early=bad

I paid my credit card off early and Westpac charged me interest. The system made them do it or at least that’s what the customer services person said.

Let me explain, when I paid my tiny February bill I noticed that March’s bill was going to be huge.  A few days later I paid a bit more off.  When the March bill fell due I paid the rest of the March bill off in full.  I’m sure the bank hates me for that, but that’s just the way I manage my money.  It turns out when I paid the extra in February it was 2 days before the March billing period so as far as the computer was concerned I’d not paid my March bill. It only looked for payments in March. So it charges me interest on the money I’d paid earlier in February. That’s adsurd!

So I phoned westpac and thankfully it didn’t take too long to get through to a real person.  The customer services person offered to refund me half the interest I’d been charged. HALF! Not bloodly likely. I don’t care that that was all he was authorised to do. You’ve already got my money, how dare you charge me interest? Blaming it on the system is lame – may I suggest your logic needs some adjustment. I asked them to send me the section of the terms and conditions which says you’ll be charged interest if you pay back your credit card early. I’ve heard nothing so far.

He assured me he’d send the job onto his manager and she’d call me in the morning. So far I’ve had no phone call,  no email returned.  I went and checked my balance online and yay the full amount of interest has been returned. That pleases me of course, but they could have improved the experience by calling me back.

no live blogging

On Friday I attended the Victoria University Post election conference held in Parliament’s Legislative Council Chamber.  It is about my third one I think and they are always fascinating.  A mix of media, campaign managers and academics disect the campaign.

It is held under Chatham House Rule so you can use the information just not identify who said what, nor the identity of their organisations.  After morning tea, the request was also made for no live blogging – to be honest the person doing the asking appeared as though they weren’t sure what they were asking.  Besides they were already too late. Some blog posts had already been written and released to the wild, just not by me.

So over the next few days I will sift through my copious notes and prepare an entry on how each party’s campaign went.  Lots of people talked about multiple parties and there were plenty of questions and comments from the audience so you can’t make assumptions about who said what.

twins

Well not really. But don’t you hate it when you turn up somewhere and someone else is wearing the same thing? John Key and Helen Clark were unusually in sync with John’s pink tie and Helen’s pink jacket.

steinlager needs to examine own morals

Steinlager have a new campaign and I find it highly offensive. No sex, no nudity, no swearing but still offensive. If I understand the point they try to make then they have the audacity to suggest that drinking steinlager is as much of a moral choice as refusing entry to American nuclear powered ships.

Have they completely lost the plot? And how dare they use the very fine words and the imagery of David Lange to sell their beer? It is insulting to his intellect.

Decide for yourself, website and YouTube video.

who really loves me?

During the election campaign some parties tried harder for my vote than others. So who tried the hardest? I kept a tally of the ways and numbers of times parties put themselves under my nose.

(In alphabetical order)

ACT
4 leaflets in my mailbox. One included a magnet. 3 of the leaflets were “homemade” pinted on a colour copier by the looks. Only one, the last one to arrive, was commerically and professionally printed.  This was also the only ACT leaflet of substance.

One street corner placard waving episode outside the window at work.  Didn’t make much impact as almost no-one tooted.

Greens
5 leaflets in my mailbox. All very professionally done. Good mix of headlines and detailed content. One duplicate leaflet delivered twice.

Three billboards on a trolley bus drove past the window at work. It was probably the same bus but I noticed it three times – very appropriate advertising I thought.

Labour
6 leaflets – the most of any party but with one duplicate.  Ran the full range from the PM writing to me adressing me by my first name, to the electorate candidate writing to me as a woman and addressing me as “Ms”. Also had the biggest glossiest leaflet and the smallest tackiest produced note inviting me to talk to him on a street corner. I was at work at the time.

One vehicle convoy which at one point was chased by a National convoy – very strange.

Last but not least one “Destiny church-esque” walk-by chanting march outside my window at work.  Thought it was a mistake as they looked and sounded more threatening than enthusiastic.

