Gambling
Broke the bank at Las Vegas, or won a packet of smokes for getting your tinkle out in class? Outrageous, heroic or plain stupid bets.
Suggested by SpankyHanky
( , Thu 7 May 2009, 13:04)
Broke the bank at Las Vegas, or won a packet of smokes for getting your tinkle out in class? Outrageous, heroic or plain stupid bets.
Suggested by SpankyHanky
( , Thu 7 May 2009, 13:04)
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A story about not gambling.
Milton Friedman once famously said 'There is no such thing as a free lunch'. I'm sure he is entirely correct. What he failed to mention was a free dinner.
In 2004 I moved down to Portsmouth as a student, naive in that ways of the world. Being away from home for the first time, I was wide eyed, fresh faced and a bit of a chancer.
My halls of residence were right opposite a casino - the Grosvenor on Commercial road. We first worked out after a big night out that the casino stayed open until 4 am, and as long as you behaved yourself they were more than happy to serve you beer until then. The only proviso was that you had to change up about £10 worth of chips.
One evening an older guy in a sharp suit and shiny shoes turned up, changed up £100 worth of chips, sat at the blackjack table, all the staff flapping round him, getting him drinks, and snacks and finally a big plate of steak and chips.
Being skint, a student and always after food, the prospect of steak and chips was too much to bear. Steak is unobtainable to almost all students unless in a food parcel sent from home, in fact I ate very little meat at uni just because vegetarian food was cheaper, leaving more money for beer. To me the idea of a big juicy steak was irresistible, I had to get some and soon.
I knew there was another Grosvenor Casino about a 15 minute walk away in a new shopping and leisure complex. The next day I shaved, got my suit on, polished my shoes, even ironed a shirt.
I walked into the casino, changed up the sum total of my entire bank balance - £255, I still have the receipt pinned to my corkboard. This really put the shitters up the staff, a young guy, well dressed, changing up a large amount of money with a devil may care look in his eye. Having sat down at the bar I was offered a beer which I took, the manager came over and introduced himself and handed me the restaurant menu. One ribeye steak rare and chips and peas please. I sit at the bar biding my time, acting cool, my dinner arrives. I eat it all.
I meander over to the blackjack table play the sum total of 2 hands, I lose both hands, change my chips up and leave £2 poorer but one dinner and two pints richer. I managed this charade once a week alternating between the casinos for a couple of months before the manager collared me for taking the piss. I ate an awful lot of steak in that time.
The moral of this story? Not gambling but acting as if you might will, in the right circumstances, get you a free dinner.
( , Thu 7 May 2009, 20:59, 11 replies)
Milton Friedman once famously said 'There is no such thing as a free lunch'. I'm sure he is entirely correct. What he failed to mention was a free dinner.
In 2004 I moved down to Portsmouth as a student, naive in that ways of the world. Being away from home for the first time, I was wide eyed, fresh faced and a bit of a chancer.
My halls of residence were right opposite a casino - the Grosvenor on Commercial road. We first worked out after a big night out that the casino stayed open until 4 am, and as long as you behaved yourself they were more than happy to serve you beer until then. The only proviso was that you had to change up about £10 worth of chips.
One evening an older guy in a sharp suit and shiny shoes turned up, changed up £100 worth of chips, sat at the blackjack table, all the staff flapping round him, getting him drinks, and snacks and finally a big plate of steak and chips.
Being skint, a student and always after food, the prospect of steak and chips was too much to bear. Steak is unobtainable to almost all students unless in a food parcel sent from home, in fact I ate very little meat at uni just because vegetarian food was cheaper, leaving more money for beer. To me the idea of a big juicy steak was irresistible, I had to get some and soon.
I knew there was another Grosvenor Casino about a 15 minute walk away in a new shopping and leisure complex. The next day I shaved, got my suit on, polished my shoes, even ironed a shirt.
I walked into the casino, changed up the sum total of my entire bank balance - £255, I still have the receipt pinned to my corkboard. This really put the shitters up the staff, a young guy, well dressed, changing up a large amount of money with a devil may care look in his eye. Having sat down at the bar I was offered a beer which I took, the manager came over and introduced himself and handed me the restaurant menu. One ribeye steak rare and chips and peas please. I sit at the bar biding my time, acting cool, my dinner arrives. I eat it all.
I meander over to the blackjack table play the sum total of 2 hands, I lose both hands, change my chips up and leave £2 poorer but one dinner and two pints richer. I managed this charade once a week alternating between the casinos for a couple of months before the manager collared me for taking the piss. I ate an awful lot of steak in that time.
The moral of this story? Not gambling but acting as if you might will, in the right circumstances, get you a free dinner.
( , Thu 7 May 2009, 20:59, 11 replies)
I live in Portsmouth
And made quite a bit of dough from the Gunwharf casino. Not tried that trick, though.
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 9:37, closed)
And made quite a bit of dough from the Gunwharf casino. Not tried that trick, though.
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 9:37, closed)
This reminds me of my boss's remark
that if he lost all his money he'd make sure the one thing he kept hold of was a really good suit, because with that, you can always get free food and drink - there's always some kind of wedding/convention/seminar going on somewhere that you can blag your way into.
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 10:35, closed)
that if he lost all his money he'd make sure the one thing he kept hold of was a really good suit, because with that, you can always get free food and drink - there's always some kind of wedding/convention/seminar going on somewhere that you can blag your way into.
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 10:35, closed)
Now that's fucking
marvellous! If only I had the sense to do something like this instead of pissing my student loan away in about half an hour of speed-induced lunacy...
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 13:29, closed)
marvellous! If only I had the sense to do something like this instead of pissing my student loan away in about half an hour of speed-induced lunacy...
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 13:29, closed)
I think...
It says a lot about Portsmouth (I'm born and bred btw thus allowed to cast aspersions) that it takes the cashing up of a mere £255 to get a casino manager excited. :-)
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 13:52, closed)
It says a lot about Portsmouth (I'm born and bred btw thus allowed to cast aspersions) that it takes the cashing up of a mere £255 to get a casino manager excited. :-)
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 13:52, closed)
I had fun in Portsmouth for a bit
In the end I couldn't wait to move away though. I used to have to walk through Somerstown to get to lectures and town. It could be pretty terrifying after dark!
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 15:37, closed)
In the end I couldn't wait to move away though. I used to have to walk through Somerstown to get to lectures and town. It could be pretty terrifying after dark!
( , Fri 8 May 2009, 15:37, closed)
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