They were all equally grotesque, phoney, stupid and self-obsessed; if they were professionals you might say that they personified George Bernard Shaw's maxim that All professionals are a conspiracy against the laity. But only Mark had any semblance of expertise or probity; all of them were cheap hustlers, whoring their arses off, red-lighting at different points on Money's Reeperbahn. Fascinating stuff, worth a look.
ONLY A PAWN IN THEIR GAME. POVERTY AMONG THE RICH.
The other series is Posh Pawn in which people who - despite all the evidence to the contrary - consider themselves rich must nevertheless strike a deal with old-fashioned usury, the pawnbroker. In the cases featured in this episode all of the borrowers were only borrowing, you understand, to kick-start their brilliant business ventures, apart, that is, from Penury's sole representative, a stupid totty who needed ten grand or so to pay-off her late mother's funeral bill.
The pawnbrokers cast themselves more as charity workers than money-lenders - the reality, of course, is that if the pledge is duly redeemed they will have earned a tidy sum in commission and if, as is likely, it is not redeemed, it will only have cost them a fraction of its eventual retail value; heads they win, tails you lose; that's the way it works and it was both sad and irritating to see the self-delusion of the pledgers.
One guy, Chris, Chris Used-to-be-Somebody, had a ludicrous business idea. He had invented, as he put it, a kind of cinema usherette's ice cream tray but this was not designed to hold choc-ices, it was to be worn around the waist of bar staff whilst they collected dirty glasses, placing them into glass-sized circular apertures in the tray before bringing them back to be washed. It was shit design on a monumental scale. As anyone who has worked in a bar will tell you, ten fingers will clamp ten glasses one to another, five on each hand; alternatively six or eight pint glasses can be stacked one inside another and carried nestling against the forearm, a loss of balance or a slip on spillage is rendered somewhat safe by simply dropping the glasses; Chris's round-the-waist tray was secured to the wearer, a slip could prove lethally dangerous, who would want to walk through a roomfull of drunks with glasses tied to his or her body? Mind you, if Chris had any sense he wouldn't be hoping to launch his wonder-product with the help of his local pawnbroker. He needed 25 to 50 thousand pounds, he said, for marketing his heap of shit to the nation's licensed victuallers and so he dug out his Tag Hauer solid gold watch and some of his mother's jewellery. Hoping for fifty, he settled for twenty, bidding his watch and other bits not Goodbye but au revoir. I know little about these things but the watch, in mint condition with all the documents was clearly a collector's piece and so, in the unlikely event of publicans not queuing-up to buy Chris's suicide tray, I wouldn't be surprised if the solid gold Tag made the pawnbroker six figures at auction, having allowed Chris about five and a half grand against it.
Some other geezer had a brilliant business venture lined-up and he pawned his Ferrari
for a hundred and twenty grand; some former model,
the wrong side of forty, with a face, in Warren Zevon's sardonic phrase, looking like something Death brought with him in his suitcase, had, with some girlfriends, as she called them, designed knickers which she thought would make them all rich and she, too, only needed fifty grand to market her idea. In her modelling days she had secreted away some goodies, bits of diamonds and notably designer handbags, gifts from exes she called them, tactfully. Her old Dad, enthused by his daughter's newfound business acumen threw-in some of the family heirloom jewels, just to help-out his walking corpse of a daughter.
There was an unintended hilarious scene, in which the pawnbroker's in-house handbag expert,
some old Cockney git who should have found something better to do with his life took the handbags to l'handbaggers handbagger, some old trout in a trendy store who knew everything knowable about handbags, in order that they might lend the client a fair amount on her Hermes bag (timeless, timeless)
but not so much on the crocodile job as the clasp was a little worn.
Fuck me, Jesus, that London, what a place that has such creatures in it. What with Eilleen the gobby strumpet, Darren the Eviction Enforcer and now this wretched old haberdasher wetting her cheesy old knickers about a fucking handbag one prayed, perhaps profanely, for another Great Fire or Black Death, wipe these useless fuckers out.
