@@kevinkujo318"I'm in it", Me, QT, am in the auction. I noticed the chair right away but didn't know that's what she meant when she said I'm in it in this clip LOL
@@Ozzymandius1 that doesn't change much, no. My chair is in the auction, I'm in the auction. When I started the video I was looking at the big image, as is natural. And that can be barely called pointing LOL. You'd be stubborn if you can't see the possibility, people liked the OP for a reason.
I love how good Lud is at improv in these situations. He's texting QT and she's telling him to bid on it, but when Connor says he thinks she wanted to get rid of it, Lud just says, "I don't give a shit." He just finds a way to make it work in a way that's funny.
@@CatmanWaGozen you can, anything over 250$, For contributions of under $250, make sure you get a receipt that shows the name of the organization and the amount you donated on a specific date. Keep the receipt handy in case the IRS wants to verify your donation and the organization. For contributions greater than $250, you'll need to show proof of the amount, the date you gave and the organization. The charity or nonprofit should send you a letter with those details. Be aware that if you received something in exchange for your donation, the fair market value of that item will be subtracted from the amount you gave. For example, say you attended a charity gala and there was a silent auction. You bid on a signed jersey from your favorite NHL player, which was valued at $1,000 and you won with a $3,000 bid. The difference,or $2,000, is your deduction.
@@CatmanWaGozen For contributions of under $250, make sure you get a receipt that shows the name of the organization and the amount you donated on a specific date. Keep the receipt handy in case the IRS wants to verify your donation and the organization. For contributions greater than $250, you'll need to show proof of the amount, the date you gave and the organization. The charity or nonprofit should send you a letter with those details. Be aware that if you received something in exchange for your donation, the fair market value of that item will be subtracted from the amount you gave. For example, say you attended a charity gala and there was a silent auction. You bid on a signed jersey from your favorite NHL player, which was valued at $1,000 and you won with a $3,000 bid. The difference,or $2,000, is your deduction...it seems like you can, she still payed money for the chair but now doesn't have to pay as much in taxes.
@@CatmanWaGozen you can, For contributions of under $250, make sure you get a receipt that shows the name of the organization and the amount you donated on a specific date. Keep the receipt handy in case the IRS wants to verify your donation and the organization. For contributions greater than $250, you'll need to show proof of the amount, the date you gave and the organization. The charity or nonprofit should send you a letter with those details. Be aware that if you received something in exchange for your donation, the fair market value of that item will be subtracted from the amount you gave. For example, say you attended a charity gala and there was a silent auction. You bid on a signed jersey from your favorite NHL player, which was valued at $1,000 and you won with a $3,000 bid. The difference,or $2,000, is your deduction...it seems like you can, she still payed money for the chair but now doesn't have to pay as much in taxes.
@@Hephaestus_God yes but buying your own chair might come with some extra stipulations. Not sure you can buy your own property and call it charity in every state
@@HeartbrokenHeartshooter I'm far from being an expert, but as long as the charity is not yours or associated with a family member... I see no problem. I mean, trump did that for years before anyone said a thing 😅
@@HeartbrokenHeartshooter the money goes to charity and there's no actual transaction, it would only be tax fraud if it goes to a charity that is urself..
@@fredgosselin1308 They fooled our law enforcement, government and local mafia for 2 years by hiding behind a queen / king facade. In reality they are corrupts for multinationals and hollywood. They can't play manipulative games anymore. They got exposed.
@@Liquidglitch This is not a donation genius, that's why your comment is so stupid in the first place, because this is not applicable for a tax deduction, since, if you use your brain, you realize this is a purchase, he's getting something in exchange for his money, even if the auction is for charity, it's not like he's giving away money just like that, that's what auctions are, you pay more money than others are willing to, and get an item, and that's how they are legally treated, that is not applicable, and that is on top of the fact that anyone who has ever filed their taxes will be able to tell you that even if it was a donation that's not how deductions work lol, if it was that easy a lot more people would donate money more often and have the government be the one to pay it, the only way you believe this is a tax write off is if you're one of those dumbasses who think that any kind of money that goes to charity or is given away automatically applies, like the morons who think Charlie's money give aways somehow allow him to write that off, even though those are super ineligible, but you people always have to see some devious plot to screw us off everywhere you look
Jerma coming in with the bid only to find out what it was while awkwardly standing behind Lud was the funniest thing
And now you can say it’s a $5000 chair
Isn't that how art valuations work?
