emergency-broadcast-system asked:
Im clicking it its not downloading
Of all the days to pop on Tumblr… All there is is Julius Caesar content!
Anonymous asked: Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
Look buddy, i’m just trying to make it to Friday.
reblog if its friday and you made it
the Indiana White Meal
yes, that’s supposed to be a sandwich
Hoosiers: “Behold, a sandwich!”
this is just what Indiana is like
these are the entries listed under “traditional foods”
also if you win the Indianapolis 500 you are forced to drink milk and/or pour milk all over your body to satiate the dairy sponsors and if you refuse to fo this it ruins your career and everybody hates your guts
Don’t return ebooks or audiobooks you’ve consumed on Amazon and Audible
Amazon and Audible made it into their policy that you can return ebooks and audiobooks and get a full refund.
They actively promote this, making their book shop into a book lending service, de facto a library you subscribe to. That’s their business plan to encourage subscribtions.
The dirty thing, however, is that Amazon and Audible are making the authors pay for each refunded item. They will detract money, income, royalties, from the authors’ account. They’re not hurting from the refund, the author is.
Look, no-one is saying you’re not allowed to return an item if you’ve read the first 50 pages or listened to the first 45 minutes. Maybe the style is not your thing. Maybe you don’t like the narrator’s voice. Maybe the quality of the writing drops severely after chapter three. Go ahead, if the product is bad, return it.
What I’m talking about is that no one should be able to listen to a ten-hour audiobook or read through nearly an entire novel and still get a refund.
Most of the readers don’t know who’s paying for this business plan. It’s not Amazon and Audible, they’re still keeping your subscription money. It’s the authors.
Spread the word.
I’ll do it for you, creamy
— Sunrise, by Louise Glück






























