RE: [vpFREE] Fuel Savings?

 

So true.  I have hundreds of stories like this during my almost 30 years of casino gambling.  We can – and often do – lose thousands of dollars in one day doing a positive expectation VP play – and then stop by another casino on the way home to pick up $25 – or maybe even less - bounce-back free pay.  Or, I will stoop down to pick up a stray quarter on the ground.
 
If you have a basic frugal nature, it sticks with you the rest of your life.  Brad calls this "crazy frugal."  I guess I am known for this and thus Harry – and others – are surprised I don't do this "small" fuel program.  Blame it on old age – I am getting just a little tired of details – and that is what extreme frugal trucks in.
 
 
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Jean $¢ott, Frugal Gambler
http://queenofcomps.com/
You can read my blog at
http://jscott.lvablog.com/
 
Sent: Tuesday, October 29, 2013 6:34 AM
Subject:RE: [vpFREE] Fuel Savings?
 
 

Harry and Jean have gone back and forth on whether the Harrah's fuel program is worth the effort. They are both correct. Harry views the time invested being a reasonable cost for the benefits and Jean does not.

 

People can funny opinions about the value of an activity and relative savings. Funny to me, anyway. Long , long ago a friend and I went to Las Vegas and were downtown having a drink. This is about 25 years ago so we were paying for airfare, paying (moderately) for hotels and food, etc. One of the places downtown had $0.49 Michelobs and $0.75 Heinekens. I bought the first round, 2 Heinekens, and paid $1.50 for them ( plus tip). My friend got the next round and came back with 2 Michelobs. I asked why he switched and he proudly said "these are $0.26 cheaper". I informed him that you have paid $300 for airfare, another $100 or so for the hotel rooms, $50 - $75 for food and a couple hundred gambling budget and you are worried about $0.26? He gave me a funny look as if to say "well, if you are going to look at it like THAT". 

 

So, people place different values on things. I give away a lot of coupons and most of the time, I don't think the people realize what they have received. These are people who are standing in line at a buffet with a family of four and I give them 2 buy one, get one free offers. They might say thank you and might not. They don't value that as much as handing them $20 ( even though the benefit is the same assume a $10 buffet for simplicity).  The net effect is the same. They have $20 more in their pocket but is viewed with as no big deal ( the 2:1 offers) and the other would be viewed much more positively.

 

 

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