Andy57
Distinguished Member
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2014
- Messages
- 4,869
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Lets. ?Fair enough. Shall we move on?
STYLE. COMMUNITY. GREAT CLOTHING.
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Lets. ?Fair enough. Shall we move on?
To be honest, i have not worn it since picking it up about 2 months ago. My daily wearer is a Seadweller. I received a call from my AD way sooner than i had anticipated. I was after the Blue Dial and they indicated at least a 12 month wait.I really love the engineering behind the Skydweller and think it is Rolex's most interesting watch. As I wrote above, I think they made a design choice I don't really love - they designed it to look a lot like a classic Rolex sport watch which resulted in a cluttered, weird dial. I wish they would have instead designed its appearance more around its unique functions, which I think would have resulted in something a little cleaner looking. But maybe I will get used to it in time. I also don't have a great idea for HOW to do it better, just that somehow, it should be possible. Still, it is very cool. How do you find owning and using it?
With respect, unless you have actual data, this argument is entirely speculative. Show me actual data, not opinion.
Well, I'm sorry, a stainless steel tool watch ain't bling. So I call bullshit on that and on your assertion regarding the "vast majority" of people. I'm aware of one person who thinks that.
You don't make your highly speculative point any more valid by insulting me.
Then the ALS fellow leaned over, poured himself a glass of Hublot's Cristal and spent the rest of the evening in a corner admiring the fineness of the bubbles.Then the Hublot chap arrived, ordered 3 shots of Jaeger, pulled his dick out, and shouted "spring break!!!"
I like this. We should write back stories for all watch brands.
Congratulations. and that is a nice looking one.My uncommon Rolex, bought to commemorate the birth of my first son. I needed a dress watch for my collection and was drawn to the glacier blue dial, heft of platinum and the fact that they only produced these for 6ish years.
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Rolex advertisements are very aspirational - not unlike those for high prestige car companies - and the company associates itself exclusively with sports and pursuits that are perceived as sophisticated - motorsports (F-1, not Nascar), golf, tennis, yachting. You can watch many of them here: https://www.youtube.com/user/WorldOfRolex/featured
Vintage Rolex print ads are even more overtly aspirational (see examples below). I mean, there are layers of semiotic meaning here - Rolex is associated directly with excellence as well as achievement, but the core message is unmistakeable. If you are a person who has achieved something, you will wear a Rolex.
Some of the ads are nominally about the performance of the timepiece itself, like an ad about summitting the Matterhorn (lol - it's not that hard of a climb - not area is ever graded above "moderate" - but whatever), but I don't think that you need a COSC timepiece to time your presentation to the UN Assembly.
Not that other luxury watch companies have not tried the same type of marketing, but Rolex has been the most successful (check out their score on Forbes reputation scale if you want some evidence). Patek Phillipe went the patrician route, but as a personal symbol of achievement, it's Rolex.
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Nope, i'd be wearing a Casio. probably a Gold Databank.If you were invited to the playboy mansion tomorrow, you’d wear a Rolex...
I am intrigued to know what this watch is. Is it this one?There is though. a watch i am currently smitten with. It looks like something forged in another galaxy that fell to earth, and colored like burnt Titanium. Dark. but full of color. and all the Tech.
To me? Damn, this thing is unique. far removed from anything else.
It's a Casio Oceanus that i can't find on images. looks like something Starlord would get.
And at $2,500? It's a LOT of Casio.
Naw, it's different, maybe @LA Guy has seen it. future AF. but classic. OMG. want.
In order to wound me, I'd have to first hold you in some regard. You're just a troll. There's a million of 'em out there.So @Andy57, you demand data, but you'll happily refute someone else's assertion on the thin grounds that only one person within your circle of acquaintances is of the same opinion? And having thus "called bulllshit" on my statement, you act wounded at the relatively mild suggestion that your view of the world could be broader than it currently is?
Lol ok boomer.
I think you're just bristling at the suggestion that anyone would have the impertinence to describe of your fine and cherished possessions as "bling" or "blingy". Like I said, the modern GMT is not the most glaring example. As long as you don't rock it with your Balenciaga trainers and Yeezy sweatpants, I think you'll be ok.
Now we can move on.
My wife probably wouldn't let me go, so I'd probably just be wearing lounge clothes. AKA beat up old performance shirts and retired gi pants.If you were invited to the playboy mansion tomorrow, you’d wear a Rolex...
We all are!In order to wound me, I'd have to first hold you in some regard. You're just a troll. There's a million of 'em out there.
You make a very good point. I’ll just wander back under my bridge now!We all are!
This is not true. I really can't think of many watches that do what Rolex does as well as Rolex does and none come to mind that do it better - at least when you are talking about a reliable, sport, long-lived, durable mechanical watch and some basic functionality. When you factor in Rolex's relatively clean and time-tested design, they really offer a great product. Omega is maybe a close second. You can certainly spend less for what Rolex offers in some cases - and that is a legitimate complaint - but you can't really do better (except every Rolex model can be improved by getting rid of the stupid day-counter and cyclops)....
Many, Many watches do what they do. Better.
But for a person to feel that they have succeeded? many will Buy a Rolex to show it.
I see that as an insecurity issue.
- and to argue with me about it, will probably paint you as insecure.
Nope, i'd be wearing a Casio. probably a Gold Databank.
or that funky one i mentioned yesterday. that looks like Starlord would wear it.
Agreed that the general population largely views SS Rolexes in the same way they view a Mercedes G wagon or a Range Rover. Yes, all three have a long history of utilitarian usage and their modern equivalents could absolutely still be used as such, the reality is that many (but not all) buy them as bling to show off. A SS Rolex is just a different kind of bling from a gold Day-Date with gemstones just like a G wagon is a different kind of bling from a Rolls Royce. Not to say you couldn't instead come off as some outdoorsy technical diver with a Sub or a rugged Paul Newman with a Daytona with the right look, but I've been around law/finance/sales long enough to see how most people wear them. Not that there's anything wrong with that, either, and there are a number of current models I like.
Rolex advertisements are very aspirational - not unlike those for high prestige car companies - and the company associates itself exclusively with sports and pursuits that are perceived as sophisticated - motorsports (F-1, not Nascar), golf, tennis, yachting. You can watch many of them here: https://www.youtube.com/user/WorldOfRolex/featured
Vintage Rolex print ads are even more overtly aspirational (see examples below). I mean, there are layers of semiotic meaning here - Rolex is associated directly with excellence as well as achievement, but the core message is unmistakeable. If you are a person who has achieved something, you will wear a Rolex.
Some of the ads are nominally about the performance of the timepiece itself, like an ad about summitting the Matterhorn (lol - it's not that hard of a climb - not area is ever graded above "moderate" - but whatever), but I don't think that you need a COSC timepiece to time your presentation to the UN Assembly.
Not that other luxury watch companies have not tried the same type of marketing, but Rolex has been the most successful (check out their score on Forbes reputation scale if you want some evidence). Patek Phillipe went the patrician route, but as a personal symbol of achievement, it's Rolex.
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