Many people believe that consuming certain foods, at the beginning of the year, will bring us love, luck, good health and/or money. Here are a few of the most popular food superstitions to help you kick off the New Year.
Washington state already has a law on the books forbidding the use of automated event ticket buying programs, often done by "bots" (automated ticket buying computer programs). Now, a Washington state senator wants it to go national.
They're not just happening somewhere else, these scams are being reported in our area on a regular basis. Which is the biggest phone scam, and will you fall for it?
HAPO Community Credit Union has taken a new step in providing banking services, by unveiling what is believed to be the first mobile ATM in the Tri-Cities and likely in all of Eastern Washington. (Image courtesy of HAPO Credit Union).
Officials at the online GoFundMe organization are trying to figure out where $2,200 went that was supposed to go to a little four-month-old infant who recently underwent open-heart surgery! Fraud investigators think somebody else scammed it.
Who doesn't want to make more money? But, what if you only made more money on the condition you had to work with people you didn't like? Which do you think is more important?
In a new interview, Chelsea Clinton says, quote, "I was curious if I could care about [money] on some fundamental level, and I couldn't. That wasn't the metric of success that I wanted in my life." Which is easy for her to say, since she's pretty much financially set. She and her husband bought a $10.5 million apartment last year.
When it comes to marriage, or any type of long term relationship, money can be the root of some pretty jacked up arguments as far as managing your finances together. He spent this, she spent that, it's a vicious cycle that a lot of couples go through. One way that has helped my wife and I, is that we separate bank accounts.
If you live in Sacramento, it's time to start tearing out the walls: these homeowners stumbled over roughly $300,000 in gold dust during a heater installation.
The U.S. Treasury printing presses are a little quieter these days, printing less paper money than ever before. The reason? The rapid increase in the use of credit and debit cards to pay for anything and everything.
Last year the presses printed less $1 bills than at any time in the modern era.