My first youtube playthrough wow
#1
Posté 02 avril 2016 - 09:41
Part 2 on Monday.
6 hours!
Many bitrate
Very data
#2
Posté 03 avril 2016 - 06:10
The second part has been uploaded! the drama intensifies.
I mean like I literally snipped out, to the nanosecond, certain frames I thought were dumb. Lines that Corypheus said that I thought were dumb.
That's how obsessively I edited this aaahhh
#3
Posté 08 avril 2016 - 05:31
My third installment!! Yaayy
#4
Posté 09 avril 2016 - 04:51
Fourth Installment!!
https://youtu.be/Zv4...hOMs68LisE3F_B3
I’d also like to take the time to go over some tax rules I learned today.
Gambling losses can be deducted on your 1040 tax return, but only to the extent of gambling winnings. Anyways, you can deduct your gambling losses on Schedule A, the Itemized Deduction, in FULL. Some other itemized deductions are Personal casualty and theft losses, including vandalism. But you can’t count your dog knocking over your vase as a personal casualty loss. You also can’t count “the loss of future profits because locusts ate my potato farm” as a personal casualty loss. Only the EXISTING crops and their market value lost due to a disaster can be counted. Some other itemized deductions are educator expenses, like if you’re a K-12 teacher, but only up to $250. If you file jointly with your spouse, you can deduct $500 on that joint tax return. You can deduct student loan interest, up to around $2,500 in 2013 (it’s probably more now), but remember that the student loan should’ve been for a dependent, yourself, or your spouse, and no one else. The student loan must’ve been taken out when the student was enrolled on at least a half-time basis. Remember that! Fack! A dependent is a qualifying child or a qualifying relative. A qualifying child has to be your descendent OR it can be your sibling’s descent (like a niece or nephew). Plus they have to be either 18 or under, or they have to be 24 or under if they’re enrolled as a full-time student at least 5 months of the year or more. See? See that right there? 5 months for the Filing Status definition of qualifying child, but half-time basis for the student loan deduction in schedule A. Okay. The qualifying child also must not be paying more than half of their own support. They cannot be filing a joint return with anybody else. Also, they can only be a dependent and be claimed as an exemption on ONE return. No double-dipping. They have to have lived with your for at least half of the year. Another type of dependent is the qualifying relative. The qualifying relative must be a citizen of the US, but they can ALSO be just a resident of Canada and Mexico. That’s right. They can live in Mexico and still be claimed as an exemption on your return! However, in addition, they must be either related to you (closer than cousin status, but in-laws of any kind also count!) OR they have to live with you for the entire year. They also cannot file a joint return with anyone else in order to be your dependent. Their income must be less than $3,900 (that is taxable gross income only). Finally, you have to pay over half of their support, unless you are in a multiple support agreement in which over half of the support for this dependent is coming from a bunch of people who all individually would qualify for the other criteria listed above except this last support one, but each of them have to contribute at least 10% of the support, and they draft a document agreeing to put the exemption on one of their returns.
Oh god, oh god, I already screwed up. I just remembered that the educator expenses (for K-12 teachers) and the student loan interest are not itemized deductions on schedule A, but rather above-the-line deductions on the face of the 1040. Got it.
Itemized deductions include charitable contributions. So if you contribute any kind of cash or checks to qualifying tax-exempt organizations (individual families in particular don’t count) you have to retain the receipt or cancelled check. If you go over $250 you have to get a written acknowledgement from the donee acknowledging the receipt of charity and a description of anything they gave you in return. If you go over $500 you need to keep a record of when and how you obtained the merchandise in addition to written acknowledgement from the donee, and also keep track of the cost of the item if it was held for less than 12 months. If you go over $5,000, you need a summary appraisal of the donated items attached to the return. If you go over $50000, it needs to be a super professional extended appraisal, in addition to all the rest of the things listed here. If you donate an intangible asset that appreciated in value and was held for more than 12 months, the amount of deduction is fair market value and limited to 30% of your AGI. If you donate either tangible or intangible items (like stocks) that were held less than 12 months, and appreciated in value, you deduct only the cost you originally paid, limited to 50% of AGI. Any time the fair market value of your donated items is less than the original cost, you can deduct the fair market value. If you donate tangible personal property that is related to the charity’s principal function (like art to an art museum) then you deduct the fair market value, limited to 30% of AGI. But if the stuff is not related to the function then you deduct just the original cost you paid, limited to 50% of AGI. The total of all the charitable contributions cannot go over 50% of AGI. If they do, you can carry over the remainder for 5 years on future returns.





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