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Stingiest things thread(op for R&R access)

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,817 ✭✭✭✭Panthro


    sligojoek wrote: »
    I posted a few years ago here or on a previous thread about an in law who gave me a bottle of bargain basement aftershave for xmas even though I have a bushy beard.

    Well she redeemed herself today. I got the Johnny Cash and Royal Philharmonic Orchestra CD and a scratchcard. I was going to buy the CD anyway and the scratchcard yielded a hundred quid.

    Cha ching

    Pla heeeese tell her you've given it to charity.
    Or bought a hape of bird food.
    Or paid for people's petrol or shopping.

    Gall the woman no end!


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,737 ✭✭✭Hococop


    She will probably demand half of it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,303 ✭✭✭✭Dodge


    theguzman wrote: »

    Am I stingy?

    No, but it’s none of your business what your sister spends her money on and your post here is absolutely pathetic.

    Obviously I don’t care what you spend your money on either but you not spending money on Penney’s shoes doesn’t make you better than her


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,457 ✭✭✭✭El_Duderino 09


    theguzman wrote: »
    ...
    Am I stingy?

    Stingy probably isn’t the right word. You’ve invented your own gift giving system where you will only help people with things they need, such as cash to pay off bills.

    I think there’s a great chance that these people you mentioned will say they don’t want help with those bills and I’d say you’d probably be happy that you offered and they declined so you’re off the hook.

    How much would you pay towards the bills? What’s the convention for paying off other people’s bills?


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,943 ✭✭✭✭the purple tin


    Buying somebody a present that was reduced in a sale and peeling off the label with the lower price, leaving the full price label on it.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,447 ✭✭✭✭castletownman


    Buying somebody a present that was reduced in a sale and peeling off the label with the lower price, leaving the full price label on it.

    My GF's uncle runs a bar, and his wife is known for her stinginess and generally erratic behaviour.

    She showed up to the GF's house on Christmas Eve with a "present"- four coffee cups from the pub that were bought for very cheap, that the husband was basically off-loading.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,992 ✭✭✭Mongfinder General


    My GF's uncle runs a bar, and his wife is known for her stinginess and generally erratic behaviour.

    She showed up to the GF's house on Christmas Eve with a "present"- four coffee cups from the pub that were bought for very cheap, that the husband was basically off-loading.

    I remember working as a lounge boy in a pub when I was a kid. I came in one day to get paid and saw the manager filling up Top brand vodka bottles with cheap vodka. The **** that goes on in pubs is outrageous.


  • Registered Users Posts: 225 ✭✭voldejoie


    Speaking of scratch cards, we do a secret santa type thing at Christmas among the extended family we're close to, so a few different sets of aunts and uncles and cousins. The top budget is 50 euro but there's no real expectation to spend that much, it's just a guide really and gag gifts or something jokey is definitely encouraged.

    One of my cousins who is generally known to be a bit of a gowl (let's call her M) got my mam, and got her a 5 euro scratch card which she had her own mam (my maternal aunt) drop down to the house last week with strict instructions that if she won a fiver she could keep it, but anything more than that would have to go back to M :pac: My aunt was mortified even saying it and of course told mam if she won anything to keep it to herself, but sadly it wasn't a winning scratch card anyway. Not that it stopped M messaging my mam on Facebook and then ringing my sister to find out if anything had been won/if my mam was lying when she said there were no prizes on it :rolleyes: Important to note that she never talks to me ever because she owes me close to 500 euro from before I copped on not to be lending her money!! Her son is making his communion in 2022 though so no doubt she'll be down around me then...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,369 ✭✭✭pgj2015


    voldejoie wrote: »
    Speaking of scratch cards, we do a secret santa type thing at Christmas among the extended family we're close to, so a few different sets of aunts and uncles and cousins. The top budget is 50 euro but there's no real expectation to spend that much, it's just a guide really and gag gifts or something jokey is definitely encouraged.

