30 Kasım 2012 Cuma

Will 'Binders Full of Women' Hurt Romney?

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California freeway closed for 'Hangover 3' filming

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LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Drivers are being warned to avoid sections of a Southern California freeway that will be shut down this weekend for filming of the third installment of the "Hangover" movie franchise.

Sections of the 73 Freeway in coastal Orange County will see staggered closures until 7 p.m. Sunday.

To the south, the freeway becomes a toll road. The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/RPgJTK ) that the film's producer, Warner Bros., will pay for lost toll revenues and other costs.

Lori Olin, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, tells the newspaper the agency will receive at least $25,000, including location fees.

The 2009 blockbuster "The Hangover," about an ill-fated bachelor party trip to Las Vegas, earned over $400 million worldwide. Its 2011 sequel was also a mega hit.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-freeway-closed-hangover-3-filming-172347046.html

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PFT: 'Maybe we?ve just spoiled people,' Brady says

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George Wilson, Chris KelsayAP

The Bills? four losses this season have been by scores of 48-28, 52-28, 45-3 and 35-34, so it doesn?t exactly take a detailed film analysis to realize that Buffalo?s defense isn?t playing well. But Bills defensive end Chris Kelsay said that after watching film of Sunday?s loss, he?s fed up with the effort his teammates are giving.

?You watch the film and not everybody was playing hard every snap and that?s unacceptable,? Kelsay said.

Kelsay said he thinks it may be on players like him to personally get in the faces of teammates who aren?t giving their all.

?We might have to grab guys by the shirt collar and tell them to get to moving,? Kelsay said. ?It?s nothing personal, but we?re relying on you. Myself included. If I?m not doing my job I expect Kyle [Williams] to grab me by the neck and tell me to get going. That?s what it?s going to take. We?ve got a lot of young guys. We?re going to get everybody on the same page.?

Kelsay didn?t name any names of teammates who aren?t trying, although he did suggest that Mario Williams isn?t going 100 percent because he?s hurt.

?I?d take Mario Williams at full health and full speed probably over anybody else in the league,? Kelsay said. ?At the same time I?d take Sean Ferguson, who we cut, over a guy that?s playing 50 percent, and I think our coaches would too. The playmakers have to make plays and the way you do that is giving all out effort every play.?

Ultimately, Kelsay says, there?s just no way he can tolerate being part of a defense that plays the way Buffalo?s defense is playing.

?It?s inexcusable,? Kelsay said. ?It?s a blessing to be in this league and to go out there and lay an egg there are no excuses for it.?

Kelsay is saying what needs to be said. The question is whether his teammates are listening.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/22/tom-brady-maybe-we-spoiled-people/related/

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I've Never Been So Happy to Lose Money - Finance - PersonalFinance

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I've made one really bad decision with money. In 2008 we bough a rental property in the North Georgia mountains. This month we sold it - and I never thought this day would arrive.

We lost money, and I've never been happier to lose money before. Because now we can stop throwing good money after bad and start recouping what we've lost. Now, we start moving ahead.

At the time we bought this rental cabin we'd sold 3 previous homes; 2 that we lived in and one that Becky had lived in then rented out. All of those previous homes were sold for a profit. But the rental house was painful, and took its toll mentally and financially. So this article is all about learning from my mistakes.

Lesson number one is to buy low and sell high. We did neither. We bought at the peak of the housing bubble. A few months later the bubble burst and the market crashed, hard. Goldman Sachs apparently knew the crash was looming as early as 2006 and hedged against it. Gifford and Gifford did not!

Lesson two, if you want a rental property you need to know what it can really rent for. We had two main property managers we wanted to work with because this was going to be an out of state venture for us ... even though the cabin was just a few miles from Becky's parents.

The first company was good about detailing what percentage their share would be, but couldn't give us a good idea of what we might rent out the cabin for. The second company told us what we wanted to hear. Then, once we signed with them, we ended up renting for half of what they said they'd charge our renters. Ouch!

All of our calculations had been based on twice as much as we ended up getting. I had assumed weekends-only as a baseline, 8 rented nights per month as a minimum. With that alone, based on the property managers initial calculations, we'd have broken even (with tax breaks and made a profit during peak seasons). End of the day I've broken even in exactly one month, and never made a profit. Ugh.

Lesson three, insurance for a vacation rental property is much higher than for a rental property with a full time-resident or a home you own. Ugh. We didn't know this going in and had we, we would have waived off.

Lesson four, go with a place with more bedrooms. Our place was really a one bedroom with a loft. We looked at some cheaper but more remote places that had 2 bedrooms plus lofts. These properties could have housed 8 or more people. These models also had space for a pool table which apparently is very popular for this region. Who knew? Not us.

So lesson five is do not mirror image. By that I mean don't assume that what interests you is what will interest your renter's demographic. A lot of what we bought in this place fit our taste. Apparently, when people want to vacation in the mountains they don't mind being remote. Not a big selling point for us, but it is a key point for our target demographic.

Lesson six can apply to anyone buying a house, rental or otherwise. If the appraisal comes in low, use that to get out ... or negotiate a better deal. Instead we foolishly sought a different bank to fiancee with. Nothing against the bank, just a bad decision when we could have saved money or backed out. Especially since there were other, viable options.

So when does owning a vacation rental property make sense? When you can pay for it in cash. And you want to stay there yourself from time to time. And you are close enough to fix things yourself, quickly. We even had a break-in/robbery shortly after buying the place and had TVs stolen. Easier to deal with these things if you are local. Becky's folks did a ton for us, no doubt, but that is a lot to ask of family. Again, much better if you can tackle it locally on your own.

