Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Moms Making Money


After seeing the strong ratings for the show, Us Weekly was the first to put the girls on a cover. “It was the right combination of a large enough audience that was passionate that could drive a sale for us,” said Lara Cohen, news director at the magazine. And the decision paid off, she said: Us Weekly had one of its biggest sales of the summer with that issue.


For MTV and entertainment magazines, cashing in on the show’s success is business as usual. But for the teen moms, their success and popularity, not to mention their show’s integrity, rely on a narrative that highlights their struggles and hardships, and the notion of suffering the consequences of one’s poor decisions.


“Teen pregnancy is not easy,” said show producer Morgan J. Freeman, and it’s clear the onus is on Teen Mom to underscore that fact. The girls “have an enormous amount of responsibility. The focus is on that.”


Since the series’ origins in 16 and Pregnant, it has hewed to a story line familiar to high school classrooms across the country. And as the girls have graduated to become teen moms, one fights to get a GED, another juggles school and a full-time job, and a few battle for custody rights and child support. Viewers, and the media, would be reluctant to embrace a show that compromised that narrative.


“It certainly would change the dynamic of the show if they had money to spend on nicer houses and nannies,” said Cohen of Us Weekly. “It would ruin what’s really interesting about the show. The whole reason that we wanted to cover them to begin with was that their struggle was compelling and very real.”





If anything, the show’s message combined with MTV’s packaging mean that Teen Mom works as a very clever and glorified public service announcement, for which the network has received considerable praise. Petite Maci laments losing her virginity to ex-fiancé Ryan, whom she broke up with after it was clear he was too immature and selfish to be a responsible and caring father. Dark-haired Farrah flip-flops between relying on an abusive mother for economic and emotional support and flailing for independence. In the season’s first episode, Farrah and her mother are trying to find a way forward after Farrah’s mother struck her. Then there’s Amber, who was captured on camera punching her daughter’s father and trying to push him down the stairs. MTV quickly turned the incident into a domestic-violence teaching moment. When Us Weekly featured all four girls in an issue, the piece was packaged under the headline “What We’ve Learned.”










A reader writes:



The idea that this recession is over is a myth. A little more than two years ago, I left a pretty well-paying corporate job behind because it was making me miserable. I enrolled at the University of Wales, earned a Masters Degree, and returned home. Since then, I've held two jobs. The first, which I started a year ago, was a temp job doing pretty much what I'd been doing before I left, albeit for less money – but I took it because I needed money to start paying down my college loans. That job dried up in April.







After five months of being jobless (and unqualified for unemployment, since I hadn't held a permanent position), I recently started as an instructor at a junior college about fifty miles from where I live. It's a part-time job, and it doesn't pay much, but at least it's work. My financial situation is still in the toilet, but at least now I can see the top of the bowl. Thankfully, my parents have allowed me to stay at their house during this time, which has alleviated much of my financial burden. Unfortunately, that may not remain an option for very long.


My dad, who immigrated here from Ireland in the mid-'70s, is a butcher by trade, but, with my mom's help, he has run his own sausage-making business since I was born. A few years ago, he finally had enough clients to give up butchering and stake out his own claim as a wholesaler. He has about four or five times as many customers now as he did then, but their week-to-week orders are down, meaning he's having trouble making ends meet.


This morning, my dad, who will turn 63 next May and has problems walking thanks to some asshole who plowed into his car five years ago, told me that he's been applying for jobs as a courier or delivery man – the only things outside of butchering for which he's really qualified, since his only educational background is in some GED courses he took in the '70s. Meanwhile, to try to make ends meet, my mom, who turns 55 next week, has been desperately seeking her own second job. Because, aside from my dad's business, she hasn't held a full-time job since I was a baby, she is understandably filled with an immense amount of self-doubt. Three times this week, I've heard her quietly sobbing in front of the computer as she scours different websites, growing ever-more frustrated with the hoops through which many companies make candidates jump.


After the accident I mentioned, my dad's insurance company dropped them as clients. They have a different insurer now, but the premiums are astronomical – through no fault of their own, only through the fault of the afore-mentioned asshole. My little brother, who's finishing up his last year in college, has a crazy amount of food allergies, so they are completely paranoid about losing the health insurance for his sake. Had I the money, I'd help them out myself; but I barely have enough to meet my loan payments. Then this, which my mom just told me a few hours ago: For the first time in their lives, my folks are worried they're going to miss a mortgage payment because they simply don't have the money in the bank to pay it.


