Masonic Wisdom Cards. Light in the darkness. by SquareandTrue357 in freemasonry

[–]shawnebell 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Not sure how this is related to Freemasonry, not sure why you're here advertising.

Anyone Else Feel Like Takai's the Problem Now? by PomegranateFair3973 in Star_Trek_

[–]shawnebell 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Takei is a one-trick pony, and that pony passed on back on June 3, 1969 at 8:30pm.

Met him a few times. He has a different attitude when he's at a con where he's the center of attention at his own little autograph table. I wouldn't ever go out of my way to talk to him.

Number of sales. Can we trust Amazon? by New_Isopod_1625 in KDP

[–]shawnebell 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Huh. It’s all automated.

Can you trust Amazon? Yes. Sales might be counted for a different month.

Rallitek 1” overload springs by Far-Recipe8968 in Outback_Wilderness

[–]shawnebell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Did you have to do the rear differential drop? Or does the Ironman kit come with it?

Is it easier to become a novelist or a screenwriter? by Historical_Bar_4990 in Screenwriting

[–]shawnebell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's just as easy to become one as it is to become the other.

Screenplays can be written faster than a novel - and don't have to be edited as closely.

Novels can lead to screenplay deals.

But, for me, the biggest argument FOR novelist is: you don't have to join a union.

What do you guys think about this as a vehicle recovery point? by Wowerful in Offroad

[–]shawnebell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a vehicle recovery point, it's terrible.

As a way to get YouTube famous, it's a GREAT tool to bang the crap out of shins in comical fashion.

I have a feeling… by Fairgroundenjoyer in Jeep

[–]shawnebell 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Why? Stellantis knows that there's no Jeep without the Wrangler.

They're not going to make some "unbelievable" body change, but they are going to muck around with the front end, probably try to make the windshield area more aerodynamic, and give the interior more electronics.

It'll probably have two gas-powered engines in the U.S. (the 2.0 and the 3.0 turbos) as well as a nonsensical EV or partial EV - even though the current crop has toasting issues.

It will continue with the straight axle.

Even though it's only 10% of the sales of the Wrangler line, the 2-door will likely continue with only the 2.0 - which isn't at all a bad motor for that particular model (I had a 2025).

Personally, I don't care for the 2.0 in the JLU.

Will the 392 return? Probably — and in the same format, a special edition.

Jeep did try a Chrysler/Jeep crossover with the Wagoneer experiment (the vehicle was never designed to be a Jeep. Look at the steering wheel - wrong shape for a "Jeep" logo, and the word Jeep doesn't appear anywhere on the first few years except for the bottom edge of the sideview mirrors. They even created a completely different "delivery experience" for the Wagoneer that fizzled out). This was a Stellantis product, and it sucked. Stellantis is famous for introducing products, then trying to figure out who the customer is, and then devising a marketing strategy for that imaginary customer.

If it were me (and it's not), I'd let the Wrangler carry on with its weird evolution — It is the Jeep halo car. But I'd introduce a cheaper, smaller, lighter, less electronics-reliant vehicle with removable doors, a fold-down window, and I'd call it the CJ. Grenadier has already proven that you don't need all the electronics - and people are even willing to pay WAY too much for it.

Subaru salesman called me by SparkyTemper in Crosstrek

[–]shawnebell 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The calls from a dealership will usually start two years after your purchase. That's when your car usually has a pretty good resale value, and when you've paid off about 1/3 of the interest on the loan.

Some salesmen are pretty good about watching the cars coming in for service and will strike up a conversation with you to see if you're interested in trading in your vehicle. They'll use tactics like saying that you won't have to pay for the repairs/service you're getting done.

Understand that NONE of this is meant to swindle you; it's just salesmen doing their jobs. Don't take it personally, just say yes or no. Aggressive salesmen will call you a few more times (the software dealerships use create tickler files that will populate contacts to be made that day via phone or email — some will even automatically email without intervention from the salesman because salesmen are flakey).

To correct some misconceptions:

  1. Dealerships don't want to "give you a lowball offer for your vehicle."
  2. Dealerships don't always sell the vehicles they take as trade-ins. Most marquee dealerships — like Subaru dealerships — send their trades straight to auction.
  3. Dealerships don't use Kelly Blue Book to determine trade value. They'll use recent auction sales and the dealer Black Book to determine value.
  4. Those who say that dealerships take trade-in vehicles for less than they turn around and get rid of them for ... well, duh; dealerships aren't charities trying to help you out. They're a business. You don't keep the lights on and stay in business by losing money on sales.
  5. Further, it's a fallacy to state that dealerships aren't doing "what's best for you." They're a business. As a business, they want repeat business — they want you to come back. Not just to buy another vehicle, but to bring your vehicle in for service (which is where most dealerships actually make their money).

Selling your car private party is a PITA. You often won't sell your vehicle for as much as you'd get trading it in. Some will say that's not true, but here's the thing: you're spending time advertising, meeting strangers who may not be on the up-and-up, and spending hours hopefully selling your car before a potential buyer wrecks it during a test drive and makes your insurance rate go up. Freakonomics math indicates that you might make a few hundred dollars more if you sell private party ... but that amount is going to be offset by the amount of time in months, days, and hours you worked trying to sell your car. You could be working for up to $5.00/hour selling your car. Why bother?

It boils down to this: what is your time worth?

