sallyhilton-02008
jun 2021 se unió
Te damos la bienvenida a nuevo perfil
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Distintivos3
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Reseñas9
Clasificación de sallyhilton-02008
There's no real story, no exposition. The acting was flat in places and over the top in others. None of the characters did anything remotely believable to save their lives. The two guards argue more about what to do, wasting what little precious power their generator had left.
Overall: The movie is an hour and ten minutes. After you fast forward through the scenes of them taking you on a tour of the building like your working the night shift. The movie is about thirty minutes.
Would I recommend this move? I'll keep it clean. H-NO!!!!
Overall: The movie is an hour and ten minutes. After you fast forward through the scenes of them taking you on a tour of the building like your working the night shift. The movie is about thirty minutes.
Would I recommend this move? I'll keep it clean. H-NO!!!!
What I like about the doc is how each episode broke down the facade that is Lularoe. It starts from the beginning of who the owners are to how the company is a Mormon cult. To be frank, I didn't know anything about this clothing brand. It was the preview that caught my attention.
Sidenote: I hate to be the one that tells you this, but these types of companies are set up so that only the one at the top is making money. That's why it's called a pyramid scheme. I mean, the owner, ten minutes into the first episode, explained how she got into the clothing business by buying counterfeit clothing and then selling them like Tupperware.
Overall: The only difference I saw with this company versus the typical schemes is the Lularoe treated the consultants like retailers, where they weren't given sample kits or brochures. The consultants brought the clothes like a retail store (even though they didn't get to pick out the prints) and sold the products like one. I hate to admit that was genius and could make criminal charges hard against the owners like others involved in pyramid schemes. Yet, I can see why the company was sued civilly. The company oversaturated the market with consultants. The quality of clothing suffered because they couldn't keep up with demand. The owner and her family didn't know how to run a billion-dollar business. You had buyers paying 5 to 10 grands to wait half a year to receive their inventory. They then pressure everyone to spend all the money they made and hashtag on SM daily that the consultants could buy the world because of Lularoe. As the company grew, the company passed being an MLS and became a full-fledged cult. During this time, the owners' masks fell off, and you can see it in their speaking engagements and interviews how greedy and selfish they were. If you work for the company, you have to wear their clothes. Everything you did center around this company, and you had to pay to party. Although I feel for those who bought into the party line, please reread my statement above.
Would I recommend this show? Yes...for those who didn't know anything about this clothing brand, thinking about buying the clothing, or working for this company. To be honest, I was surprised the owners agreed to do this doc, but again, narcissistic people do not see themselves in the way reality sees them.
And to those still, with this company, it's okay to say you were doop and seek retribution through litigation or walk away. It's not okay to keep pushing a product for people that claim to be uplifting you but are trying to control you and your family.
Sidenote: I hate to be the one that tells you this, but these types of companies are set up so that only the one at the top is making money. That's why it's called a pyramid scheme. I mean, the owner, ten minutes into the first episode, explained how she got into the clothing business by buying counterfeit clothing and then selling them like Tupperware.
Overall: The only difference I saw with this company versus the typical schemes is the Lularoe treated the consultants like retailers, where they weren't given sample kits or brochures. The consultants brought the clothes like a retail store (even though they didn't get to pick out the prints) and sold the products like one. I hate to admit that was genius and could make criminal charges hard against the owners like others involved in pyramid schemes. Yet, I can see why the company was sued civilly. The company oversaturated the market with consultants. The quality of clothing suffered because they couldn't keep up with demand. The owner and her family didn't know how to run a billion-dollar business. You had buyers paying 5 to 10 grands to wait half a year to receive their inventory. They then pressure everyone to spend all the money they made and hashtag on SM daily that the consultants could buy the world because of Lularoe. As the company grew, the company passed being an MLS and became a full-fledged cult. During this time, the owners' masks fell off, and you can see it in their speaking engagements and interviews how greedy and selfish they were. If you work for the company, you have to wear their clothes. Everything you did center around this company, and you had to pay to party. Although I feel for those who bought into the party line, please reread my statement above.
Would I recommend this show? Yes...for those who didn't know anything about this clothing brand, thinking about buying the clothing, or working for this company. To be honest, I was surprised the owners agreed to do this doc, but again, narcissistic people do not see themselves in the way reality sees them.
And to those still, with this company, it's okay to say you were doop and seek retribution through litigation or walk away. It's not okay to keep pushing a product for people that claim to be uplifting you but are trying to control you and your family.
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