Maori Party
One vehicle convoy past the window at work. Complete with dozens of flags on dozens of vehicles and Hone Harawira on the back of a Ute with a megaphone.  Not entirely sure that was safe

National
Only 3 leaflets, 2 postcards of little substance and one 4 pager filled with pictures – Do you think I can’t read or do you have nothing to say? One leaflet invited me to morning tea with the candidate at a coffee shop – some of us work you know! I found it quite hard to disassociate the National candidate from his previous party so I almost assigned all the National leaflets to ACT.

One vehicle convoy spotted three times in an afternoon driving up and down Lambton Quay. At one point they appeared to do a U-turn to chase a Labour convoy.

One billboard on my route to work. I live very central so I didn’t regularly pass any of the suburban billboard farms. I did go and visit a couple but they don’t count.

Three street corner waving episodes – boy were these irritating. Did it occur to any of you that those buildings contain people trying to work. Besides it was quite irresponsible out on the traffic islands – enough people get hit by busses as it is, you’re just bloody lucky you didn’t become a statistic.

Did it have any impact?
No, I didn’t change the way I voted. It made me wonder what the point was in killing all those trees and wasting all that petrol on the convoys.  And what were the Progressives, United Future and NZ First doing? I heard and saw nothing of them.

The whole campaign felt quite superficial, pretty window dressings but not much behind it for some parties. When I went looking at candidate information across the country I thought it was woeful. A few had informative sites or pages but many more still got to polling day with “coming soon” notices on their pages. If your party is providing a page for you, how hard is it to write something meaningful and put up a digital photo?

cold sunshine

Winter is my preferred season.  I like snow and ice and the sparkly magic of it all.  Hail and thunderstorms fascinate me.  And lets face it, how can you not love the chance to wear hats and scarves and gloves. Tis the season for accessories.  Daylight saving starting early doesn’t please me. I’m not sure these extra hours of daylight are much use to us at the moment.  It may be lighter later but it is still cold and it is still raining.

In the morning on my way to work it is almost summer like, I could be wearing sandals and a t-shirt.  In the evenings coming home from work I still need a winter coat, scarf and gloves and most days an umbrella. Of course the thing I hate the most is we have to wait till 9.30 or 10pm for a decent show of fireworks on Nov 5.

history in the making

Asides from the hideous over-used phrase, the One News You Tube Election Debate is an excellent idea. I have no idea why Mark Sainsbury would think this is such a novel way to do things, after all, another election happening somewhere else in the world which is making a much bigger use of user generated content.

In previous elections we’ve had citizen questions filmed on the street by professional teams and nicely edited.  I like the idea of being able to vote on which questions get asked.  One News do say they aren’t making all questions available to vote on so I’m guessing what gets up on the site is moderated.  There are no ranting hateful questions at this point.  Mind you, having your face behind the question must make people think twice about being thoroughly obnoxious. You can’t hide behind an anonymous comment. I do wonder though what the demographic coverage will be like – will they all be younger and tech-savy?

And what amuses me most? Just how happy people are to display the contents of their bedrooms and living rooms.

dismal dennis

I’ve just watched the first episode of the new series of the Pretender. It wasn’t un-funny but I did expect a bit more. Dennis is hapless and clueless.  He’s striking out on his own fully confident he has a future. The crazy thing is that this wasn’t a truly original script I was watching, this was history, reality with names changed to protect the innocent. As ridiculous as some of these situations appeared most have happened in NZ’s political history.

 I did admire how well they’d got the set for Bowen House – it the pre-renovation state anyway.

Dennis Plant for Prime Minister

Check out the website of Future New Zealand. With the Election coming up we’ll need some light relief.

i <3 iphone

Today I made a little purchase and am now the proud owner of an iphone. I’m a touch-screen girl from way back so it suits me down to the ground. I almost forgot to have dinner I was so enthralled with setting it up.

But, Vodafone, honestly, how paranoid are you? I had to sign an extra DIY form promising not to hack the thing. For all the other licensing agreements you have to click to agree to as you set the thing up do they really need that extra scappy piece of paper signed by me. Apple must have them running scared.