blommer's profile

April 4th, 2006
April 2nd, 2018
Made Average Rating
729 2.65
Total Created Average Score
89 (4.10) 
Made Received
$0.00 $63.03

recent activity

when activity
September 30th, 2015 blommer viewed dugyj's profile.
February 7th, 2014 blommer viewed ?Shaka-laka-doo's profile.
February 7th, 2014 blommer viewed ?Shaka-laka-doo.
January 19th, 2014 blommer viewed ?Look what I got!.
January 19th, 2014 blommer viewed ?Look what they got.

most recent sites

title views votes rating creation
?Look what I got! 5,012 41 (4.12)  2014-01-13
?burgers can't fly, silly 7,114 127 (4.21)  2009-10-10
?Shaq sets kid straight 28,767 426 (4.50)  2009-10-05
?OH MY GOD LOOK AWAY 31,783 349 (4.55)  2009-04-12
?Dick Cheney sings 8,188 167 (4.10)  2009-03-28

highest rated sites

title views votes rating creation
?Tom Hanks Rocket 161,782 1,622 (4.69)  2008-11-02
?Indiana Jones and the Art of Seduction 74,372 849 (4.63)  2008-05-21
?Snoopy vs the Joneses 42,315 1,059 (4.61)  2007-09-14
?OH MY GOD LOOK AWAY 31,783 349 (4.55)  2009-04-12
?Ray Charles joyrides an airplane 34,434 529 (4.53)  2008-11-07

recent comments

June 26th, 2010
No, Kiva lenders DO NOT make interest. If you lend $25, you get back a maximum of $25. The person taking the loan out pays interest to the local field partner (some local financial group). Generally, the more dangerous the country, the higher the interest rate. So in Mongolia it's like 25% and in the Democratic Republic of the Congo it's 80%.

The real strength with Kiva versus donation charities is the long term involvement. With a donation, you send $25 once and usually forget about it. With Kiva, you donate $25 and get repaid over a year, usually with an email update once a month. This keeps you involved and really makes it feel like you're personally invested in helping the individual out. You want them to succeed! You stay updated on where your money goes and how it's being used. And once your $25 is repaid, you're encouraged to find someone new to lend the money back out. Accountability is probably better with the micro-loans. You know exactly who the money is going to.
April 19th, 2010
Reply to nutnics' comment on the news post A Glorious Dawn.
Listen to nutnics. His design is pleasant and clean. And [i]professional[/i].

I can't articulate how much I dislike the new design without going on another rant. Some of the new back-end features might be nice, but they're useless without a decent UI. I'm honestly considering pulling all my content from this website, and I've submitted a lot under other aliases other than blommer.

I can't stand the look of this place.
April 2nd, 2010
Reply to max's comment on the news post Return Of The Mack.
You know, I've tried to provide constructive criticism on every change you've implemented. And your usual response is dismissal or something along the lines of, "Your criticism is exactly what's making YTMND worse!" You know what? Fuck you. I've spent hundreds if not thousands of hours making content for this website. I've been disappointed in the direction (or lack thereof) you've taken this place, and my comments have been blunt but honest. I've cared about YTMND for way longer than I should have. It's obvious that your target audience is the random visitor from Google who accidentally clicks on an ad, because this new layout is terrible. And no one will want to become a user or frequent this site unless it's out of some strange feeling of nostalgia.
April 2nd, 2010
On on the news post Return Of The Mack.
Is this a late April foosl joke? The update is awful. The layout makes no sense and the color scheme is horrendous. Parsing anything on this site is an exercise in futility (also YTMNDs won't open in a new window). If you don't change the layout to something usable, expect new visitors to the site to plummet to 0.
March 31st, 2010
Reply to money-hat's comment on the news post At Last.
He probably just ripped it from this YouTube video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHzh6eghVFo