So I come home last night, turn on the TV, and there's a big message on the blank screen about how this channel will be available shortly. Then I check my phone, and see a message about there being no line. Oy. So I call a certain cable company which I'll call Castcom to see what's going on. By the time I finally make it through the IVR and talk to an actual person, I was feeling highly frustrated. Come to find out, I've been disconnected. WHAT??? I'm not moving for 4 more days!! How did this happen? And how did a request to transfer service to a new address change into a DISCONNECT? Let's just say that I was now highly hysterical and angry. Said cable company representative proceeds to talk down to me, put me on hold two or three different times for several minutes at a time, all while telling me there's nothing that can be done for the entire four days. YOU'VE GOT TO BE KIDDING ME!! He offers me a $50 credit, at which point I tell him this is sooooo going to cost them more than $50. So he offers me a $200 credit and free install on Saturday, which I agree to, although I'm still fuming.
I call the brother, who looks up all my info, is even just as angry as I am, and tells me to call them back, because now I might be losing my phone number because of how the initial idiot from two weeks ago put in the transfer request. Call them back, and go through the same runaround with the automated system (Question: How if I can't get to the internet, am I supposed to go to their website for more info and troubleshooting tips?) and the agent on the phone, at which point I'm in tears. But I'm finally assured that someone will be there this morning to reconnect everything from outside, and that I will be the first appointment. I'm also told that they will credit all of my transfer fees, and they will redo the transfer request tomorrow and take care of everything.
So---no option for TV, other than a DVD which I thankfully had not packed with the rest, and no phone (although on the upside, no continuous evening calls from the Republican National Committee). Seriously, what did we do in the days before we were all wired?
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