And now I know there was some drama llama, and Big!Boss requested this journal be taken away from the current editor and given to me. All righty then. No pressure. But I already know the Editor-in-Chief and he likes me, so I'm not worried about it.
Did you hear that? I'm not worried!
My boss is not poisoning me, unless stress counts.
THe problem with the Rodan and Fields thing is that they are personal posts by the friends-- so I can hide or unfollow the friend, but not hide just their posts about R + F, which I think is a scam in a "turn two, the rest are food" sort of way.
ETA-
I see now that I can see fewer posts like this (although I think it just means I see fewer posts from that person???)
Oh- and in weird campus lunch news, I kind of want to order the buffalo chicken panini, but last time I did, the panini was covered in rosemary, which was really not good. The other option a vegan chickpea stew, and the cafeteria is so hit or miss with flovorings, that I think it will either have no flavor, or have a weird flavor.
I didn't even know what rodan and fields was.
I thought that this was Rodan and fields.
You are lucky, msbelle. So lucky. I really just want to scream "It's a scam!!!!" Maybe it is not a scam, I don't know. But it seems fishy to me.
I didn't either, Rebecca. Seems like kissing cousins with doTerra and the Avon lady.
R + F is just like Mary Kay, Avon, Beachbody, Tastefully Simple, Younique, Amway, and all of the rest of the Multi-Level Marketing organizations. They refer to themselves as direct sales organizations, but it's MLM all the way. Their products may not all be bad--I buy from Tastefully Simple and Younique--but the company makes money from sales to its reps and recruiting new reps, and not by sales to consumers. It becomes unconscionable when directors or other higher ups force large inventory packages on those that cannot afford them, or force reps to recruit sales people so they can get a percentage of what the new recruit buys. The more recruits you have in your downline, the more money you make off of their sales. Those MK cars and other incentives? Not even remotely free. You have to maintain a certain level of sales or there's a copay, and the company doesn't care how you get the sales as long as the product is leaving its distribution centers. Sales are measured by what is bought by company reps, not by what is sold to the end user.
I watched a friend of mine get suckered in and end up over $10,000 in debt with product that couldn't be moved--because NO ONE wanted to buy it and she ended up with a garage-ful of hand cream and face wash--and did some research.
Edit: Yes, I realize the absurdity of using the products. I buy from people I know who don't see this as a get rich quick scheme. They end up with a little pocket money, and I end up with the products I want. Still trying to reconcile it.