What could I have done with the money instead? Invested it. Of course the market has not fully recovered from its peak but most of our investments are nearing where they were prior to the crash. And putting more money into stocks after the crash makes sense when you're investing for the long haul, back to the aforementioned buy low and sell high methodology. Missed a good opportunity there.

Savings, oh sweet mother of pearl, I should've saved this money for a down payment on our final house. The place we'll live when I eventually retire from active duty and stop moving every 2 years. We could have put the money in a CD and made some money back. Or we could've dropped that dough in my kids' 529 plans. In retrospect, these were all much better options.

The other thing we could've/should've done is wait. Neither one of us was totally for the idea. It was my wife's idea first, then she got cold feet (smartly!). But I thought this was something she really wanted and might have been a good place for her and the kids to hang had I ended up on a deployment for a year (Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea etc). Also we'd done so well in real estate with the previously mentioned houses that I didn't want a portfolio without any real estate. Had we waited for the market to crash we'd have either waived off or bought low!

Now to be fair the rental market has increased for us with each successive year. And if that trend continued in 2011 we might have actually eventually broken even. But it is not worth the stress. Every time you think you're about to get ahead of the game a hot tub cover needs replaced, the washing machine breaks, or someone complains about a mattress and you drop big coin to get a new one. Or some fool reserves a week - golden! Then they leave after the first night. Now it is too late to get anyone into the place for the rest of the week. Ugh. We've been, most months since we bought the place, carrying what equates to two mortgages (although actually it is a mortgage on the rental and rent on our residence.)

Now that we've closed, and taken our licks, we can start investing both in the federal government's 401K plan and Colin's 529 (Liv will get to benefit from my new GI Bill ... we only have to cover 1 year for her undergraduate degree, yay!) The 401K plan, or TSP, gets us tax breaks as well as systematic investing. Though not without risk, it is an much better bet than the rental cabin.

We will earn it all back eventually. And now that we're out from under the cabin experiment, we have a ton more monthly money freed up with which to buy camera gear! Oh wait, my wife is glaring at me. Ok, so we'll save for a "final" house and invest for retirement and college. Either way it feels like we've won the lotto. Moreover, the stress on us has been lifted. We're among the lucky ones who did not end up in a short sale or foreclosure in what were, and in many cases still are, very dark times for real estate.

Now there are some people out there that are making huge bank off of their rental properties. Maybe they can leave a comment about what has worked for them that we should have done differently. But again my advice is put money in the house you live in, in a 401K and in no-load, index funds. Baseball cards are probably a better bet as well!





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Time Isn't Always Money

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Time is the most important resource we all have. Time will run out and you can never get it back. Time is the one link between you and every person in the world. We all have 24 hours in 7 days a week to work with. If you work a steady job think about your day. Your job takes up a large portion of time 5 days a week. You are trading time for a set payment every month. Now if you calculate your cash flow (income after expenses) you can see how long it will take to get rich. It is extremely hard to get rich when your income is directly correlated to the energy you exert every day. One option is to work harder to get a promotion, raise, or new job. However, your expenses will probably increase when your title or paycheck improve. This makes saving very difficult. Why not create passive income?

Passive income is the secret to wealth. Passive income is money that your money earns you. Passive income doesn't require time to find its way to your wallet. When you can successfully detach your time away from a money system, you will eventually become rich. Sounds easy right? Well....not necessarily. In order to get a strong passive income stream, a lot of work has to be done to create passive income vehicles.


  • First, you have to understand that you will work extremely hard upfront without getting paid. When creating for yourself, money doesn't come until the system is created and operating. It's a lot of work to build passive income vehicles such as real estate portfolios, stock portfolios, royalty checks, or a business.
  • Second, you have to find the time to put in the work. The difficult part about this is each passive income vehicle is a pool with sharks swimming. The pros swim in these waters to survive. They aren't in it for extra money. If you don't put in the time to really understand what you are doing, you will get swallowed up. Time will be a challenge if you have a family and major responsibilities. A supportive spouse and family is essential in this area. Communicate with them and include them so they know that your work will pay off in the end. Being up front with your family will eliminate a lot of distractions and you can focus on the details of your endeavor.
  • Lastly, you must be willing to walk away. Income isn't passive until your time is not attached. Building a system to run itself requires a different plan than building a system that depends on you to run it. Have an exit plan at the start and tailor all of your actions and energy into eventually walking away with consistent income.


If you study wealthy people you will notice that they all have mastered the art of creating passive income. Even if they work a business, their businesses have passive income. If you want to be wealthy, you must generate different streams of income not dependent on your time. You can only do so much in 24 hours a day. Work hard to create money that will work harder for you. This is the definition of passive income.

29 Kasım 2012 Perşembe

Time Isn't Always Money

To contact us Click HERE

Time is the most important resource we all have. Time will run out and you can never get it back. Time is the one link between you and every person in the world. We all have 24 hours in 7 days a week to work with. If you work a steady job think about your day. Your job takes up a large portion of time 5 days a week. You are trading time for a set payment every month. Now if you calculate your cash flow (income after expenses) you can see how long it will take to get rich. It is extremely hard to get rich when your income is directly correlated to the energy you exert every day. One option is to work harder to get a promotion, raise, or new job. However, your expenses will probably increase when your title or paycheck improve. This makes saving very difficult. Why not create passive income?

Passive income is the secret to wealth. Passive income is money that your money earns you. Passive income doesn't require time to find its way to your wallet. When you can successfully detach your time away from a money system, you will eventually become rich. Sounds easy right? Well....not necessarily. In order to get a strong passive income stream, a lot of work has to be done to create passive income vehicles.


