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Angie's List – Online Deal

$8 for Local Reviews-Site Membership

$8
Buy
No Longer Available
Mon Jul 02 03:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$17
Discount
53%
You Save
$9
  • T460x279
  • Home Improvement

In a Nutshell

National service helps consumers find high-quality pros, such as doctors & mechanics, with live support & certified data-collection process

The Fine Print

  • Expires Jan 2, 2013
  • Limit 1 per person. Must activate by the expiration date on your Groupon, subscription expires 1 year from activation date. Online only. Must provide credit card number, membership will auto-renew if not opted out of. New Members only. Not valid for adding cities to already existing accounts. Valid only for the Fort Wayne area.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Unlike grading automobile safety features, rating a service requires real-world experience from non-dummies. Gain an educated perspective with today's Groupon: for $8, you get a one-year bundle membership to Angie's List (a $17 value).

Angie's List offers nationwide service, collecting quality reviews to help consumers find high-quality contractors, doctors, mechanics, veterinarians, and more. Membership grants access to more than 500 home and personal services in categories such as home, health and wellness, auto service, and pets. The location-specific site uses a certified data-collection process and does not accept anonymous reviews to better ensure transparency. More than one million members nationwide grade experiences on a scale from A to F, with optional marker-drawn smiley faces awarded for especially outstanding achievements.

Tech-savvy perks such as a mobile app, buying and selling access in a digital marketplace, and live call-center support (available six days a week) keep consumers in the net-based know. Additionally, the included monthly Angie's List Magazine provides helpful tips to readers, with articles covering topics such as in-home etiquette for visiting contractors and the key differences between doctors and mad scientists.

Angie's List

Angie's List helps consumers find high-quality contractors, doctors, mechanics, veterinarians, and other professionals by collecting reviews from the people who have hired them in the past. More than one million members nationwide grade experiences on a scale from A to F, with optional marker-drawn smiley faces awarded for especially outstanding achievements. By forbidding anonymous reviews, allowing companies to respond to customers' posts, and screening each submission for red flags, the location-specific site better ensures its members a transparent and balanced information resource. Perks such as a mobile app, complaint resolution, and live call-center support (available six days a week) keep services safeguarded and consumers in the know. Additionally, the included monthly Angie's List Magazine provides helpful tips to readers, with articles covering topics such as in-home etiquette for visiting contractors and the key differences between doctors and mad scientists.

Groupon Says

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The Groupon Guide to: TV Crossovers

Other than series finales and unplanned on-air births, few television events rival the excitement of the crossover—wherein characters from one program meet characters from another. What are the top-rated TV crossovers of all time?

"The Munsters on Gilligan’s Island" (1964): After winning a contest for a vacation in the South Pacific, an agitated Herman Munster stomps a hole in the plane’s fuselage, sending it careening onto Gilligan’s island. Once there, Grandpa Munster and the Professor devise a potion to transport the monster family home while Ginger poses for photographs on Herman’s bicep.
Approximate Ratings: 240 million viewers

"Frasier Meets The Beatles" (1996): After winning a contest to have the surviving Beatles perform on his radio program, Frasier is a nervous wreck—until the Fab Three invite him to sing all of John Lennon’s parts.
Approximate Ratings: 390 million viewers

"The Simpsons Meet the Simpsons" (1993): Capitalizing off the success of America’s favorite animated family, TV execs logically paired up The Simpsons with the most popular TV show airing at the time—itself. In this hourlong special, the Simpsons win a contest to meet identical versions of themselves, resulting in the two Barts getting into double trouble (also the title of the special’s companion rap single).
Approximate Ratings: 2.1 billion viewers

What year did Frasier meet The Beatles?

Angie's List