My parents aren't like those irresponsible people at which pseudo-libertarians point – the type who got in over their heads and now expect society's or the government's support. My dad worked for twenty years to build his business to a point at which it could be his last job; his hope was to sell the business in a few years in order to retire. But he's not even close to that; in fact, it seems like he's further away than ever. My parents have never been late on any bills. They work hard, pay their taxes, and are active members in the community. They've done everything that they were supposed to do. Similarly, I've done what I was supposed to do: gone to school, worked hard, gotten a good education, and decided to give back by teaching at a JC attended heavily by minorities. And yet, we're still drowning.


The recession isn't over; it's killing us. What's worse is that it appears to me that the American Dream isn't just, as punk rocker Ben Weasel put it, "an ugly fucking lie." The American Dream is nonexistent. When I see those who contribute nothing to society getting further and further ahead while my parents, whom I have seen work their asses off my whole life, drift further and further behind, I find that belief in the American Dream is like a belief in Santa Claus – a story told to kids to keep them in line.





robert shumake hall of shame

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


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After seeing the strong ratings for the show, Us Weekly was the first to put the girls on a cover. “It was the right combination of a large enough audience that was passionate that could drive a sale for us,” said Lara Cohen, news director at the magazine. And the decision paid off, she said: Us Weekly had one of its biggest sales of the summer with that issue.


For MTV and entertainment magazines, cashing in on the show’s success is business as usual. But for the teen moms, their success and popularity, not to mention their show’s integrity, rely on a narrative that highlights their struggles and hardships, and the notion of suffering the consequences of one’s poor decisions.


“Teen pregnancy is not easy,” said show producer Morgan J. Freeman, and it’s clear the onus is on Teen Mom to underscore that fact. The girls “have an enormous amount of responsibility. The focus is on that.”


Since the series’ origins in 16 and Pregnant, it has hewed to a story line familiar to high school classrooms across the country. And as the girls have graduated to become teen moms, one fights to get a GED, another juggles school and a full-time job, and a few battle for custody rights and child support. Viewers, and the media, would be reluctant to embrace a show that compromised that narrative.


“It certainly would change the dynamic of the show if they had money to spend on nicer houses and nannies,” said Cohen of Us Weekly. “It would ruin what’s really interesting about the show. The whole reason that we wanted to cover them to begin with was that their struggle was compelling and very real.”





If anything, the show’s message combined with MTV’s packaging mean that Teen Mom works as a very clever and glorified public service announcement, for which the network has received considerable praise. Petite Maci laments losing her virginity to ex-fiancé Ryan, whom she broke up with after it was clear he was too immature and selfish to be a responsible and caring father. Dark-haired Farrah flip-flops between relying on an abusive mother for economic and emotional support and flailing for independence. In the season’s first episode, Farrah and her mother are trying to find a way forward after Farrah’s mother struck her. Then there’s Amber, who was captured on camera punching her daughter’s father and trying to push him down the stairs. MTV quickly turned the incident into a domestic-violence teaching moment. When Us Weekly featured all four girls in an issue, the piece was packaged under the headline “What We’ve Learned.”










A reader writes:



The idea that this recession is over is a myth. A little more than two years ago, I left a pretty well-paying corporate job behind because it was making me miserable. I enrolled at the University of Wales, earned a Masters Degree, and returned home. Since then, I've held two jobs. The first, which I started a year ago, was a temp job doing pretty much what I'd been doing before I left, albeit for less money – but I took it because I needed money to start paying down my college loans. That job dried up in April.







After five months of being jobless (and unqualified for unemployment, since I hadn't held a permanent position), I recently started as an instructor at a junior college about fifty miles from where I live. It's a part-time job, and it doesn't pay much, but at least it's work. My financial situation is still in the toilet, but at least now I can see the top of the bowl. Thankfully, my parents have allowed me to stay at their house during this time, which has alleviated much of my financial burden. Unfortunately, that may not remain an option for very long.


My dad, who immigrated here from Ireland in the mid-'70s, is a butcher by trade, but, with my mom's help, he has run his own sausage-making business since I was born. A few years ago, he finally had enough clients to give up butchering and stake out his own claim as a wholesaler. He has about four or five times as many customers now as he did then, but their week-to-week orders are down, meaning he's having trouble making ends meet.