  • First, you have to understand that you will work extremely hard upfront without getting paid. When creating for yourself, money doesn't come until the system is created and operating. It's a lot of work to build passive income vehicles such as real estate portfolios, stock portfolios, royalty checks, or a business.
  • Second, you have to find the time to put in the work. The difficult part about this is each passive income vehicle is a pool with sharks swimming. The pros swim in these waters to survive. They aren't in it for extra money. If you don't put in the time to really understand what you are doing, you will get swallowed up. Time will be a challenge if you have a family and major responsibilities. A supportive spouse and family is essential in this area. Communicate with them and include them so they know that your work will pay off in the end. Being up front with your family will eliminate a lot of distractions and you can focus on the details of your endeavor.
  • Lastly, you must be willing to walk away. Income isn't passive until your time is not attached. Building a system to run itself requires a different plan than building a system that depends on you to run it. Have an exit plan at the start and tailor all of your actions and energy into eventually walking away with consistent income.


If you study wealthy people you will notice that they all have mastered the art of creating passive income. Even if they work a business, their businesses have passive income. If you want to be wealthy, you must generate different streams of income not dependent on your time. You can only do so much in 24 hours a day. Work hard to create money that will work harder for you. This is the definition of passive income.

U.S. official confirms Exxon seeking to leave Iraq's West Qurna

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Will 'Binders Full of Women' Hurt Romney?

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California freeway closed for 'Hangover 3' filming

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LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Drivers are being warned to avoid sections of a Southern California freeway that will be shut down this weekend for filming of the third installment of the "Hangover" movie franchise.

Sections of the 73 Freeway in coastal Orange County will see staggered closures until 7 p.m. Sunday.

To the south, the freeway becomes a toll road. The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/RPgJTK ) that the film's producer, Warner Bros., will pay for lost toll revenues and other costs.

Lori Olin, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, tells the newspaper the agency will receive at least $25,000, including location fees.

The 2009 blockbuster "The Hangover," about an ill-fated bachelor party trip to Las Vegas, earned over $400 million worldwide. Its 2011 sequel was also a mega hit.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-freeway-closed-hangover-3-filming-172347046.html

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PFT: 'Maybe we?ve just spoiled people,' Brady says

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George Wilson, Chris KelsayAP

The Bills? four losses this season have been by scores of 48-28, 52-28, 45-3 and 35-34, so it doesn?t exactly take a detailed film analysis to realize that Buffalo?s defense isn?t playing well. But Bills defensive end Chris Kelsay said that after watching film of Sunday?s loss, he?s fed up with the effort his teammates are giving.

?You watch the film and not everybody was playing hard every snap and that?s unacceptable,? Kelsay said.

Kelsay said he thinks it may be on players like him to personally get in the faces of teammates who aren?t giving their all.

?We might have to grab guys by the shirt collar and tell them to get to moving,? Kelsay said. ?It?s nothing personal, but we?re relying on you. Myself included. If I?m not doing my job I expect Kyle [Williams] to grab me by the neck and tell me to get going. That?s what it?s going to take. We?ve got a lot of young guys. We?re going to get everybody on the same page.?

Kelsay didn?t name any names of teammates who aren?t trying, although he did suggest that Mario Williams isn?t going 100 percent because he?s hurt.

?I?d take Mario Williams at full health and full speed probably over anybody else in the league,? Kelsay said. ?At the same time I?d take Sean Ferguson, who we cut, over a guy that?s playing 50 percent, and I think our coaches would too. The playmakers have to make plays and the way you do that is giving all out effort every play.?

Ultimately, Kelsay says, there?s just no way he can tolerate being part of a defense that plays the way Buffalo?s defense is playing.

?It?s inexcusable,? Kelsay said. ?It?s a blessing to be in this league and to go out there and lay an egg there are no excuses for it.?

Kelsay is saying what needs to be said. The question is whether his teammates are listening.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/22/tom-brady-maybe-we-spoiled-people/related/

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28 Kasım 2012 Çarşamba

Will 'Binders Full of Women' Hurt Romney?

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California freeway closed for 'Hangover 3' filming

To contact us Click HERE

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Drivers are being warned to avoid sections of a Southern California freeway that will be shut down this weekend for filming of the third installment of the "Hangover" movie franchise.

Sections of the 73 Freeway in coastal Orange County will see staggered closures until 7 p.m. Sunday.

To the south, the freeway becomes a toll road. The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/RPgJTK ) that the film's producer, Warner Bros., will pay for lost toll revenues and other costs.

Lori Olin, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, tells the newspaper the agency will receive at least $25,000, including location fees.

The 2009 blockbuster "The Hangover," about an ill-fated bachelor party trip to Las Vegas, earned over $400 million worldwide. Its 2011 sequel was also a mega hit.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-freeway-closed-hangover-3-filming-172347046.html

melanie amaro new air jordans jeff dunham young guns concord safe and sound botticelli

PFT: 'Maybe we?ve just spoiled people,' Brady says

To contact us Click HERE
George Wilson, Chris KelsayAP

The Bills? four losses this season have been by scores of 48-28, 52-28, 45-3 and 35-34, so it doesn?t exactly take a detailed film analysis to realize that Buffalo?s defense isn?t playing well. But Bills defensive end Chris Kelsay said that after watching film of Sunday?s loss, he?s fed up with the effort his teammates are giving.

?You watch the film and not everybody was playing hard every snap and that?s unacceptable,? Kelsay said.

Kelsay said he thinks it may be on players like him to personally get in the faces of teammates who aren?t giving their all.

