iAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I cherish my Rolexes. I wear one every day. I have ones handed am down from family members, ones I bought to commemorate a milestone, and some I bought just on a whim.
The plural is Roloi.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the McDonald's of luxury watches. Everyone has one.
How many watches appreciate in value
when you walk out of the store?
Bingo…
The world is full of collectables & other crap that supposedly appreciate. But it seems like most of that stuff gets lost, broken, or sold for a loss at estate sales or flea markets.
Anonymous wrote:https://i0.wp.com/deployant.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/43175-000p-b190-rv.jpg?fit=1024%2C1444&ssl=1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the McDonald's of luxury watches. Everyone has one.
How many watches appreciate in value
when you walk out of the store?
Bingo…
The world is full of collectables & other crap that supposedly appreciate. But it seems like most of that stuff gets lost, broken, or sold for a loss at estate sales or flea markets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's the McDonald's of luxury watches. Everyone has one.
How many watches appreciate in value
when you walk out of the store?
Bingo…
Anonymous wrote:I cherish my Rolexes. I wear one every day. I have ones handed am down from family members, ones I bought to commemorate a milestone, and some I bought just on a whim.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of Rolexes you see “in the wild” are copies. Just like with LV Neverfuls, Cartier Love bracelets, Chanel flap bags, etc. Fake. That’s part of why you see so many of them. Another reason is that more people these days have more discretionary funds, and a lot more people than that are spending more than they actually can.
Anonymous wrote:It's the McDonald's of luxury watches. Everyone has one.
Anonymous wrote:Where can one buy fentanyl in NOVA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the premise that Rolex is only acceptable if it’s exclusive. Someone upthread mentioned their watches cost more than single family homes. Fine, but I think money, wealth, class, etc IMO mean you can pretty much wear and do what you want (within reason).
I like my Rolex and I also like plain white tshirts from the Gap and Reeboks. If I think it’s good, I choose it. What is the use of having money and being in the 1% if I’m “required” to wear a 100K watch, fine cashmere, dressy shoes, and 10K coats? That kind of image is some weird idea of rich people that non-rich people and new money people seem to have. The richest and most powerful guy I know actually has a Subaru as his primary car.
A billionaire friend of mine drives a Mustang. I love him for that, lol. Fits his personality well.
Yep. The billionaires and multimillionaires I know tend to have quirks, hobbies, interests. They aren’t worried about being on some exclusive waiting list to shop. That is ridiculous. Rich people also eat McDonalds and drink cheap beer.
PP here. FWIW, that particular friend is wearing a Rolex (but he wears it for sentimental reasons -- it was his grandfather's).
Some day the one I purchase will got to our son, then his son hopefully.
[youtube]
Until he pawns it to buy some fentanyl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the premise that Rolex is only acceptable if it’s exclusive. Someone upthread mentioned their watches cost more than single family homes. Fine, but I think money, wealth, class, etc IMO mean you can pretty much wear and do what you want (within reason).
I like my Rolex and I also like plain white tshirts from the Gap and Reeboks. If I think it’s good, I choose it. What is the use of having money and being in the 1% if I’m “required” to wear a 100K watch, fine cashmere, dressy shoes, and 10K coats? That kind of image is some weird idea of rich people that non-rich people and new money people seem to have. The richest and most powerful guy I know actually has a Subaru as his primary car.
A billionaire friend of mine drives a Mustang. I love him for that, lol. Fits his personality well.
Yep. The billionaires and multimillionaires I know tend to have quirks, hobbies, interests. They aren’t worried about being on some exclusive waiting list to shop. That is ridiculous. Rich people also eat McDonalds and drink cheap beer.
PP here. FWIW, that particular friend is wearing a Rolex (but he wears it for sentimental reasons -- it was his grandfather's).
Some day the one I purchase will got to our son, then his son hopefully.
[youtube]
Until he pawns it to buy some fentanyl.