Mrs Ishmael thought that the bint pledging the handbags and diamonds was a ladyman. And maybe s/he was. S/he was, after all, a friend, they said, of the pawnbroker-in-chief. And nothing would surprise me about him.
She got the loan, anyway, fifty grand and we must await shooting stars in the underwear firmament. If she and her coven don't do it all on coke. I will venture that there is little in the way of follow up on these, erm, these business ventures
It was probably the farthest thing from the minds of the producers but there was a morality tale contained within all this consumerist horseshit.
Stupid Totty had tendered her grandfather's WW1 medals, hoping for ten grand, silly cow. In ordinary circumstamces the pawnbrokers would've just laughed at her and sent her packing but since this was TeeVee the Cockney, in-house handbag expert said he would do some ree-surch, I shouldn't think he could research his name and address but somebody, anyway, on the production team, established that these were relativey unexceptional service medals, given to any members of the then Royal Flying Corp who had been anywhere near the Front. Stupid Totty's granddad had been a sergeant mechanic and someone on the production team had obtained a copy of his service record for her and a scene was constructed in which Mr Handbag strolled up the path, into the gaff and revealed the truth about her ancestor to the greedy bint. She had never looked around the edge of one medal which was engraved with graddad's name and rank and she feigned being thrilled at now discovering it. The valuation, said Diamond Geezer, Head of Handbags, on the one medal, was four. Thousand, she gasped. Pounds. And the other one? Ten. Ten Pounds. Lady Avarice put on a brave show, insisting that had she known what the medals meant she never wouldof thought of selling them, they'd just have to pull their belts in, her and hubby, to pay for Mum's funeral bill, praps not go on holiday so much. Cockney git actually had the cheek to say that it was all part of the service, connecting customers wiv their families, even if what they wanted to pawn was shite and a waste of everyone's fucking time. Family, innit, 'swots important.
In a world less ruinously skewed the medals would have been far and away more valuable than a few handbags, a vulgar, gaudy pimp's watch and a more or less useless flashy automobile.
Militaria, that's what they call it on Flog It and Bargain Hunt
but that's just consumerspeak; they are actually part of a sombre, national treasure. When those medals were awarded the recipients were told all sorts of stuff about courage and duty and sacrifice and patriotism, all of it now, quite literally, as far as Money is concerned, worthless.
6 comments:
Oddly enough, my dog likes watching one of those daytime TV advertising shows we get down here. Takes it very seriously and sometimes barks approval - he particularly likes ladies underwear.
Harris doesn't care for the telly, he is more of a foodie. We just had some Evesham asparagus which he enjoyed. But not as much as he likes smoked haddock, mashed potatoes and cabbage. He does eat dog food but he prefers a well balanced proper human diet.
The arse in the last picture we see down here - I'd assumed he was a caricature of what the English think the Aussies think an Englishman is. No doubt we will get those other progs when they drop the price sufficiently for our public broadcaster to be tempted. TV down here must be the worst on the planet.
He is a caricature, that arsebloke, but he's making a fortune. I don't know if he is an expert or if it's all the work of researchers; he is certainly very nasty and it slips out now and again, he might, therefore, have slithered from the antiques trade which has more than it's share of the unGodly, Christies and Sothebys, to name but most of them.
When even Google are starting to buy London property as a means of fleecing the tax payer, well, it seems that the humble Landanner can go fuck himself should the prospect of home ownership be on his agenda - they're only voters anyway and fuck me, can't have them getting in the way of international money laundering - fuck, they'll be wanting other stuff too, i'd wager - some kind of human rights next, the cheeky cunts.
There need only be a few cunts like Fletcher and McKnight in education and health, which there are, and the whole shebang'll be sold off. Come the revolution there should be more than a few union leaders dangling from the People's lamp posts.
I remember reading Decca Aitkenhead in the Guardian, years ago, saying that the probation service offered the only decent, human face to be found in the grinding behemoth of the criminal justice system. That was at the tail end period of the service's role being to advise, assist and befriend the outlaw, bring him back inside. Fuck me, Jack Torture couldn't be doing with that shit and now it's all gone; politicians and union leaders shitting on members and public alike. As you say, mr dtp, nothing must get in the way of GlobaCrime.