?We might have to grab guys by the shirt collar and tell them to get to moving,? Kelsay said. ?It?s nothing personal, but we?re relying on you. Myself included. If I?m not doing my job I expect Kyle [Williams] to grab me by the neck and tell me to get going. That?s what it?s going to take. We?ve got a lot of young guys. We?re going to get everybody on the same page.?

Kelsay didn?t name any names of teammates who aren?t trying, although he did suggest that Mario Williams isn?t going 100 percent because he?s hurt.

?I?d take Mario Williams at full health and full speed probably over anybody else in the league,? Kelsay said. ?At the same time I?d take Sean Ferguson, who we cut, over a guy that?s playing 50 percent, and I think our coaches would too. The playmakers have to make plays and the way you do that is giving all out effort every play.?

Ultimately, Kelsay says, there?s just no way he can tolerate being part of a defense that plays the way Buffalo?s defense is playing.

?It?s inexcusable,? Kelsay said. ?It?s a blessing to be in this league and to go out there and lay an egg there are no excuses for it.?

Kelsay is saying what needs to be said. The question is whether his teammates are listening.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/22/tom-brady-maybe-we-spoiled-people/related/

bulls heat goldman sachs brandon carr knicks coach encyclopedia britannica pi white lion

I've Never Been So Happy to Lose Money - Finance - PersonalFinance

To contact us Click HERE

I've made one really bad decision with money. In 2008 we bough a rental property in the North Georgia mountains. This month we sold it - and I never thought this day would arrive.

We lost money, and I've never been happier to lose money before. Because now we can stop throwing good money after bad and start recouping what we've lost. Now, we start moving ahead.

At the time we bought this rental cabin we'd sold 3 previous homes; 2 that we lived in and one that Becky had lived in then rented out. All of those previous homes were sold for a profit. But the rental house was painful, and took its toll mentally and financially. So this article is all about learning from my mistakes.

Lesson number one is to buy low and sell high. We did neither. We bought at the peak of the housing bubble. A few months later the bubble burst and the market crashed, hard. Goldman Sachs apparently knew the crash was looming as early as 2006 and hedged against it. Gifford and Gifford did not!

Lesson two, if you want a rental property you need to know what it can really rent for. We had two main property managers we wanted to work with because this was going to be an out of state venture for us ... even though the cabin was just a few miles from Becky's parents.

The first company was good about detailing what percentage their share would be, but couldn't give us a good idea of what we might rent out the cabin for. The second company told us what we wanted to hear. Then, once we signed with them, we ended up renting for half of what they said they'd charge our renters. Ouch!

All of our calculations had been based on twice as much as we ended up getting. I had assumed weekends-only as a baseline, 8 rented nights per month as a minimum. With that alone, based on the property managers initial calculations, we'd have broken even (with tax breaks and made a profit during peak seasons). End of the day I've broken even in exactly one month, and never made a profit. Ugh.

Lesson three, insurance for a vacation rental property is much higher than for a rental property with a full time-resident or a home you own. Ugh. We didn't know this going in and had we, we would have waived off.

Lesson four, go with a place with more bedrooms. Our place was really a one bedroom with a loft. We looked at some cheaper but more remote places that had 2 bedrooms plus lofts. These properties could have housed 8 or more people. These models also had space for a pool table which apparently is very popular for this region. Who knew? Not us.

So lesson five is do not mirror image. By that I mean don't assume that what interests you is what will interest your renter's demographic. A lot of what we bought in this place fit our taste. Apparently, when people want to vacation in the mountains they don't mind being remote. Not a big selling point for us, but it is a key point for our target demographic.

Lesson six can apply to anyone buying a house, rental or otherwise. If the appraisal comes in low, use that to get out ... or negotiate a better deal. Instead we foolishly sought a different bank to fiancee with. Nothing against the bank, just a bad decision when we could have saved money or backed out. Especially since there were other, viable options.

So when does owning a vacation rental property make sense? When you can pay for it in cash. And you want to stay there yourself from time to time. And you are close enough to fix things yourself, quickly. We even had a break-in/robbery shortly after buying the place and had TVs stolen. Easier to deal with these things if you are local. Becky's folks did a ton for us, no doubt, but that is a lot to ask of family. Again, much better if you can tackle it locally on your own.

What could I have done with the money instead? Invested it. Of course the market has not fully recovered from its peak but most of our investments are nearing where they were prior to the crash. And putting more money into stocks after the crash makes sense when you're investing for the long haul, back to the aforementioned buy low and sell high methodology. Missed a good opportunity there.

Savings, oh sweet mother of pearl, I should've saved this money for a down payment on our final house. The place we'll live when I eventually retire from active duty and stop moving every 2 years. We could have put the money in a CD and made some money back. Or we could've dropped that dough in my kids' 529 plans. In retrospect, these were all much better options.

The other thing we could've/should've done is wait. Neither one of us was totally for the idea. It was my wife's idea first, then she got cold feet (smartly!). But I thought this was something she really wanted and might have been a good place for her and the kids to hang had I ended up on a deployment for a year (Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea etc). Also we'd done so well in real estate with the previously mentioned houses that I didn't want a portfolio without any real estate. Had we waited for the market to crash we'd have either waived off or bought low!

Now to be fair the rental market has increased for us with each successive year. And if that trend continued in 2011 we might have actually eventually broken even. But it is not worth the stress. Every time you think you're about to get ahead of the game a hot tub cover needs replaced, the washing machine breaks, or someone complains about a mattress and you drop big coin to get a new one. Or some fool reserves a week - golden! Then they leave after the first night. Now it is too late to get anyone into the place for the rest of the week. Ugh. We've been, most months since we bought the place, carrying what equates to two mortgages (although actually it is a mortgage on the rental and rent on our residence.)

