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my understanding is that unless he were buying a house using her income for the loan, that their marital status wouldn't require them to put her on the loan application and the mortgage.
also, i think the use of the term bachelor is that he never would have married her and not only that, would be single, rather than simply living with her in an unmarried state.
but overall, we agree that the commercial is puke-inducing. second, yes, i agree with you on the first commercial, although there are some jobs you can't get with a poor credit score, in fact, that's more and more typical. and that first commercial has just 1 redeeming quality --the old lady who is enjoying the music but the moment one of the musicians says "yeehaw", that moment the change in her expression is priceless as her gaze turns cold. wow. she earned her scale in that one.
i don't really like the whole product to begin with, i feel for $180/year it's not a good value and further, the songs are misleading about what the service actually does, suggesting it is more helpful than it is. in other words, the commercials pose the service as the solution to problems that it can't fix and can't even really alert you to.
and the credit agency that runs this service, Experian, should know better. such mendacity.
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