“While Stanley Quenchers are all the rage, we strongly advise against turning to crime to fulfill your hydration habits,” police said.
The craze for Stanley stainless steel drinking cups reached new levels last week when a woman was arrested and accused of stealing 65 of them, worth almost $2,500, from a store in California.
Police in Roseville, in Placer County, northeast of Sacramento, said Sunday that they were called Wednesday to a report of a theft from a store on Stanford Ranch Road in the city.
"Staff saw a woman take a shopping cart full of Stanley water bottles without paying for them. The suspect refused to stop for staff and stuffed her car with the stolen merchandise," police said in a statement on Facebook.
I still get confused when I hear women talking about these. For a split second I always think I'm going to have a new friend to talk about hockey with.
I genuinely thought it was something to do with the NHL, like maybe mini commemorative replica cups or something. That at least would be interesting. This is just some weirdo stealing over priced thermos bottles.
Best thing about this craze and scalping trend is that there are thousands of insulated mug brands and many are just as good or better so you can just buy something else if you want.
Your obviously being sarcastic or ignorant.
I did buy amd it was still expensive. And what do you think was making PCs expensive other than all of it..... The freaking GPUs. Intel or amd.
This Stanley cup thing is pissing me off because I have one of those green trigger coffee mugs that needs a new lid. You can't get replacement parts for practically any Stanley cup.
I could get a different coffee cup, but why should I change when it's these TikTok water cup weirdos that suck?
The worst thing is that a lot of people aren't even drinking out of them! They're just collecting expensive ass mugs to put on display. As a leftist hydro homie, that's so offensive to me. Buy one cup and put some damn water in it. Hydrate yourself and stop participating in OTT consumerism that just results in more shit in a landfill down the line, ffs.
I can understand having 2 or 3 to make sure you're drinking out of something clean without having to disassemble the whole thing every day, but a friend from work showed me how some people have like 20 of these things. Defeats the purpose of a reusable cup when you have a couple dozen.
Like you said, though. These aren't being used for their initial purpose. They're decor for lots of folks.
...which honestly wouldn't upset me so much if this automotive o-ring I'm using on my lid right now didn't leak and/or they'd keep their hands off the other less twee Stanley stuff. I like my mug.
Stanley is OG though, I got one handed down from my gramps back in the day that still gets use. They just recently started wrapping them in colors other than black or army green lol
I mean, technically, any profitable product will single handedly improve a company's profit margin, but I get your drift -- the Stanley Cup crazy is extraordinary.
Its a pretty good thing to spend money on if you use it on a daily basis. I work in a kitchen and need an insulated water bottle or I will literally die. Instead of using plastic I use a reusable bottle. I bought it a year ago and I have not looked back. Yeah, its more expensive than it needs to be and is a fad, but it's certainly not the most irresponsible thing you can spend $50 on.
edit: removed superfluous an
I mean... It's a lot of metal... And it's strong enough to survive the job site for a decade.
As someone who frequents construction sites for my job, and also as someone who has owned a Stanley travel mug and water bottle before whatever the fuck this fad is ( over 10 years... ), they are nigh indestructible, and they keep temperature for longer than either my wife's Hydro flask or my yeti. So far in that sams period only my, Yeti coffee mug has survived as long. My wife has replaced her hyroflasj twice.
Just anecdotal, but I tend to be hard on things, and it's stayed with me this long... It's like $4/year for a coffee mug.
I was so confused. I thought it was the hockey NHL Stanley Cup. Then it's worth more than that. Then how are they multiple? Then are they like miniature novelty ones? Then how do you get so many to be worth that much?
You can get high quality stainless steel thermos on AliExpress for $10-$20 (bought a few myself, can't believe how good they're), so I guess you're right.
Hol-leee shit, $2500 worth of consumer goods trash. Put this woman in jail! If the government wasn't so tied up on witch hunts, like Trump staging an insurrection, we would have to resources to weed out this trash once and for all.
Not every single day, but quite often, I'm reminded of how much I hate the general public and continue to be amazed at the new and exciting ways it's shown off.
My wife and I align in this feeling pretty close. However I'm more rigid with my opinion of "people" in general.
So many people just want to fit in, I'm just not like that. I'm me, and you get what you get. I'm not gonna play games to be like everyone else or fall into silly things like suddenly Stanley cups have some crazy value associated with them.
Well, that and their bar for what qualifies is really low. If a single study shows that a chemical agent may cause cancer in animals, it will be listed. It doesn't actually have to be confirmed. Also, in many cases, manufacturers will simply put the label on their products by default to avoid being sued in California because it would cost them more to verify whether it contains one of the many listed chemicals or not. As such, the labels have largely become noise at this point.
Basically, they have a list of things “known to the state of California to cause cancer”. If a material on that list is used in a product, that product needs to have a “proposition 65” warning label in order to be sold in CA.
Which, since everything is a polluted mess, basically everything is on that list.
I honestly don't get these fads. Last one that left me scratching my head like this was the yeti cooler craze, and before that was the instapot craze. Mindless hyper consumerism, that will be used just as much as your last mug, cooler, pot all of which are likely in a landfill now.
My grandma used pressure cookers in the 50s, they weren't very safe then. But even before the instapot, pressure cookers had all sorts of safety features that make them quite usable. I just don't get the hype of one instance of commodity items.
It's so ridiculous to see it getting pushed in real-time too. A few days ago every news outlet was simultaneously posting stories about these stupid cups or people waiting in line to buy these cups out of the blue just trying to drive the latest craze. There's no way that's organic.
So she had like 0.0003% of the Stanley Cup?! A 1/3 of a percent of the Stanley Cup by weight would be something like 1.8 OZ, so maybe enough to peel off one team's roster?
(And yeah now I know, it's a bunch of mugs, not that Stanley Cup.)
I have 2 Walmart Ozark Trail 32 oz tumblers that work great. The only thing they don't have is the lid with the slide cover for the drink hole. Spent a total of twenty dollars.
I bought a few cheap pieces of camping gear from that brand a few years ago in a pinch, and you know what? I still have it. Some of that stuff is solid.
Nah, I think "Hey I think I see a way to make a bunch of money" happened. "Stanley cups have suddenly become very popular and thus scarce, so I'll go get a bunch of them and sell them for more than their retail price. oh, their retail price is actually quite high. I know, I'll just shoplift them! Profit margins increase!"
The psychology I find fascinating is the trend itself. A brand of quality insulated metal water cups that has apparently existed this whole time has suddenly become a popular fashion item among the instagramettes. We've apparently reached the shoplifting stage of the craze. I wonder how many fistfights there will be over $45 water bottles.
From the point of view of a male 30-something hermit, the journey has gone like this so far: I use Firefox, and if you don't set a homepage it has this start screen with buttons for sites you frequent as well as a bunch of news articles served by whatever the hell Pocket is. One of them had an image of a bright pink handled drinking cup with a headline to the effect of "Confessions of a cup girl." I did not read this article. A short time later, someone posts to Lemmy the picture of Homer Simpson in the lesbian bar, all the women have those same pink cups, he's got the hockey trophy. Now here we are, a 23-year old woman has been arrested for stealing a shopping cart full of them. It's absolutely fucking hilarious.