Now that we've closed, and taken our licks, we can start investing both in the federal government's 401K plan and Colin's 529 (Liv will get to benefit from my new GI Bill ... we only have to cover 1 year for her undergraduate degree, yay!) The 401K plan, or TSP, gets us tax breaks as well as systematic investing. Though not without risk, it is an much better bet than the rental cabin.

We will earn it all back eventually. And now that we're out from under the cabin experiment, we have a ton more monthly money freed up with which to buy camera gear! Oh wait, my wife is glaring at me. Ok, so we'll save for a "final" house and invest for retirement and college. Either way it feels like we've won the lotto. Moreover, the stress on us has been lifted. We're among the lucky ones who did not end up in a short sale or foreclosure in what were, and in many cases still are, very dark times for real estate.

Now there are some people out there that are making huge bank off of their rental properties. Maybe they can leave a comment about what has worked for them that we should have done differently. But again my advice is put money in the house you live in, in a 401K and in no-load, index funds. Baseball cards are probably a better bet as well!





iAutoblog the premier autoblogger software

Time Isn't Always Money

To contact us Click HERE

Time is the most important resource we all have. Time will run out and you can never get it back. Time is the one link between you and every person in the world. We all have 24 hours in 7 days a week to work with. If you work a steady job think about your day. Your job takes up a large portion of time 5 days a week. You are trading time for a set payment every month. Now if you calculate your cash flow (income after expenses) you can see how long it will take to get rich. It is extremely hard to get rich when your income is directly correlated to the energy you exert every day. One option is to work harder to get a promotion, raise, or new job. However, your expenses will probably increase when your title or paycheck improve. This makes saving very difficult. Why not create passive income?

Passive income is the secret to wealth. Passive income is money that your money earns you. Passive income doesn't require time to find its way to your wallet. When you can successfully detach your time away from a money system, you will eventually become rich. Sounds easy right? Well....not necessarily. In order to get a strong passive income stream, a lot of work has to be done to create passive income vehicles.


  • First, you have to understand that you will work extremely hard upfront without getting paid. When creating for yourself, money doesn't come until the system is created and operating. It's a lot of work to build passive income vehicles such as real estate portfolios, stock portfolios, royalty checks, or a business.
  • Second, you have to find the time to put in the work. The difficult part about this is each passive income vehicle is a pool with sharks swimming. The pros swim in these waters to survive. They aren't in it for extra money. If you don't put in the time to really understand what you are doing, you will get swallowed up. Time will be a challenge if you have a family and major responsibilities. A supportive spouse and family is essential in this area. Communicate with them and include them so they know that your work will pay off in the end. Being up front with your family will eliminate a lot of distractions and you can focus on the details of your endeavor.
  • Lastly, you must be willing to walk away. Income isn't passive until your time is not attached. Building a system to run itself requires a different plan than building a system that depends on you to run it. Have an exit plan at the start and tailor all of your actions and energy into eventually walking away with consistent income.


If you study wealthy people you will notice that they all have mastered the art of creating passive income. Even if they work a business, their businesses have passive income. If you want to be wealthy, you must generate different streams of income not dependent on your time. You can only do so much in 24 hours a day. Work hard to create money that will work harder for you. This is the definition of passive income.

27 Kasım 2012 Salı

Will 'Binders Full of Women' Hurt Romney?

To contact us Click HERE
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California freeway closed for 'Hangover 3' filming

To contact us Click HERE

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Drivers are being warned to avoid sections of a Southern California freeway that will be shut down this weekend for filming of the third installment of the "Hangover" movie franchise.

Sections of the 73 Freeway in coastal Orange County will see staggered closures until 7 p.m. Sunday.

To the south, the freeway becomes a toll road. The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/RPgJTK ) that the film's producer, Warner Bros., will pay for lost toll revenues and other costs.

Lori Olin, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, tells the newspaper the agency will receive at least $25,000, including location fees.

The 2009 blockbuster "The Hangover," about an ill-fated bachelor party trip to Las Vegas, earned over $400 million worldwide. Its 2011 sequel was also a mega hit.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-freeway-closed-hangover-3-filming-172347046.html

melanie amaro new air jordans jeff dunham young guns concord safe and sound botticelli

PFT: 'Maybe we?ve just spoiled people,' Brady says

To contact us Click HERE
George Wilson, Chris KelsayAP

The Bills? four losses this season have been by scores of 48-28, 52-28, 45-3 and 35-34, so it doesn?t exactly take a detailed film analysis to realize that Buffalo?s defense isn?t playing well. But Bills defensive end Chris Kelsay said that after watching film of Sunday?s loss, he?s fed up with the effort his teammates are giving.

?You watch the film and not everybody was playing hard every snap and that?s unacceptable,? Kelsay said.

Kelsay said he thinks it may be on players like him to personally get in the faces of teammates who aren?t giving their all.

?We might have to grab guys by the shirt collar and tell them to get to moving,? Kelsay said. ?It?s nothing personal, but we?re relying on you. Myself included. If I?m not doing my job I expect Kyle [Williams] to grab me by the neck and tell me to get going. That?s what it?s going to take. We?ve got a lot of young guys. We?re going to get everybody on the same page.?

Kelsay didn?t name any names of teammates who aren?t trying, although he did suggest that Mario Williams isn?t going 100 percent because he?s hurt.