@@andyt2k yes, or a art evaluator will get paid by someone rich to just say it’s worth that much and then it is
... For the *next* time you donate it. Minimum bid!
it took me like 4 minutes to realize she was sitting on the chair in the stream lol
She says "my chair, I'm in it" in the first 3 seconds of this clip how did you not realize
@@kevinkujo318"I'm in it", Me, QT, am in the auction. I noticed the chair right away but didn't know that's what she meant when she said I'm in it in this clip LOL
@@johndinner4418 She said “My chair!; I’m in it”
And then pointed down to the exact purple chair in the photo. Like… really?
@@Ozzymandius1 that doesn't change much, no. My chair is in the auction, I'm in the auction. When I started the video I was looking at the big image, as is natural. And that can be barely called pointing LOL. You'd be stubborn if you can't see the possibility, people liked the OP for a reason.
@@johndinner4418she pointed to it
I love how good Lud is at improv in these situations. He's texting QT and she's telling him to bid on it, but when Connor says he thinks she wanted to get rid of it, Lud just says, "I don't give a shit." He just finds a way to make it work in a way that's funny.
Paying a $5000 ransom to charity to keep your gaming chair is one of the moves of all time.
tax write off
@@Eradicationist Can't just write off ANY charity donation from taxes
@@CatmanWaGozen you can, anything over 250$, For contributions of under $250, make sure you get a receipt that shows the name of the organization and the amount you donated on a specific date. Keep the receipt handy in case the IRS wants to verify your donation and the organization.
For contributions greater than $250, you'll need to show proof of the amount, the date you gave and the organization. The charity or nonprofit should send you a letter with those details.
Be aware that if you received something in exchange for your donation, the fair market value of that item will be subtracted from the amount you gave.
For example, say you attended a charity gala and there was a silent auction. You bid on a signed jersey from your favorite NHL player, which was valued at $1,000 and you won with a $3,000 bid. The difference,or $2,000, is your deduction.
@@CatmanWaGozen For contributions of under $250, make sure you get a receipt that shows the name of the organization and the amount you donated on a specific date. Keep the receipt handy in case the IRS wants to verify your donation and the organization.
For contributions greater than $250, you'll need to show proof of the amount, the date you gave and the organization. The charity or nonprofit should send you a letter with those details.
Be aware that if you received something in exchange for your donation, the fair market value of that item will be subtracted from the amount you gave.
For example, say you attended a charity gala and there was a silent auction. You bid on a signed jersey from your favorite NHL player, which was valued at $1,000 and you won with a $3,000 bid. The difference,or $2,000, is your deduction...it seems like you can, she still payed money for the chair but now doesn't have to pay as much in taxes.
@@CatmanWaGozen you can, For contributions of under $250, make sure you get a receipt that shows the name of the organization and the amount you donated on a specific date. Keep the receipt handy in case the IRS wants to verify your donation and the organization.
For contributions greater than $250, you'll need to show proof of the amount, the date you gave and the organization. The charity or nonprofit should send you a letter with those details.
Be aware that if you received something in exchange for your donation, the fair market value of that item will be subtracted from the amount you gave.
For example, say you attended a charity gala and there was a silent auction. You bid on a signed jersey from your favorite NHL player, which was valued at $1,000 and you won with a $3,000 bid. The difference,or $2,000, is your deduction...it seems like you can, she still payed money for the chair but now doesn't have to pay as much in taxes.
"I got scammed by my girlfriend"...
I can already see it😂
He REALLY thought the chair was worth $5k, is what he's going to say 😂.
jerma roleplaying as professor wearing glasses in the background LMAO
0:34 Jerma doing the FULL McMahon walk (WWE Reference) announcing "29 HUNDRED DOLLARS.......... What's the item?" is ICONIC
Real CHAIRity here
"Does it come with coots?" That fake fan doesn't even recognize that the cat in the image is Ders....
tbf most Connor fans are only familiar with Coots cause he was trying to rizz her up for a few days
@@hornitako7006 nah they saw ders too
Connor joked about including coots with it a couple days before.
A chair so good QT bought it twice
Seems like QT became self-conscious about the chair when she thought it would go to Poki
I think claiming this one on your taxes might constitute legitimate tax fraud somehow 😂
Charity donations can be claimed so it doesn't matter
@@Hephaestus_God yes but buying your own chair might come with some extra stipulations. Not sure you can buy your own property and call it charity in every state
@@HeartbrokenHeartshooter Nah this is technically just a dono
@@HeartbrokenHeartshooter I'm far from being an expert, but as long as the charity is not yours or associated with a family member... I see no problem. I mean, trump did that for years before anyone said a thing 😅
@@HeartbrokenHeartshooter the money goes to charity and there's no actual transaction, it would only be tax fraud if it goes to a charity that is urself..