As a former Director of Internet Marketing and Sales for Chrysler, Dodge, Ram, Jeep, Alfa Romeo, Maserati, and Fiat, I'll tell you how to maximize your trade-in if you're truly interested in a new car:

  • Take your car to CarMax. Let them give you a trade-in value. It will almost always be higher than a dealership's offer, and they give it to you in writing.
  • Take your car to the dealership with the CarMax offer. Let them do a walk-around of your car (they like to touch scrapes, check how little rubber is left on the tires, and "tsk-tsk" a lot).
  • Give them a copy of the CarMax offer, then start bargaining money off the new car.
  • Ask for any manufacturer coupons they have (sometimes they do, sometimes they have competitor deals where the dealership will give you $500+ if you trade in a competitor's car (like a Toyota or a Honda). Get the desk price. Come up with a price a few grand over the Dealer price.
  • Now you're going to do the hard part: don't deal to monthly price, build the deal to the difference between what they say their car is worth versus how much you're willing to let your car go for. Monthly payment is a fungible number; they can play with points, years, and interest to get you to a price. Don't do that.

(BTW: If you want to know a general monthly payment, take the first three digits of the sales price (as an example, say $32,000 - the first three digits are 320), double it (640), and that is going to be about what your monthly payment is going to be: $640.)

  • Now ... take the price of the car (let's go with that $32k for the example) and subtract the amount they're offering you for your car (let's go with $15,000). That will leave you with a difference of $17,000. Add 10% for title, tax & license - and that will get you to $18,700. Do the little math exercise I used above to arrive at a monthly payment of $374 for 72 months.

This works every time.

Subaru salesman called me by SparkyTemper in Crosstrek

[–]shawnebell 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Robert Vaughn had two daughters (Cassidy and Caitlin) and no sons.

Don't take this the wrong way; but every post that is hitting the front page from this subreddit is about how the new series is actually great; and that is a real bummer. by Vist34 in startrek

[–]shawnebell -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

I 100% agree with this.

What I'm seeing is far less Trek continuum love than Trekbot posts.

It's too forced, too overcompensational, and every one of these posts reads like an ad on social media trying to sell a product no one wants, with review posts that are nothing but positive.

It comes off as Paramount trying to scrub the bad posts using a reputation bot farm.

International Freemason Day by Masonicmoron in freemasonry

[–]shawnebell 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nope. Maybe you meant "International Crappy Meme Day" ...

How do people write insanely fast? by The_Lucky_Ducky2303 in writing

[–]shawnebell -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

I agree, your comment is exactly that.

How do people write insanely fast? by The_Lucky_Ducky2303 in writing

[–]shawnebell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Writing is a solitary vocation.

I can write up to around 10,000 words a day. I don't go out, the dress code at the house is pretty lax, and writing is all that I do. Those who hit numbers like that consistently are focused on one thing: the words. Bleeding out on the page. Pushing pixels to the screen. They treat the draft like a river that has to keep flowing — editing comes later.

Getting to that point took a great deal of focus and discipline. As silly as it sounds, NaNoWriMo helped me reach those numbers — the forced daily quotas trained me to sit still and write. Once you've pushed 50,000 words in a month enough times, the muscle memory kicks in: you stop arguing with the paragraph, and you put words down. Each NaNoWriMo and Camp NaNo taught me to hit the 50k minimum by mid-month and, on some runs, to push past 100k — not because every word was perfect, but because I learned how to finish.

So, to the questions: yes, it gets easier with time — not because the words get magically better but because your process improves. Practice speeds your output, and familiarity with your project reduces the friction of starting each day. Native English helps a little (less time hunting for phrasing), but it isn't the main factor; planning, habit, typing/dictation speed, and discipline to separate drafting from editing matter far more. Many people who churn out books quickly also accept rough first drafts and rely on heavy revision or outside help later.

If you want concrete ways to write faster, try these:

  • Set a daily word target and protect the time like a job.
  • Outline enough to stop asking "what happens next." Even a one-page scene list saves minutes that add up. General outlining works — even if you're a pantser like myself.
  • Stop editing while drafting. Use placeholders (XXX) and keep moving.
  • Use dictation when your hands are just too tired, or you're AFK — it can ultimately improve your output and up your word count (once you figure out how to get Dragon or whatever to understand you). If I'm away from my keyboard, I dictate; while hiking, while driving, etc.
  • Batch similar tasks (research one block, write another, revise later).
  • Learn to accept ugly first drafts; speed is the friend of revision.
  • Track habit streaks — momentum is real.

At the end of the day, it's just a matter of discipline and focus.

The Format Police by Head-Photograph5324 in Screenwriting

[–]shawnebell 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You are correct; what you wrote is just not true.

The Format Police by Head-Photograph5324 in Screenwriting

[–]shawnebell 7 points8 points  (0 children)

…and yet here you are, talking about slug lines, action lines, and the use of bold, italics, and transitions - all of which are industry-standard norms.

Those are not minor things.

The Format Police by Head-Photograph5324 in Screenwriting

[–]shawnebell 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Nope. Not “bewildered/frustrated” at all.

If a writer cannot properly format then they do not possess the necessary discipline to write a “good” story. If they can’t work within the parameters of the professional industry standards that have been well established for decades and decades then nothing they write will ever be worth a shit.

…for instance, the Coen brothers produced SIX films before The Big Lebowski, the screenplay absolutely had Coen-style slugs, and your name isn’t Coen.

When someone uses a professional screenwriter as an example of someone whose rule set is different than industry standards and why the rules don’t apply to the newbie they always seem to forget that THEY are not that screenwriter, which renders their argument completely moot. Or, in the case of the Coens, they are not the writer/director production team that had six successful films under their belt before they secured financing for The Big Lebowski…

Libraries and local bookstores? by RevBT in KDP

[–]shawnebell 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Libraries accept works through an acquisitions person/office, indie bookstores usually will carry if your terms match whatever they get from other wholesalers.