middle seats, telling you, try and switch once you’re on board to sit together. Oh yeah, when was the last time you gave up your cramped aisle or window seat for the “I love having no personal space” middle seat? I definitely don’t recommend this airline for any tall people (umm… that would be defined as anyone over 4’6”) since you spend the flight with your knees crammed up against the back seat in front of you, praying that that person doesn’t lean their seat back.

 

  1. EarthLink DSL

For six years, I enjoyed reliable DSL from this company until I had the audacity to move. I called up EarthLink to transfer my DSL to the new house. After three weeks of waiting for the blinking yellow light on my DSL modem to turn to green, I called them up. “Oops! We don’t have a transfer order on file for you, it will be ANOTHER three weeks for your service to transfer.” When I tried to call their customer service, it was impossible to get through to a live person in under 30 minutes. When I did get through, my phone call was routed to India where I was put into the customer service circle of hell of being transferred to one clueless representative after the other. After two months of EarthLink hell, I finally cancelled the service and ordered DSL from AT&T which took three days to arrive.

 

  1. Los Angeles Times

I refuse to call this a newspaper. It’s a rag mostly made up of opinion pieces. I used to get both the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times and the quality of reporting and news journalism by the NY Times is far superior. All newspapers have a slant but the strong bias and subversive agendas in the reporting by the LA Times is horrific. You would think they would get a clue based on their rapidly falling subscriber base that people are turned off by reading opinion piece after opinion piece instead of actual news.

 

  1. Bank of America

This is the King of Hidden Fees. Both my husband and I couldn’t tolerate staying with this bank anymore. Even if you read the guidelines, you still get nailed for some hidden fee. We even got nailed for an “excessive” deposit when we moved money over for our house renovation project. You’d think they would encourage high balances since banks make money off of your accounts.

Saw this sign on a Washington Mutual bank door:

“For your safety and ours, please remove holiday masks before entering.”

What if you’re wearing face paint?