5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For

Lots of things fall under the 'you get what you pay for' umbrella. These do not.
5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For

"You get what you pay for" is a phrase most often heard when something you bought at a really good value breaks while a jealous friend is around. It's not meant to be used solely for spite, though. In general, "you get what you pay for" is sound life advice -- except when it's not. We don't touch on this at all on the most recent Unpopular Opinion podcast ...

... because the engineer had the gall to take a vacation, meaning I had to record a bunch of episodes all at once. So, honestly, I had no idea what I'd be writing about this week. In the spirit of that, if you do listen, you'll hear two of the newest additions to the full-time-with-benefits division of the Cracked team, JF Sargent and David Christopher Bell, help me decide what next week's column will be. So, I guess it's sort of about getting what you pay for in that I'm asking new employees to do my work for me.

Now, with that link firmly established, let's move on to the rest of the column. There are a lot of things in this world that would have you believe they fall under the "you get what you pay for" family of products, but they're wrong. Here are five modern luxuries that are never worth buying at full price.

High-Resolution Music Players

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Kickstarter.com

Does the music on your iPod sound like shit? Neil Young thinks so, and he's got a point ... sort of. It's not something the average music buyer cares about or even notices, but there is indeed a drop in sound quality that comes with making a digital music file small enough that you can fit 40,000 of them on a single device.

Not content with simply complaining, though, Neil Young is doing something about it. Earlier this year, the permanently grumpy rock legend launched a Kickstarter to finance the release of the Ponomusic player, an iPod-type device that plays FLAC files. That stands for Free Lossless Audio Codec and the important word there would be "lossless" if that was an actual word. Still, it is a formation of letters that matter to a lot of people.

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Jupiterimages/Photos.com/Getty Images

I can't tell if this kid is in pain or not.

Are you one of those people? Probably not. Digital music wouldn't have taken off the way it did if sound quality was a widespread concern. The flip side, of course, is that if nobody cared about sound quality, PonoMusic probably wouldn't be the third most successful Kickstarter campaign in history, blowing past its initial funding goal of $800,000 in a matter of hours and eventually raking in an astounding $6.2 million.

If you find yourself on either extreme of that spectrum, nothing I'm saying here will matter much either way. I'm not going to convince you to care about sound quality if you're comfortable rocking to the eardrum-shredding sounds of a 96 kbps MP3 and people who spend hundreds of dollars on expensive speaker cables and whatnot can't be told anything by anyone.

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Hemera Technologies/Photos.com/Getty

Technology will never surpass this, snobs.

What about those people who might be on the fence about the matter, though? If you're looking for a portable music player with the technical specifications needed to make your insanely overpriced stereo system sing, should you invest in a PonoPlayer? Personally, I'd say no, for one simple reason -- the technology required to play lossless audio files on the go has existed for a long damn time now. This is what it looks like in its present form.

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Apple.com

How do you text with that thing?

Right, that's just a basic iPod Classic, and if you really need to listen to lossless music, it's fully capable of doing the job. Can it play FLAC files? Nope, but it can play ALAC (Apple Lossless Audio Codec) files, and if you think there's an audible difference between the two, you're in the minority. I totally understand why you'd take the word of a 70-something who's been playing an electric guitar for the past four decades over that of a bunch of stupid experts and scientists, though.

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Kevin Winter/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty Images

"How do I make a phone call with this thing?"

Anyway, once you take that advantage away, the PonoPlayer doesn't have a whole lot to offer that you can't find in an iPod, except for the part where it's way more expensive and holds a lot fewer songs.

Wait, Apple doesn't sell ALAC files, but Neil Young's new venture comes with a shiny new music service where early adopters can buy all the FLAC files their hearts desire. So, that's better, right? Not at all. Keep reading.

Digital Music Files

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Wikipedia

At some point, we're just going to have to accept that music has a finite capacity to sound awesome. Yes, Neil Young's PonoMusic will sell pristine quality FLAC downloads of major label music, but those albums are also going to carry a price tag in the $14.99 - $24.99 range. Call me crazy, but to the best of my recollection, prices like that are precisely why society revolted against the idea of buying music in the first place. Is it still going to feel like a revolution when you're spending obscene amounts of cash to replace the MP3s that everyone promised would permanently replace your CDs a few short years ago?