5:01 “For CHAIRity!!!!” lol
The chair came home
If Coots was included, it could have been a huge level up for someone's supervillain arc.
That's not Coots
THAT’S GOOD CHAIR-ITY BAYBEEEEEE
Only QT/Ludwig could do something like this 😂
The last bit, it's funny how much qt sounds like Dokibird for some reason when she talks like that
Jerma is such a funny dude
Wow this whole time I thought it was one of those butterfly chairs. It looks way more comfy than that
Not charity, but chairity 🙂
'is it here?' no QT is literally watching from it 😂
I was half expecting someone to jump in last second for the chair
This event is truly just a wealth transfer away from Ludwig.
Jerma walked in like a chad he is and went "Oh" lol
Ironmouse thanks you for spending $5000 on the chair you're already sitting on
That's not mouse
3:10
“You said she sat on it right?” 😂😂😂😂
1:01
“You gotta stop”😂
As Ludwig won the chair, anybody else want to see it as part of his stream room decor?
Between this and the piratesoftware challenge coin im starting to wonder whether anyone actually gave anything away😂
for chairity
speedy upload W clippers
they’re definitely gonna sniff that
why am i reminded of the mayflowers from hudson hawk
TWENTY NINE HUNDRED DOLLARS!!!!
Girl math
This was literally done just to pressure Ludwig inappropriately.
a chair for charity
he just doesn’t want a guy to buy his girls chair because he thinks they’ll be weird and smell it or something, 100% the reason
Lee Kenneth Thompson Margaret Anderson Jose
she should've put that pillow or plush in the background for sale, so adorable.
LETSGO
Her "reaction"
😐😐🙂🙂😐😐🙂😀🙂😐😐 yaaay. 🙂🙂🙂😐😐😐😐🙂🙂yaaay.
QT is literal NPC, she's such a brainrot 'content' creator
How do you feel about being Rizzutos, Hells Angels and Quebecs new ennemy ?
Meaning? How are those things related to anything or anyone in the video? Seriously I’m curious
@@fredgosselin1308 They fooled our law enforcement, government and local mafia for 2 years by hiding behind a queen / king facade. In reality they are corrupts for multinationals and hollywood. They can't play manipulative games anymore. They got exposed.
She doesn't sound excited to keep her chair at the end 😢
She just has dry deadpan humor lol I don’t think she cares
Not everyone has expressive faces
She told him to bid on it.
What you want her to do? Scream and dance?
for a few mins I was so happy that fugly chair was going away :((((
is that a tax write off ?
i would give all of my life savings for qts chair. tho i would not have beaten 5k
???????
Miller Kimberly Harris Jessica Harris Laura
Chairity! Heh...
Why is Ludwig wearing g a mask?
he's sick
He is a lib
covid existing
he cancelled his stream the day before because he was sick. So likely related to that
@@milansoede2072 my guess was from his Doug Doug challenge with Connor and the boys
Buying your own shit is cringe
Not if you can write it off on your taxes.
It’s his own money brother and it’s for charity. Sounds like you really wanted this chair
@@Liquidglitch Tell me you're a conspiracy theorist without saying you're a conspiracy theorist
@@NicaremE tell me you don't know how charitable donations work. Oh wait you just did
@@Liquidglitch This is not a donation genius, that's why your comment is so stupid in the first place, because this is not applicable for a tax deduction, since, if you use your brain, you realize this is a purchase, he's getting something in exchange for his money, even if the auction is for charity, it's not like he's giving away money just like that, that's what auctions are, you pay more money than others are willing to, and get an item, and that's how they are legally treated, that is not applicable, and that is on top of the fact that anyone who has ever filed their taxes will be able to tell you that even if it was a donation that's not how deductions work lol, if it was that easy a lot more people would donate money more often and have the government be the one to pay it, the only way you believe this is a tax write off is if you're one of those dumbasses who think that any kind of money that goes to charity or is given away automatically applies, like the morons who think Charlie's money give aways somehow allow him to write that off, even though those are super ineligible, but you people always have to see some devious plot to screw us off everywhere you look
i swear she was there in person vgtrfced