?I?d take Mario Williams at full health and full speed probably over anybody else in the league,? Kelsay said. ?At the same time I?d take Sean Ferguson, who we cut, over a guy that?s playing 50 percent, and I think our coaches would too. The playmakers have to make plays and the way you do that is giving all out effort every play.?

Ultimately, Kelsay says, there?s just no way he can tolerate being part of a defense that plays the way Buffalo?s defense is playing.

?It?s inexcusable,? Kelsay said. ?It?s a blessing to be in this league and to go out there and lay an egg there are no excuses for it.?

Kelsay is saying what needs to be said. The question is whether his teammates are listening.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/22/tom-brady-maybe-we-spoiled-people/related/

bulls heat goldman sachs brandon carr knicks coach encyclopedia britannica pi white lion

I've Never Been So Happy to Lose Money - Finance - PersonalFinance

To contact us Click HERE

I've made one really bad decision with money. In 2008 we bough a rental property in the North Georgia mountains. This month we sold it - and I never thought this day would arrive.

We lost money, and I've never been happier to lose money before. Because now we can stop throwing good money after bad and start recouping what we've lost. Now, we start moving ahead.

At the time we bought this rental cabin we'd sold 3 previous homes; 2 that we lived in and one that Becky had lived in then rented out. All of those previous homes were sold for a profit. But the rental house was painful, and took its toll mentally and financially. So this article is all about learning from my mistakes.

Lesson number one is to buy low and sell high. We did neither. We bought at the peak of the housing bubble. A few months later the bubble burst and the market crashed, hard. Goldman Sachs apparently knew the crash was looming as early as 2006 and hedged against it. Gifford and Gifford did not!

Lesson two, if you want a rental property you need to know what it can really rent for. We had two main property managers we wanted to work with because this was going to be an out of state venture for us ... even though the cabin was just a few miles from Becky's parents.

The first company was good about detailing what percentage their share would be, but couldn't give us a good idea of what we might rent out the cabin for. The second company told us what we wanted to hear. Then, once we signed with them, we ended up renting for half of what they said they'd charge our renters. Ouch!

All of our calculations had been based on twice as much as we ended up getting. I had assumed weekends-only as a baseline, 8 rented nights per month as a minimum. With that alone, based on the property managers initial calculations, we'd have broken even (with tax breaks and made a profit during peak seasons). End of the day I've broken even in exactly one month, and never made a profit. Ugh.

Lesson three, insurance for a vacation rental property is much higher than for a rental property with a full time-resident or a home you own. Ugh. We didn't know this going in and had we, we would have waived off.

Lesson four, go with a place with more bedrooms. Our place was really a one bedroom with a loft. We looked at some cheaper but more remote places that had 2 bedrooms plus lofts. These properties could have housed 8 or more people. These models also had space for a pool table which apparently is very popular for this region. Who knew? Not us.

So lesson five is do not mirror image. By that I mean don't assume that what interests you is what will interest your renter's demographic. A lot of what we bought in this place fit our taste. Apparently, when people want to vacation in the mountains they don't mind being remote. Not a big selling point for us, but it is a key point for our target demographic.

Lesson six can apply to anyone buying a house, rental or otherwise. If the appraisal comes in low, use that to get out ... or negotiate a better deal. Instead we foolishly sought a different bank to fiancee with. Nothing against the bank, just a bad decision when we could have saved money or backed out. Especially since there were other, viable options.

So when does owning a vacation rental property make sense? When you can pay for it in cash. And you want to stay there yourself from time to time. And you are close enough to fix things yourself, quickly. We even had a break-in/robbery shortly after buying the place and had TVs stolen. Easier to deal with these things if you are local. Becky's folks did a ton for us, no doubt, but that is a lot to ask of family. Again, much better if you can tackle it locally on your own.

What could I have done with the money instead? Invested it. Of course the market has not fully recovered from its peak but most of our investments are nearing where they were prior to the crash. And putting more money into stocks after the crash makes sense when you're investing for the long haul, back to the aforementioned buy low and sell high methodology. Missed a good opportunity there.

Savings, oh sweet mother of pearl, I should've saved this money for a down payment on our final house. The place we'll live when I eventually retire from active duty and stop moving every 2 years. We could have put the money in a CD and made some money back. Or we could've dropped that dough in my kids' 529 plans. In retrospect, these were all much better options.

The other thing we could've/should've done is wait. Neither one of us was totally for the idea. It was my wife's idea first, then she got cold feet (smartly!). But I thought this was something she really wanted and might have been a good place for her and the kids to hang had I ended up on a deployment for a year (Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea etc). Also we'd done so well in real estate with the previously mentioned houses that I didn't want a portfolio without any real estate. Had we waited for the market to crash we'd have either waived off or bought low!

Now to be fair the rental market has increased for us with each successive year. And if that trend continued in 2011 we might have actually eventually broken even. But it is not worth the stress. Every time you think you're about to get ahead of the game a hot tub cover needs replaced, the washing machine breaks, or someone complains about a mattress and you drop big coin to get a new one. Or some fool reserves a week - golden! Then they leave after the first night. Now it is too late to get anyone into the place for the rest of the week. Ugh. We've been, most months since we bought the place, carrying what equates to two mortgages (although actually it is a mortgage on the rental and rent on our residence.)

Now that we've closed, and taken our licks, we can start investing both in the federal government's 401K plan and Colin's 529 (Liv will get to benefit from my new GI Bill ... we only have to cover 1 year for her undergraduate degree, yay!) The 401K plan, or TSP, gets us tax breaks as well as systematic investing. Though not without risk, it is an much better bet than the rental cabin.