    One of my cousins who is generally known to be a bit of a gowl (let's call her M) got my mam, and got her a 5 euro scratch card which she had her own mam (my maternal aunt) drop down to the house last week with strict instructions that if she won a fiver she could keep it, but anything more than that would have to go back to M :pac: My aunt was mortified even saying it and of course told mam if she won anything to keep it to herself, but sadly it wasn't a winning scratch card anyway. Not that it stopped M messaging my mam on Facebook and then ringing my sister to find out if anything had been won/if my mam was lying when she said there were no prizes on it :rolleyes: Important to note that she never talks to me ever because she owes me close to 500 euro from before I copped on not to be lending her money!! Her son is making his communion in 2022 though so no doubt she'll be down around me then...




    Buy him some cheap rosary beads or just a card with nothing in it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,347 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    I remember working as a lounge boy in a pub when I was a kid. I came in one day to get paid and saw the manager filling up Top brand vodka bottles with cheap vodka. The **** that goes on in pubs is outrageous.
    Knew a bar man who told me much the same. The owner would serve you genuine spirits till you had 2 or 3 in you then pull from another bottle of cheap crap, assuming you couldn't tell the difference after a few. With vodka and bacardi were you have mixers it was especially easy.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 285 ✭✭jelem


    using electric toaster (despite cost) rather than buy new lighter to light up ciggy.
    i figure alot have done it for a while -- lol


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,347 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    And I didn't buy my elderly parents a present and used the pandemic as an excuse.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,420 ✭✭✭✭sligojoek


    cj maxx wrote: »
    Knew a bar man who told me much the same. The owner would serve you genuine spirits till you had 2 or 3 in you then pull from another bottle of cheap crap, assuming you couldn't tell the difference after a few. With vodka and bacardi were you have mixers it was especially easy.

    That's going on since time began.

    There was a story going around Nenagh years ago, maybe urban legend, But I knew the man and wouldn't be surprised.

    One day a lad came into the pub and asked for a large Powers from the owner's daughter. She was about 14 and just standing in while the father went out for something.

    Daughter: Would you like red lemonade or Ginger ale?

    Customer: No thanks. I'll just put a drop of water into it.

    Daughter: Ah there's no need. Daddy put the water in this morning before he opened.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 25,420 ✭✭✭✭sligojoek


    Another publican I worked for had a saying regarding the pewter measures.

    "Never empty it, never fill it and NEVER spill it."


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,479 ✭✭✭KevRossi


    I worked in a well known hotel in the Midlands in the late 80's during the summer and at weekends. One of the jobs was to go to the supermarket and buy about 10-12 bottles of spirits every Friday, Saturday and Sunday. A mix of whiskey, gin, vodka etc. Paid cash, receipt thrown away. Owners would sell them and remove them from till receipts so no tax due on them. Shafted revenue and in their own way, us.

    A very wealthy family then and now. Supposedly lost loads in the boom as they had huge investments in property. A couple of years later they were back up and running. They had a load of money 'invested' abroad. They have loads of contacts so I doubt revenue will ever go after them properly. Even if they did they'd never trace all of it.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2 Clue Lady


    I was in Tesco last week. A neighbour ahead of me was holding up the queue at the customer service checkout. I couldn’t figure out what was going on ... she bought 20 scratch cards and proceeded to get the checkout girl to scan them immediately after purchasing them. Of course, most of them were “not a winner” and the checkout girl asked my neighbour whether she wanted her to bin the losing scratch cards. My neighbour said no and put them into her handbag. I thought it was a bit strange but the checkout girl said this was a regular occurrence ... my neighbour does the weekly lotto run for her neighbours and gives the losing unscratched tickets to them. She pockets the winning tickets for herself. How stingy is that?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,519 ✭✭✭the_pen_turner


    Clue Lady wrote: »
    I was in Tesco last week. A neighbour ahead of me was holding up the queue at the customer service checkout. I couldn’t figure out what was going on ... she bought 20 scratch cards and proceeded to get the checkout girl to scan them immediately after purchasing them. Of course, most of them were “not a winner” and the checkout girl asked my neighbour whether she wanted her to bin the losing scratch cards. My neighbour said no and put them into her handbag. I thought it was a bit strange but the checkout girl said this was a regular occurrence ... my neighbour does the weekly lotto run for her neighbours and gives the losing unscratched tickets to them. She pockets the winning tickets for herself. How stingy is that?

