#42 This genuinely makes me sad. I grew up with it since my mom had so much of it and now whenever I have to use something I'm so mad because it all s#cks in comparison.
Karon, Yes, they probably hurt themselves by continuing to make higher quality, but (very slightly) more expensive to make the initial purchase. More than once, I've had Tupperware knockoffs break the *first time I went to use them*; and at best, they last for a few uses. Also, we could throw real Tupperware in a backpack or bag, and never have to worry about it spilling. Now, I have to be careful taking it out of the fridge because I've had them pop open in my hand when all I did was pick it up.
The irony: because of Tupperware's durability, it is/was actually much, much less expensive in the long run.
#42 This genuinely makes me sad. I grew up with it since my mom had so much of it and now whenever I have to use something I'm so mad because it all s#cks in comparison.
Karon, Yes, they probably hurt themselves by continuing to make higher quality, but (very slightly) more expensive to make the initial purchase. More than once, I've had Tupperware knockoffs break the *first time I went to use them*; and at best, they last for a few uses. Also, we could throw real Tupperware in a backpack or bag, and never have to worry about it spilling. Now, I have to be careful taking it out of the fridge because I've had them pop open in my hand when all I did was pick it up.
The irony: because of Tupperware's durability, it is/was actually much, much less expensive in the long run.
The irony: because of Tupperware's durability, it is/was actually much, much less expensive in the long run.