The worst part is that if the ultimate goal of the "digital music revolution" was to replace compact discs with FLAC files, then pawning your physical copy of Jagged Little Pill (and other classics) was completely pointless, because that's exactly where lossless audio files come from.

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Wikipedia

They were invented by Alanis Morissette.

The easiest way to produce a high-quality music download is to put an actual CD into your computer and rip the files directly to your hard drive. Depending on the program you use, you can save them as WAV, FLAC, ALAC or any number of other lossless file formats.

Am I saying you shouldn't buy FLAC files from Neil Young's new store? No, I'm saying you should literally go back to buying CDs.

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Ryan McVay/Photodisc/Getty Images

This stock photo is 75 years old.

Forget $24.99 FLAC files, let's talk about regular old MP3s for a bit. In a lot of cases, the difference in price between an MP3 album and a physical CD is minimal. For example, right now, the new Jack White album is selling for $10.99 on iTunes.

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
iTunes

Worth it.

On Amazon, you can get the actual CD, which includes an instant MP3 download and free shipping, for just $9.99.

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Amazon.com

More worth it.

So for a dollar less, you get twice as much. Also, when's the last time you resold a digital music file? Instead of spending $9.99 for the MP3 version of every album you want, why not let Amazon send you a copy that you can instantly resell to make some of your money back?

While we're on the subject of reselling, sites like Murfie make shelling out for CDs seem like an even better idea. If you're unfamiliar, Murfie is basically a used CD store that gives you the option of downloading your purchase as a high quality FLAC or ALAC file. Albums are almost exclusively in the under-$10 range. For research purposes, I went on a $50 shopping spree and came away with 14 albums, all downloaded in the same high-resolution format that Neil Young wants you to start buying at exponentially higher prices. For two dollars more, Murfie will send you the actual disc.

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Murfie.com

Fuck you, Neil!

Between sites like that and drastically reduced CD prices, buying MP3s for retail money no longer makes financial sense. More times than not, you'll save yourself a few bucks just buying the real thing.

Expensive Headphones

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beatsbydre.com

Dr. Dre is rich as fuck. At some point around the time when most of us wish he'd been working on a new album, the rap music legend was launching a high-end headphone empire that recently netted him a $3.2 billion payday when he sold Beats by Dre to Apple. It's the very definition of a feel-good success story, except for the part where he beat up all those chicks along the way.

It didn't happen by accident, either. He makes legitimately good headphones. Sure, they're a little bass-heavy for some people's taste, but what do you expect? They're headphones made by Dr. Dre. If a refreshing focus on mid-range and treble frequencies is on your wishlist, you're shopping at the wrong store.

Of course, "good" doesn't necessarily mean "$299.95 good," which is what a pair of Beats by Dre Studio headphones will set you back -- unless you spring for the optional rest pillow, in which case you should expect to add another $300 to the price.

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beatsbydre.com

Not joking.

So what's a person to do if they want to hear "Fuck the Police" like they've never heard it before but lack the necessary funds to spend on headphones? Well, if that famous song taught me anything, it's that stealing is always your first and best option.

Barring that, if you've accepted that you're going to have to spend something but still want to feel like you're getting away with something, remember one word -- discontinued. Beats by Dre is not a business model that revolves around making the best product one time, and if it ever was, it won't be now that Apple is in charge. In fact, the "new" Beats by Dre models are in stores right now, which means all of the "old" models have been discontinued. They still need to be sold, though, and you can usually get them at a huge discount over whatever you'd pay in stores currently. Case in point, if you buy the discontinued version of the Beats by Dre Studio headphones, you'll pay just over $180 on Amazon.

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Amazon.com

It's like Black Friday without the fistfights and trampling.

What do you lose in the deal? A rechargeable battery, for those who enjoy waiting two hours to listen to music again as opposed to just putting in a fresh pair of Duracells and getting back to the rock right away; and noise canceling that "works in two modes," which I'm hoping are "quiet" and "quieter" or something of the like.