    im actually impressed with that level of stinge. its a stroke of genius as well. obviusly wrong and mean but bloody smart.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,960 ✭✭✭✭Thargor


    Clue Lady wrote: »
    I was in Tesco last week. A neighbour ahead of me was holding up the queue at the customer service checkout. I couldn’t figure out what was going on ... she bought 20 scratch cards and proceeded to get the checkout girl to scan them immediately after purchasing them. Of course, most of them were “not a winner” and the checkout girl asked my neighbour whether she wanted her to bin the losing scratch cards. My neighbour said no and put them into her handbag. I thought it was a bit strange but the checkout girl said this was a regular occurrence ... my neighbour does the weekly lotto run for her neighbours and gives the losing unscratched tickets to them. She pockets the winning tickets for herself. How stingy is that?
    im actually impressed with that level of stinge. its a stroke of genius as well. obviusly wrong and mean but bloody smart.
    But you have to scratch the card to reveal the code you scan to see if its a winner, the barcode on the back doesnt do it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,519 ✭✭✭the_pen_turner


    Thargor wrote: »
    But you have to scratch the card to reveal the code you scan to see if its a winner, the barcode on the back doesnt do it.

    that makes way more sense.
    i was thinking that a lot of scrupules shop staff could scan them and seel only the good ones to their crownies


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,937 ✭✭✭SmartinMartin


    Clue Lady wrote: »
    I was in Tesco last week. A neighbour ahead of me was holding up the queue at the customer service checkout. I couldn’t figure out what was going on ... she bought 20 scratch cards and proceeded to get the checkout girl to scan them immediately after purchasing them. Of course, most of them were “not a winner” and the checkout girl asked my neighbour whether she wanted her to bin the losing scratch cards. My neighbour said no and put them into her handbag. I thought it was a bit strange but the checkout girl said this was a regular occurrence ... my neighbour does the weekly lotto run for her neighbours and gives the losing unscratched tickets to them. She pockets the winning tickets for herself. How stingy is that?

    This is just not true.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,845 ✭✭✭Antares35


    Thargor wrote: »
    But you have to scratch the card to reveal the code you scan to see if its a winner, the barcode on the back doesnt do it.

    There's a small code on the front that has to be scratched, is it called a QR code I think, tells if it's a winner. The main panel where you eg match three and win, is just for the fun of 'playing' the game.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,943 ✭✭✭✭the purple tin


    Those dirty tricks go on in lots of bars.
    I read a book years ago about some world famous, expensive old hotel in London. Written anonymously by an ex-employee about all the stunts they pulled.
    One trick was to keep a small dish of each spirit under the bar. If a punter was well away and on g and t's for eg, he would dip the glass in the gin and then fill it with tonic. The tipsy punter would taste the gin on the lip of the glass and not suspect anything.
    Then the barman could either trouser the money for those drinks or keep a tally of how many he had sold. When he had sold a bottle worth of 'gin', he could go to the storeroom and swipe a full bottle which wouldn't be missed in the stocktake.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,992 ✭✭✭Mongfinder General


    Those dirty tricks go on in lots of bars.
    I read a book years ago about some world famous, expensive old hotel in London. Written anonymously by an ex-employee about all the stunts they pulled.
    One trick was to keep a small dish of each spirit under the bar. If a punter was well away and on g and t's for eg, he would dip the glass in the gin and then fill it with tonic. The tipsy punter would taste the gin on the lip of the glass and not suspect anything.
    Then the barman could either trouser the money for those drinks or keep a tally of how many he had sold. When he had sold a bottle worth of 'gin', he could go to the storeroom and swipe a full bottle which wouldn't be missed in the stocktake.