We will earn it all back eventually. And now that we're out from under the cabin experiment, we have a ton more monthly money freed up with which to buy camera gear! Oh wait, my wife is glaring at me. Ok, so we'll save for a "final" house and invest for retirement and college. Either way it feels like we've won the lotto. Moreover, the stress on us has been lifted. We're among the lucky ones who did not end up in a short sale or foreclosure in what were, and in many cases still are, very dark times for real estate.

Now there are some people out there that are making huge bank off of their rental properties. Maybe they can leave a comment about what has worked for them that we should have done differently. But again my advice is put money in the house you live in, in a 401K and in no-load, index funds. Baseball cards are probably a better bet as well!





iAutoblog the premier autoblogger software

Time Isn't Always Money

To contact us Click HERE

Time is the most important resource we all have. Time will run out and you can never get it back. Time is the one link between you and every person in the world. We all have 24 hours in 7 days a week to work with. If you work a steady job think about your day. Your job takes up a large portion of time 5 days a week. You are trading time for a set payment every month. Now if you calculate your cash flow (income after expenses) you can see how long it will take to get rich. It is extremely hard to get rich when your income is directly correlated to the energy you exert every day. One option is to work harder to get a promotion, raise, or new job. However, your expenses will probably increase when your title or paycheck improve. This makes saving very difficult. Why not create passive income?

Passive income is the secret to wealth. Passive income is money that your money earns you. Passive income doesn't require time to find its way to your wallet. When you can successfully detach your time away from a money system, you will eventually become rich. Sounds easy right? Well....not necessarily. In order to get a strong passive income stream, a lot of work has to be done to create passive income vehicles.


  • First, you have to understand that you will work extremely hard upfront without getting paid. When creating for yourself, money doesn't come until the system is created and operating. It's a lot of work to build passive income vehicles such as real estate portfolios, stock portfolios, royalty checks, or a business.
  • Second, you have to find the time to put in the work. The difficult part about this is each passive income vehicle is a pool with sharks swimming. The pros swim in these waters to survive. They aren't in it for extra money. If you don't put in the time to really understand what you are doing, you will get swallowed up. Time will be a challenge if you have a family and major responsibilities. A supportive spouse and family is essential in this area. Communicate with them and include them so they know that your work will pay off in the end. Being up front with your family will eliminate a lot of distractions and you can focus on the details of your endeavor.
  • Lastly, you must be willing to walk away. Income isn't passive until your time is not attached. Building a system to run itself requires a different plan than building a system that depends on you to run it. Have an exit plan at the start and tailor all of your actions and energy into eventually walking away with consistent income.


If you study wealthy people you will notice that they all have mastered the art of creating passive income. Even if they work a business, their businesses have passive income. If you want to be wealthy, you must generate different streams of income not dependent on your time. You can only do so much in 24 hours a day. Work hard to create money that will work harder for you. This is the definition of passive income.

26 Kasım 2012 Pazartesi

Will 'Binders Full of Women' Hurt Romney?

To contact us Click HERE
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California freeway closed for 'Hangover 3' filming

To contact us Click HERE

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? Drivers are being warned to avoid sections of a Southern California freeway that will be shut down this weekend for filming of the third installment of the "Hangover" movie franchise.

Sections of the 73 Freeway in coastal Orange County will see staggered closures until 7 p.m. Sunday.

To the south, the freeway becomes a toll road. The Los Angeles Times reports (http://lat.ms/RPgJTK ) that the film's producer, Warner Bros., will pay for lost toll revenues and other costs.

Lori Olin, a spokeswoman for the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor, tells the newspaper the agency will receive at least $25,000, including location fees.

The 2009 blockbuster "The Hangover," about an ill-fated bachelor party trip to Las Vegas, earned over $400 million worldwide. Its 2011 sequel was also a mega hit.

___

Information from: Los Angeles Times, http://www.latimes.com

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/california-freeway-closed-hangover-3-filming-172347046.html

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PFT: 'Maybe we?ve just spoiled people,' Brady says

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George Wilson, Chris KelsayAP

The Bills? four losses this season have been by scores of 48-28, 52-28, 45-3 and 35-34, so it doesn?t exactly take a detailed film analysis to realize that Buffalo?s defense isn?t playing well. But Bills defensive end Chris Kelsay said that after watching film of Sunday?s loss, he?s fed up with the effort his teammates are giving.

?You watch the film and not everybody was playing hard every snap and that?s unacceptable,? Kelsay said.

Kelsay said he thinks it may be on players like him to personally get in the faces of teammates who aren?t giving their all.

?We might have to grab guys by the shirt collar and tell them to get to moving,? Kelsay said. ?It?s nothing personal, but we?re relying on you. Myself included. If I?m not doing my job I expect Kyle [Williams] to grab me by the neck and tell me to get going. That?s what it?s going to take. We?ve got a lot of young guys. We?re going to get everybody on the same page.?

Kelsay didn?t name any names of teammates who aren?t trying, although he did suggest that Mario Williams isn?t going 100 percent because he?s hurt.

?I?d take Mario Williams at full health and full speed probably over anybody else in the league,? Kelsay said. ?At the same time I?d take Sean Ferguson, who we cut, over a guy that?s playing 50 percent, and I think our coaches would too. The playmakers have to make plays and the way you do that is giving all out effort every play.?

Ultimately, Kelsay says, there?s just no way he can tolerate being part of a defense that plays the way Buffalo?s defense is playing.

?It?s inexcusable,? Kelsay said. ?It?s a blessing to be in this league and to go out there and lay an egg there are no excuses for it.?