If those are features you can't live without, by all means, spend the $300. Otherwise, paying full price is just silly. It's not a phenomenon that's unique to Beats headphones, either. Bose, Klipsch, Sennheiser and all the other suspiciously spendy brands have discontinued versions of their current product offerings readily available for purchase on Amazon and wherever else people buy things online, which I'm pretty sure is actually just Amazon these days, so check there first. Oh, hey, and speaking of Amazon ...

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For

eBooks

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Wikipedia

The music industry gets all the press, but when it comes to having the absolute maximum amount of gall possible as it pertains to selling digital files, my vote goes to the publishing industry. An eBook, for all intents and purposes, is nothing more than a glorified PDF. Sure, if it comes down to paying $9.99 for an eBook or $24.99 for a hardcover that I'll enjoy once and then resent every time I have to pack up my shit and move, I'm taking the eBook. That's only after exhausting every possible resource that might allow me to just read it for free legally, though.

You have at least two options in that respect. For starters, if you own a Kindle and have an Amazon Prime membership (which you totally should), they offer thousands of books for free through their "Lending Library" program.

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Amazon.com

Fact: Not paying for shit is one of the seven habits of highly successful people.

You can only check out one book at a time, but you can keep it as long as you want, which leaves you plenty of time to watch the 11 seasons of Forensic Files they just added to Prime Instant Video instead of reading books like some kind of genius showoff.

Granted, seeing as how it requires an Amazon Prime membership, that doesn't exactly qualify as a "free" option, but another, slightly more obscure resource for free books also exists. It's sometimes referred to as a "library" but you'll probably recognize it as "that place where the homeless watch porn" more than anything else these days.

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Jetta Productions/Photodisc/Getty

Get a job, loser!

If you have an e-reader of any sort, though, you should have a library card. With very few exceptions, most libraries offer an extensive selection of e-books that you can check out just like any other, except with the added bonus of not having to actually go to the library to do it. Free is a hard price point to beat, you know?

That said, none of this applies to any book written by anyone Cracked-related. Buy all of those in all available formats wherever fine books are sold.

Cable Television

5 Modern Luxuries You Need to Stop Paying Full Price For
Comstock Images/Stockbyte/Getty

I was on the fence as to whether I wanted to make cable television the number one entry on this list or just leave it off the list altogether. On the one hand, cable is quite possibly the least cost-effective entertainment option available short of gassing up your vehicle and driving to a movie theater. At the same time, though, who doesn't fucking know that already?

I mean, don't get me wrong, I'm glad some people do still have cable, because my ability to watch HBOGo depends on it, but that treasured service is a perfect example of why you don't need cable at all.

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hbogo.com

I love you.

The CEO of HBO has gone on record to say that they encourage subscribers to share their log-in details with friends and family. If you have no one in your life willing to share theirs with you, you probably have way bigger worries than not being able to watch Game of Thrones in a timely manner. For you, I'd suggest not only paying for cable, but also sharing your subsequent HBO streaming details with as many people as possible, just to see if it might net you a few friends.

As for everyone else, once you have ready access to HBO secured, what else do you really need? Showtime? Fine, weirdo, they have an HBOGo-like service of their own. I think there might be restrictions on how many different people can use the same account, but how many people will want to anyway?

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ShowtimeAnytime.com

Penny Dreadful is pretty great, though.

After that, most of the best stuff is available on Hulu Plus. For shows that aren't, you can usually buy a "pass" or "subscription" to the entire season for way less than what you'd pay for cable each month. How many shows do you watch with such fervor that you can't wait a few hours to see the latest episode? That number probably doesn't even approach double digits for most people, and even if it did, with most shows maxing out somewhere in the $40 range, you'd still pay less per year than you do just for the luxury of having a reason to hate Comcast.


Adam would like it a whole lot if you'd download the latest episode of his podcast and/or check out this video of him telling a bunch of jokes. Then come see him do that in person the first and third Tuesday of every month at Westside Comedy Theater in Santa Monica. Once you have all of that out of your system, follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

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