Virgin Media Timekeeping: A Lesson in Alternative Reality
If you’ve ever had the misfortune of dealing with Virgin Media’s installation team, you might have noticed something strange. The concept of time, as understood by the rest of the world, simply does not apply to them. While the rest of us rely on clocks, calendars, and the basic principles of scheduling, Virgin Media appears to operate on a timekeeping system all of its own—a mysterious, ever-shifting entity I can only describe as Virgin Media Time. The Never-Ending “Tomorrow” Most of us are familiar with the idea of a scheduled date. If you book an appointment for, say, the 1st of April, you’d expect something to happen on that day. But not in the Virgin Media universe! No, here’s how it works: You’re told your installation is scheduled for tomorrow. Tomorrow arrives. Nothing happens. You call them. They tell you your installation is scheduled for tomorrow. Rinse and repeat indefinitely. I have personally experienced this absurd time loop, as documented in my previous posts (here and here). You would think that after a certain number of times, someone would break the cycle, but no. Virgin Media has clearly perfected the art of making tomorrow an unreachable mirage. Callbacks? What Callbacks? But the real pièce de résistance of Virgin Media Timekeeping is their approach to returning calls. You see, in this fascinating alternate reality, 48 hours does not actually mean 48 hours. It might mean 48 days. It might mean never. Who knows? I was personally assured by a manager—yes, an actual manager!—that if their staff failed to call me back within 48 hours, he himself would call me the following day. What happened? Absolutely nothing. No callback, no explanation, just pure, unfiltered silence. This was not a one off incident. But a regular occurrence. Multiple promises for callbacks which never materialised. Special Training Required? At this point, I refuse to believe this is mere incompetence. No, there must be a training course involved. Perhaps new employees at Virgin Media are sat down in a room and taught how to expertly delay appointments, shift dates around in a way that makes customers question their own sanity, and promise callbacks they have no intention of making. Maybe they even get a certificate in Advanced Time Manipulation upon completion. If only the rest of us could sign up for this mysterious course—imagine the possibilities! “Oh, I’ll pay my bill tomorrow.” “I’ll be at work in 48 hours.” “I’ll finish that project you asked for in… let’s say, another 48 hours.” The world would descend into chaos. Conclusion Virgin Media’s approach to time is a thing of legend. If you’re ever unfortunate enough to be waiting on an installation or a callback, just remember: their clocks don’t work the same way yours do. Your appointment will always be tomorrow. Your callback will always be within 48 hours. And your frustration? Well, that’s guaranteed to arrive immediately.Netflix on hold, no help when contacting virgin
I have had the ‘Virgin Media has put your Netflix subscription on a temporary hold. Please contact them directly, so you can get back to enjoying Netflix’ error message for about 3 weeks now. I have recently agreed a new contract which is the same package as my last contract which includes Netflix and I am up to date with all bills. I have tried contacting virgin numerous times on the live chat as well as phoning them, being promised reactivation links and that urgent IT tickets have been raised, but unsurprisingly it got me absolutely nowhere and I have received no replies to my correspondence. I’ve phoned Netflix who have stated this is a problem on Virgins side. Is there any way this can be resolved as it is getting incredibly frustrating trying to chase something that I am already paying for. Any help would be appreciated.65Views0likes1CommentNo TV service in Westcliff on Sea - engineering update keeps moving hoped-for fix date
TV service went down completely on Easter Sunday with 'service status' saying engineer will fix by 17.04 on Tuesday 2nd April '24 - so precise, my hopes were raised. But no Bank Holiday TV for the family: and the hoped-for date came and went. It has now has been moved forward to 17:04 on Friday 5th - if this is correct, I'll be nearly a week without TV, (TiVo).with no realistic fix-by date. Will I automatically get a refund of the TV portion of my Broadband package, or do I have to apply for it, if and when the loss of service is resolvedSolved1.4KViews0likes7Comments