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My family changed our Friday night pizza and movie tradition to save money. It took some time for the kids to get on board.

A family watches a movie while sitting on a couch
TK

  • Family movie and pizza nights were costing us hundreds of dollars a month.
  • Rising costs prompted us to rethink our Friday night tradition and try an at-home version instead.
  • At first our kids were upset with the change, but now they seem to enjoy our new tradition.

For as long as I can remember, Friday nights for our family meant two things: pizza and a movie. It was our family’s way to unwind after a busy week, just the four of us, no phones, no distractions.

We’d usually head to our favorite local pizza place, grab two large pies, garlic knots, and drinks then make our way to the movie theater where we’d get four tickets, popcorn, and candy. Though the cost of these things in Pakistan are less than they would be in the US, but they still set us back about $100 USD every Friday night — for years.

Over the years, that cost really adds up, but it felt worth it. We were making memories. But when prices started creeping up for afterschool activities, at the grocery store, at the movies, and at our pizza place our budget started feeling tighter. We decided we had to rethink what “worth it” really meant.

We started a new tradition

We didn’t want to give up our special tradition altogether. So instead of scrapping our usual Friday nights, we transformed them.

Now, we cozy up on the couch with homemade popcorn and a good movie on one of the three streaming services we subscribe to. Combined, they cost less than a trip to the movies, and we use them way more often.

The pizza? At first, we tried skipping it entirely, but the kids weren’t having it. So, we compromised. Some weeks we make our own pizza with ready-made crusts, sauce, and toppings that cost a fraction of the price at the grocery store. It’s fun, a little messy, and surprisingly delicious. Other times, we’ll still order one large pie to share, cutting that part of the cost in half. Anyone who is still hungry after dinner can load up on popcorn, as that’s an inexpensive treat to make at home.

It took some time for our kids to adjust

At first, our 13-year-old rolled her eyes. “This isn’t the same,” she said. But after a few weeks of our new routine, she came around. She even admitted that the homemade pizza is “kind of better,” and she likes picking out the movie herself and not sitting through trailers and previews at a theater.

Our youngest, 11, loves setting up the living room like a home theater with blankets, pillows, and dimmed lights.

Now, we’re more intentional with our spending

We still go out sometimes. We’re not strict. But we’re more intentional. We plan ahead. We watch for deals. And when we do decide to splurge on a night out, it feels extra special.

Changing how we spent our Fridays felt tough at first. I worried the kids would miss the real experience. But what we’ve learned is that it’s not the theater or the restaurant that made it memorable, it was the time together. And now we have more of that, not less.

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Greece’s Longtime Scourge: Dynastic Politics

Greece comprises 20 regional and sub-regional elected governments and 6,000 islands — 227 of them inhabited.

A decade ago, at the height of the eurozone crisis, Greece was Europe’s weakest economic link. In recent years, the country has been on an impressive run to improve its economic performance.

The tradition of dynastic politics

The Balkan nation had joined the European Community in 1979 — just five years after the fall of a brutal military dictatorship. However, while Greece left military rule behind, over 45 years later, it still has not been able to shake off its tradition of dynastic politics.

Look at the evidence: Three Papandreous — father, son and grandson — have led Greek governments from the left since 1945.

Two Karamanlises ruled from the right. The Mitsotakis family, rooted in 19th-century Crete, has produced two prime ministers — including the current one, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, 57, and his sister, a former mayor of Athens and foreign minister.

The euro to the rescue?

Political clans’ specialty is to trade favors, investments and job placements for votes. This is obviously not a recipe for economic effectiveness and also crassly violates any democratic standards of transparency.

Hoping it would transform the country’s struggling economy, it was Costas Simitis, a reformist social democratic Prime Minister, who moved to adopt the euro as Greece’s currency in 2001. However, it was a vain hope that the adoption of the single currency would transform the country’s unreformed, internationally uncompetitive economy. 

In 2004, Greece hosted the Olympics and won the Euro football cup. New infrastructure was unveiled and diplomacy improved regional relations. Alas, Simitis pursued reform but avoided challenging the party-financing system controlled by political families.

Myopia, corrupt ideals and sheer breathtaking incompetence

The 2008–2009 global financial crash hit Greece hard. Journalist Yannis Palaiologos chronicled the era in his book, The 13th Labour of Hercules, describing a landscape of “myopia, corrupted ideals, and sheer breathtaking incompetence.”

After the interlude led by the Syriza party under Tsipras, the Greek party system remained dominated by familiar names. Opposition parties failed to mount sustainable alternatives. The economy remained fragile, and GDP per capita continued to trail most of the EU.

Despite Greece’s wealth of globally recognized economists and successful diaspora professionals, the domestic business environment stayed mired in clientelism and inertia.

Mitsotakis, the reformer?

In 2019, Kyriakos Mitsotakis returned to power and was re-elected in 2023. His government, though popular in some circles, has faced serious questions.

A major scandal erupted a while ago when it was revealed that his office had authorized surveillance of the leader of the opposition party. The official overseeing this operation was his nephew — underlining the persistence of dynastic governance.

Derailed by an avoidable train accident

In February 2023, tragedy struck when a head-on collision between a passenger train and a freight train killed 57 people, mainly students. Over 100 were injured.

The freight train carried hazardous chemicals not declared on its manifest, resulting in a devastating fireball. Investigations revealed a severely outdated signaling system. The transport minister, a scion of another major political family, resigned, only to be re-elected a few months later.

Public outrage exploded. More than 2.5 million people took part in nationwide protests. Protesters demanded to know why such dangerous cargo had gone undeclared.

At the same time, rail workers had been legally barred from striking over safety concerns due to earlier legislation. Though a parliamentary inquiry was eventually launched in 2025, few expect meaningful accountability.

Enter the European Public Prosecutor’s Office

The European Public Prosecutor’s Office has accused two Greek government ministers of “criminal offenses.” The case involves a fraud in which politically linked Greek citizens who voted for the New Democracy party received millions of EU agricultural funds.

However, these funds were provided to them for pastureland they did not own or had not leased, or for agricultural work they never performed, depriving real farmers of the cash they were entitled to.

Brussels has asked the Greek parliament to investigate this Homeric corruption but no one in Greece expects to see any serious sanction against a political class that believes it is above the law.

Now five ministers have had to resign, but Prime Minister Mitsotakis still floats free above the rottenness of the Greek state his dynasty has controlled since 2019.

Greece’s center-left has lost coherence and impact

Soon after, two government ministers were accused by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office of participating in a fraudulent scheme involving EU agricultural funds. Voters linked to the ruling party allegedly received payments for land they did not own or for work never performed.

Once again, expectations for consequences were low. Despite mounting scandals, Mitsotakis appears largely unaffected. The opposition remains weak and fragmented. The traditional center-left has lost coherence and impact. Other movements lack cohesion or national reach.

As columnist Nikos Konstandaras wrote, “In Greece we are satisfied with grand statements of intent and endless whining… we daub the chaos with digital lipstick.”

The two big questions

Can a revitalized political movement emerge in Greece to break the hold of entrenched dynasties and initiate long-overdue national reform?

Or is Greece destined to remain stuck in a political cycle dominated by inherited power and institutional fatigue?

The post Greece’s Longtime Scourge: Dynastic Politics appeared first on The Globalist.

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