This morning, my dad, who will turn 63 next May and has problems walking thanks to some asshole who plowed into his car five years ago, told me that he's been applying for jobs as a courier or delivery man – the only things outside of butchering for which he's really qualified, since his only educational background is in some GED courses he took in the '70s. Meanwhile, to try to make ends meet, my mom, who turns 55 next week, has been desperately seeking her own second job. Because, aside from my dad's business, she hasn't held a full-time job since I was a baby, she is understandably filled with an immense amount of self-doubt. Three times this week, I've heard her quietly sobbing in front of the computer as she scours different websites, growing ever-more frustrated with the hoops through which many companies make candidates jump.


After the accident I mentioned, my dad's insurance company dropped them as clients. They have a different insurer now, but the premiums are astronomical – through no fault of their own, only through the fault of the afore-mentioned asshole. My little brother, who's finishing up his last year in college, has a crazy amount of food allergies, so they are completely paranoid about losing the health insurance for his sake. Had I the money, I'd help them out myself; but I barely have enough to meet my loan payments. Then this, which my mom just told me a few hours ago: For the first time in their lives, my folks are worried they're going to miss a mortgage payment because they simply don't have the money in the bank to pay it.


My parents aren't like those irresponsible people at which pseudo-libertarians point – the type who got in over their heads and now expect society's or the government's support. My dad worked for twenty years to build his business to a point at which it could be his last job; his hope was to sell the business in a few years in order to retire. But he's not even close to that; in fact, it seems like he's further away than ever. My parents have never been late on any bills. They work hard, pay their taxes, and are active members in the community. They've done everything that they were supposed to do. Similarly, I've done what I was supposed to do: gone to school, worked hard, gotten a good education, and decided to give back by teaching at a JC attended heavily by minorities. And yet, we're still drowning.


The recession isn't over; it's killing us. What's worse is that it appears to me that the American Dream isn't just, as punk rocker Ben Weasel put it, "an ugly fucking lie." The American Dream is nonexistent. When I see those who contribute nothing to society getting further and further ahead while my parents, whom I have seen work their asses off my whole life, drift further and further behind, I find that belief in the American Dream is like a belief in Santa Claus – a story told to kids to keep them in line.





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Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


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robert shumake detroit

Day 74 by lisaschafferphoto


robert shumake hall of shame

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


robert shumake hall of shame


After seeing the strong ratings for the show, Us Weekly was the first to put the girls on a cover. “It was the right combination of a large enough audience that was passionate that could drive a sale for us,” said Lara Cohen, news director at the magazine. And the decision paid off, she said: Us Weekly had one of its biggest sales of the summer with that issue.


For MTV and entertainment magazines, cashing in on the show’s success is business as usual. But for the teen moms, their success and popularity, not to mention their show’s integrity, rely on a narrative that highlights their struggles and hardships, and the notion of suffering the consequences of one’s poor decisions.


“Teen pregnancy is not easy,” said show producer Morgan J. Freeman, and it’s clear the onus is on Teen Mom to underscore that fact. The girls “have an enormous amount of responsibility. The focus is on that.”


Since the series’ origins in 16 and Pregnant, it has hewed to a story line familiar to high school classrooms across the country. And as the girls have graduated to become teen moms, one fights to get a GED, another juggles school and a full-time job, and a few battle for custody rights and child support. Viewers, and the media, would be reluctant to embrace a show that compromised that narrative.


“It certainly would change the dynamic of the show if they had money to spend on nicer houses and nannies,” said Cohen of Us Weekly. “It would ruin what’s really interesting about the show. The whole reason that we wanted to cover them to begin with was that their struggle was compelling and very real.”





If anything, the show’s message combined with MTV’s packaging mean that Teen Mom works as a very clever and glorified public service announcement, for which the network has received considerable praise. Petite Maci laments losing her virginity to ex-fiancé Ryan, whom she broke up with after it was clear he was too immature and selfish to be a responsible and caring father. Dark-haired Farrah flip-flops between relying on an abusive mother for economic and emotional support and flailing for independence. In the season’s first episode, Farrah and her mother are trying to find a way forward after Farrah’s mother struck her. Then there’s Amber, who was captured on camera punching her daughter’s father and trying to push him down the stairs. MTV quickly turned the incident into a domestic-violence teaching moment. When Us Weekly featured all four girls in an issue, the piece was packaged under the headline “What We’ve Learned.”










