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Altoids Addict ([info]altoidsaddict) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2008-01-15 14:36:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Entry tags:lawsuits

Mr. Monk and the Deceptive Thread Count
...So titled because I can't imagine anyone else a) counting to keep 'em honest and b) caring enough to sue them. And if it's not wanky to instigate a class-action lawsuit over thread counts, I don't know what is.

Retailer Bed, Bath and Beyond may be settling a class-action lawsuit over the thread count in their bedsheets. Generally if you've bought sheets there over the past seven years, you'll get yourself a reward for the pain and suffering brought by the false belief that your Egyptian cotton percale topsheets are, in reality, less than 1500-thread-count. How did they accomplish this dastardly feat? By "stating the number of threads in the warp and filling directions in one square inch of fabric, rather than the number of yarns." I have no idea why warp and filling rather than thread is important or even worthy of a class-action lawsuit, but it's likely to cost BBB lots of money.

The fabulous reward to the consumer swindled out of God's magical pubic threadcount sheets? A $10 gift card or a 20% off coupon. Linda Keenan, who received a settlement offer, has written an amusing response. Consumerist has also written about it here. Predictably, most of the actual settlement money is likely to go to lawyers' fees.

This is also the second time in a year someone's sued BBB for its thread counts. The original suit was dismissed in U.S. District Court because the consumer could not provide intent or real monetary or physical damage, and it was only then that the suit went to class-action. "Even if it assumed that the consumer had been able to plead an ascertainable loss, the Court further found that the consumer failed to demonstrate the causal relationship between the alleged misrepresentation and the ascertainable loss" is legalese for Really? Are you fucking kidding us? Thread counts? Go away.

(Note: Anyone bringing up the McDonald's lady does so at their own peril.)



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[info]waitwut
2008-01-16 03:44 am UTC (link)
That's a total rule. My mom, on the phone with me tonight, was complaining that her white cat was sitting on her black pants. Well, duh... she was wearing black pants!

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[info]yubsie
2008-01-16 06:38 am UTC (link)
Black clothes make white kitties EXTRA WUBBING. :p

And yet I always end up wearing black when I go visit my parents and their cats. :p

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[info]waitwut
2008-01-16 12:39 pm UTC (link)
Clearly, you just wanted extra cat love! ;)

We have a black and white cat (tuxedo) and a brown/black cat. We just decided that cat fur is an accessory (and I keep a lint roller at work).

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[info]chibikaijuu
2008-01-20 10:15 am UTC (link)
We conveniently have a black cat, who sheds like crazy and whose fur looks kind of grey on clothing, a black and white cat, and a tan-to-cream and grey cat (with medium-length fur and 3-inch-long guard hairs). Whatever you are wearing, there is a cat who can shed properly contrasting fur.

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