Kelsay is saying what needs to be said. The question is whether his teammates are listening.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/10/22/tom-brady-maybe-we-spoiled-people/related/

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I've Never Been So Happy to Lose Money - Finance - PersonalFinance

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I've made one really bad decision with money. In 2008 we bough a rental property in the North Georgia mountains. This month we sold it - and I never thought this day would arrive.

We lost money, and I've never been happier to lose money before. Because now we can stop throwing good money after bad and start recouping what we've lost. Now, we start moving ahead.

At the time we bought this rental cabin we'd sold 3 previous homes; 2 that we lived in and one that Becky had lived in then rented out. All of those previous homes were sold for a profit. But the rental house was painful, and took its toll mentally and financially. So this article is all about learning from my mistakes.

Lesson number one is to buy low and sell high. We did neither. We bought at the peak of the housing bubble. A few months later the bubble burst and the market crashed, hard. Goldman Sachs apparently knew the crash was looming as early as 2006 and hedged against it. Gifford and Gifford did not!

Lesson two, if you want a rental property you need to know what it can really rent for. We had two main property managers we wanted to work with because this was going to be an out of state venture for us ... even though the cabin was just a few miles from Becky's parents.

The first company was good about detailing what percentage their share would be, but couldn't give us a good idea of what we might rent out the cabin for. The second company told us what we wanted to hear. Then, once we signed with them, we ended up renting for half of what they said they'd charge our renters. Ouch!

All of our calculations had been based on twice as much as we ended up getting. I had assumed weekends-only as a baseline, 8 rented nights per month as a minimum. With that alone, based on the property managers initial calculations, we'd have broken even (with tax breaks and made a profit during peak seasons). End of the day I've broken even in exactly one month, and never made a profit. Ugh.

Lesson three, insurance for a vacation rental property is much higher than for a rental property with a full time-resident or a home you own. Ugh. We didn't know this going in and had we, we would have waived off.

Lesson four, go with a place with more bedrooms. Our place was really a one bedroom with a loft. We looked at some cheaper but more remote places that had 2 bedrooms plus lofts. These properties could have housed 8 or more people. These models also had space for a pool table which apparently is very popular for this region. Who knew? Not us.

So lesson five is do not mirror image. By that I mean don't assume that what interests you is what will interest your renter's demographic. A lot of what we bought in this place fit our taste. Apparently, when people want to vacation in the mountains they don't mind being remote. Not a big selling point for us, but it is a key point for our target demographic.

Lesson six can apply to anyone buying a house, rental or otherwise. If the appraisal comes in low, use that to get out ... or negotiate a better deal. Instead we foolishly sought a different bank to fiancee with. Nothing against the bank, just a bad decision when we could have saved money or backed out. Especially since there were other, viable options.

So when does owning a vacation rental property make sense? When you can pay for it in cash. And you want to stay there yourself from time to time. And you are close enough to fix things yourself, quickly. We even had a break-in/robbery shortly after buying the place and had TVs stolen. Easier to deal with these things if you are local. Becky's folks did a ton for us, no doubt, but that is a lot to ask of family. Again, much better if you can tackle it locally on your own.

What could I have done with the money instead? Invested it. Of course the market has not fully recovered from its peak but most of our investments are nearing where they were prior to the crash. And putting more money into stocks after the crash makes sense when you're investing for the long haul, back to the aforementioned buy low and sell high methodology. Missed a good opportunity there.

Savings, oh sweet mother of pearl, I should've saved this money for a down payment on our final house. The place we'll live when I eventually retire from active duty and stop moving every 2 years. We could have put the money in a CD and made some money back. Or we could've dropped that dough in my kids' 529 plans. In retrospect, these were all much better options.

The other thing we could've/should've done is wait. Neither one of us was totally for the idea. It was my wife's idea first, then she got cold feet (smartly!). But I thought this was something she really wanted and might have been a good place for her and the kids to hang had I ended up on a deployment for a year (Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea etc). Also we'd done so well in real estate with the previously mentioned houses that I didn't want a portfolio without any real estate. Had we waited for the market to crash we'd have either waived off or bought low!

Now to be fair the rental market has increased for us with each successive year. And if that trend continued in 2011 we might have actually eventually broken even. But it is not worth the stress. Every time you think you're about to get ahead of the game a hot tub cover needs replaced, the washing machine breaks, or someone complains about a mattress and you drop big coin to get a new one. Or some fool reserves a week - golden! Then they leave after the first night. Now it is too late to get anyone into the place for the rest of the week. Ugh. We've been, most months since we bought the place, carrying what equates to two mortgages (although actually it is a mortgage on the rental and rent on our residence.)

Now that we've closed, and taken our licks, we can start investing both in the federal government's 401K plan and Colin's 529 (Liv will get to benefit from my new GI Bill ... we only have to cover 1 year for her undergraduate degree, yay!) The 401K plan, or TSP, gets us tax breaks as well as systematic investing. Though not without risk, it is an much better bet than the rental cabin.

We will earn it all back eventually. And now that we're out from under the cabin experiment, we have a ton more monthly money freed up with which to buy camera gear! Oh wait, my wife is glaring at me. Ok, so we'll save for a "final" house and invest for retirement and college. Either way it feels like we've won the lotto. Moreover, the stress on us has been lifted. We're among the lucky ones who did not end up in a short sale or foreclosure in what were, and in many cases still are, very dark times for real estate.

Now there are some people out there that are making huge bank off of their rental properties. Maybe they can leave a comment about what has worked for them that we should have done differently. But again my advice is put money in the house you live in, in a 401K and in no-load, index funds. Baseball cards are probably a better bet as well!





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