A reader writes:



The idea that this recession is over is a myth. A little more than two years ago, I left a pretty well-paying corporate job behind because it was making me miserable. I enrolled at the University of Wales, earned a Masters Degree, and returned home. Since then, I've held two jobs. The first, which I started a year ago, was a temp job doing pretty much what I'd been doing before I left, albeit for less money – but I took it because I needed money to start paying down my college loans. That job dried up in April.







After five months of being jobless (and unqualified for unemployment, since I hadn't held a permanent position), I recently started as an instructor at a junior college about fifty miles from where I live. It's a part-time job, and it doesn't pay much, but at least it's work. My financial situation is still in the toilet, but at least now I can see the top of the bowl. Thankfully, my parents have allowed me to stay at their house during this time, which has alleviated much of my financial burden. Unfortunately, that may not remain an option for very long.


My dad, who immigrated here from Ireland in the mid-'70s, is a butcher by trade, but, with my mom's help, he has run his own sausage-making business since I was born. A few years ago, he finally had enough clients to give up butchering and stake out his own claim as a wholesaler. He has about four or five times as many customers now as he did then, but their week-to-week orders are down, meaning he's having trouble making ends meet.


This morning, my dad, who will turn 63 next May and has problems walking thanks to some asshole who plowed into his car five years ago, told me that he's been applying for jobs as a courier or delivery man – the only things outside of butchering for which he's really qualified, since his only educational background is in some GED courses he took in the '70s. Meanwhile, to try to make ends meet, my mom, who turns 55 next week, has been desperately seeking her own second job. Because, aside from my dad's business, she hasn't held a full-time job since I was a baby, she is understandably filled with an immense amount of self-doubt. Three times this week, I've heard her quietly sobbing in front of the computer as she scours different websites, growing ever-more frustrated with the hoops through which many companies make candidates jump.


After the accident I mentioned, my dad's insurance company dropped them as clients. They have a different insurer now, but the premiums are astronomical – through no fault of their own, only through the fault of the afore-mentioned asshole. My little brother, who's finishing up his last year in college, has a crazy amount of food allergies, so they are completely paranoid about losing the health insurance for his sake. Had I the money, I'd help them out myself; but I barely have enough to meet my loan payments. Then this, which my mom just told me a few hours ago: For the first time in their lives, my folks are worried they're going to miss a mortgage payment because they simply don't have the money in the bank to pay it.


My parents aren't like those irresponsible people at which pseudo-libertarians point – the type who got in over their heads and now expect society's or the government's support. My dad worked for twenty years to build his business to a point at which it could be his last job; his hope was to sell the business in a few years in order to retire. But he's not even close to that; in fact, it seems like he's further away than ever. My parents have never been late on any bills. They work hard, pay their taxes, and are active members in the community. They've done everything that they were supposed to do. Similarly, I've done what I was supposed to do: gone to school, worked hard, gotten a good education, and decided to give back by teaching at a JC attended heavily by minorities. And yet, we're still drowning.


The recession isn't over; it's killing us. What's worse is that it appears to me that the American Dream isn't just, as punk rocker Ben Weasel put it, "an ugly fucking lie." The American Dream is nonexistent. When I see those who contribute nothing to society getting further and further ahead while my parents, whom I have seen work their asses off my whole life, drift further and further behind, I find that belief in the American Dream is like a belief in Santa Claus – a story told to kids to keep them in line.





robert shumake detroit

Day 74 by lisaschafferphoto


robert shumake hall of shame

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


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Day 74 by lisaschafferphoto


robert shumake detroit

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


robert shumake hall of shame

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


robert shumake detroit

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


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robert shumake hall of shame

Day 74 by lisaschafferphoto


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Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


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Especially, if you join the "wrong" survey companies from the very beginning and are simply just looking for "Fast Cash!" The unfortunate problem nowadays is also the simple fact that online consumer survey respondents "just don't have the patience required for daily participation and don't know how to qualify for the beginning screening or qualifying process?" It's really NOT their fault? considering how many millions of companies on today's internet announce how much money you can make in (1) one day with very little time involved.

