![]() Crew 2 didn't call me direct, they didn't have the balls to - they had the store employee do their legwork. Then Monday, June 29th, I get a call - not from Crew 2, but from the Home Depot store - telling me Crew 2 looked at the pictures of my subfloor and refused to do the installation. The floor is now in my house and everything is accounted for, and the installation is scheduled. ![]() ![]() He pulled up my file (so presumably saw the pictures the measurement guy took), saw what the job was, and we scheduled an installation for July 14th/15th, which unfortunately was the earliest they could do. I called several more times on Friday before finally reaching another manager, Nate, late in the afternoon. I absolutely wanted to get the installation scheduled before the weekend as at this point my house had been unlivable for a month. No answer, left a voicemail, same thing - no call back. They were going to transfer me to Corey again and I said no, I need to speak with someone else because Corey doesn't answer the phone or call anyone back. No call back.Ĭalled back on Friday, June 26th. No call back.Ĭalled back on Thursday, June 25th. No answer, so I left a voicemail saying I wanted to schedule an installation, call me back etc. I was transferred to a manager named Corey. I called Crew 2 and asked to schedule an installation the morning of the 24th. I said screw that, got my dad's SUV, and went and picked it up myself. Floor finally came in on that day, and Home Depot wanted to give me an asinine 6 hour delivery window to bring it to the house. We ordered the floor.įloor was backordered until June 24th. At the time of the order, the store employee was looking at pictures of my subfloor that the measurement guy took. I'll spare you the condescending attitude of the store employee who just wanted to rush me out, didn't want to answer my basic questions about the installation, and seemingly couldn't answer some questions. June 7th, my wife and I went to the store and ordered the floor. Before the guy came in to measure, I removed all of the flooring down to the subfloor so he could measure for floor flatness and take a look at the subfloor so that there were no surprises. ![]() It's a combo review because the whole experience has been a horrible ordeal.Īt the end of May or very early June I had Home Depot come in and do some floor measurements as we were going to buy a hardwood laminate floor for all of the bedrooms, the landing at the top of the stairs, and the stairs themselves. This is a combo review for both Home Depot and their contracted installer, Crew 2. Glover, one of the best-known actors in Hollywood and who starred in the blockbuster “Lethal Weapon” movies with Mel Gibson, stands to receive 2% of the gross profits from “Saw,” according to the lawsuit.Terrible company, and they deserve a public review for all to see. The suit maintains “favored nations” meant that payments to Elwes “should have included box office bonuses equal to the highest paid an actor who performed in ‘Saw’ ” as well as a percentage of profits “equivalent to the highest paid actor” in the film. The suit maintains that Elwes has received only $53,275 - in addition to a salary of $2,587.20 for his performance. There were also promises, according to the suit, that he would receive a minimum of 1% of the producers’ net profits from the film, that during a conversation about a “start date” for the movie, Koules informed Elwes that they were “going to make a sweet deal on the film” and that during a September 2004 press junket publicizing the movie, Burg told Elwes that he “would make more money than he had ever made before.” Elwes alleges that in September 2003, while the film was being cast, he was assured that he would receive “favored nations” status with all cast members. ![]()
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