"Hi! This is Phillip Chambley! Original author of "Secrets of paid online surveys ebook!" $9.98 USD. (secretsofsurveys.com). I worked as a (5) five year inside market research interviewer/consultant and also provided online research for the companies(s) I worked for over the years. The biggest problem I have personally found is the fact that people that ARE actually interested in online survey participation have simply joined the "wrong companies". In other words, these companies only want to pay with prizes and gifts and even sometimes "Nothing at all?" after they have provided their hard working online opinion.

Making money with paid online surveys is NOT easy! It actually requires a lot of time and hard work. The hard part is finding the "right" cash paying survey companies to begin with, because so many internet website people nowadays advertise "join this particular company" and receive FREE CASH? However, what they don't tell you is they are making money off the referral fee(s) once you "click on and join" all of these so-called market research companies advertised on their websites and they could care less whether you make any money or not after you join?

Also, if you are not careful, you will be lured into giving certain FRAUDULENT survey companies your credit card number (as advertised on the bigspot.com T.V commercial). Which is really bad for people that are honestly interested in paid online survey participation that have been "steered in the wrong direction" regarding LEGITIMATE surveys that actually pay you for your online time. "These online incidents really make me mad" as a professional market research interviewer, because it simply defrauds the TRUE basis for daily opinion consumer market research to begin with.

People email me from all around the world and ask me? "Can you really make money off paid online surveys?" I tell them, it's not that hard once you join the right cash paying companies, but it does take a lot of patience and hard work everyday. Average paid online surveys pay anywhere from $3.00 to $25.00 per 15 minute survey depending on your occupation? "If you join the right companies in the beginning and learn how to qualify?" You can honestly make anywhere from $12.00 to $75.00 per hour, this also depends on your internet speed and how fast you can read.

This situation is great for un-employed workers and stay at home moms or dads and even college students. Because, legitimate online survey companies do NOT take out taxes or ask for your social security number or even your credit card number until you reach the $600.00 IRS limit pay for the year. "Ironically, these legitimate market research companies are 100% FREE to join!" Most legitimate paying online market research companies do NO internet advertisement and pay absolutely nothing for referral fees of any kind. Most of these online legitimate market research companies are "hidden within the internet?" which most website people never advertise because of "NO referral payment" in return.

"This is where the hard part comes in?" How do I find these actual cash paying online survey companies?" My wife and I actually bought a 500 list of these so-called survey companies for $39.95 over the internet and narrowed it down to 18 legitimate companies, which we still make money off everyday regarding our online opinion payable via paypal.com or checks in the U.S.A. mail each month. We honestly spent month after month joining these companies that has paid off for us in the end, because this is additional monthly income and we also have the right to choose which paid survey we want to participate in on a daily basis 24 hours a day.

"Trying to find these legitimate cash paying online market research companies over the internet, is like finding a needle in a haystack!" Ironically, most people have bought my ebook just for this list of the 18 Top cash paying online survey companies alone. Which they claim has been a "Time Saver" simply because of internet research, day after day, and the fact that they are tired of all the B.S. regarding paid online surveys of joining the "wrong survey companies".

"Unfortunately, you may have to lie at times regarding the screening or qualifying process", which is one of the reasons why I personally quit this business to begin with, because your occupation seems to conflict with this particular survey for some strange reason? In other words, restaurant workers are NOT allowed to do food surveys? Construction workers can NOT do surveys regarding tools? However, computer experts are allowed to always do any NEW computer technology, which pays anywhere from $60.00 to $100.00 per survey. But, these technology surveys are really complicated for an average person, but at the same time rewarding if these experts take the time to participate in these paid online surveys, with NO personal information ever revealed.

Thanks for reading,

Phillip Chambley.


robert shumake twitter

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...


robert shumake twitter

Dallas Morning <b>News</b> Makes Case for Rick Perry While Endorsing Bill <b>...</b>

Did you know that of Texas' budget of approximately $180 billion, over one third is sent by Texans to Washington in the form of federal taxes and.

The openSUSE Build Service 2.1 released - openSUSE <b>News</b>

This iteration has enhanced the web user interface of openSUSE Build Service with features that were previously only in the osc command line client. It now allows submitting of packages to other projects, showing a history of changes ...

Bing Exciting <b>News</b> From Bing and Yahoo! - Search Blog - Site Blogs <b>...</b>

Exciting News From Bing and Yahoo! Bing. 24 Aug 2010 9:00 AM. Comments (20). In our last update we shared that we had begun testing Bing results in Yahoo! search as we move forward with our transition. Today I am happy to share that ...























































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