    And then it theres’s the inverse logic of this. Bring in your own gin and tonic and pocket the takings from the sales of said gin and tonic. Don’t ring it into the till. The stock is as is. You’ve just sold from your own stash. There’s about 28 gins to a litre bottle of gin in Ireland. Let’s just say a bottle of gin costs €28 and a tonic costs €1. So that’s €2 per gin and tonic. If you’re selling it for €7, that’s €5 in your sky rocket per drink. €140 a bottle.

    I saw this being done in the U.S. but with kegs of beer. The guy was literally bringing his own leg. He was also paying somebody to cover a couple of hours of his shift so that he could Uber/limo drive!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17,081 ✭✭✭✭the beer revolu


    Clue Lady wrote: »
    I was in Tesco last week. A neighbour ahead of me was holding up the queue at the customer service checkout. I couldn’t figure out what was going on ... she bought 20 scratch cards and proceeded to get the checkout girl to scan them immediately after purchasing them. Of course, most of them were “not a winner” and the checkout girl asked my neighbour whether she wanted her to bin the losing scratch cards. My neighbour said no and put them into her handbag. I thought it was a bit strange but the checkout girl said this was a regular occurrence ... my neighbour does the weekly lotto run for her neighbours and gives the losing unscratched tickets to them. She pockets the winning tickets for herself. How stingy is that?

    You've jumped to some conclusion about your neighbour, there.
    People ask for scanned scratch card and loto tickets back because they are afraid that the server might say a card/ticket has nothing on it when it actually has and rather than bin it, they pocket it.

    Your version makes no sense whatsoever.


  • Registered Users Posts: 10,943 ✭✭✭✭the purple tin


    And then it theres’s the inverse logic of this. Bring in your own gin and tonic and pocket the takings from the sales of said gin and tonic. Don’t ring it into the till. The stock is as is. You’ve just sold from your own stash. There’s about 28 gins to a litre bottle of gin in Ireland. Let’s just say a bottle of gin costs €28 and a tonic costs €1. So that’s €2 per gin and tonic. If you’re selling it for €7, that’s €5 in your sky rocket per drink. €140 a bottle.

    I saw this being done in the U.S. but with kegs of beer. The guy was literally bringing his own leg. He was also paying somebody to cover a couple of hours of his shift so that he could Uber/limo drive!
    Very clever yes. The owner might start to wonder why the sales of gin are way down every night that Timmy is working though.
    A lot of people have been caught out by the boss having secret cameras installed in the bar and over the till.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,652 ✭✭✭✭AndyBoBandy


    Happened years ago in a club I was a member of... a barman was putting cheap Vodka into the Smirnoff bottle, and was eventually caught with a hidden camera.....

    I don’t know what his endgame was though? Was he keeping the money and claiming no vodka was sold? Or was he simply stealing the Smirnoff and replacing it with cheaper vodka?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,369 ✭✭✭pgj2015


    some little scumbag barman gave me the change of a tenner when I gave him a 20 in a nightclub one time. when I pulled him up on it he got the "manager" to do up the till and said I made a mistake. I was thinking about reporting it to the club owner but I kind of thought at the time that the staff reflect what the owner is like. I probably should have reported him though, the scumbag.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,649 ✭✭✭Wildly Boaring


    Our local was run by 2 brothers.

    Both of them were notorious for short changing people once the night pushed on.

    They were narky by nature so even a sober person questioning the change got a grumpy answer and the rest of their change thrown at them.

    One of their sons is working there years. If one of the old fellas short changed you, give him a nod, show what was on your hand. Would even need a sentence and he'd sort it out.

    No idea why people frequent the place. It is a landmark. About all that's going for it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,097 ✭✭✭johndaman66


    pgj2015 wrote: »
    some little scumbag barman gave me the change of a tenner when I gave him a 20 in a nightclub one time. when I pulled him up on it he got the "manager" to do up the till and said I made a mistake. I was thinking about reporting it to the club owner but I kind of thought at the time that the staff reflect what the owner is like. I probably should have reported him though, the scumbag.
    That was very very common when we used to have nightclubs around the country. The amount of times they got away with it would have likely well outweighed the amount of times they were called up on it.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,558 ✭✭✭✭dreamers75


    And then it theres’s the inverse logic of this. Bring in your own gin and tonic and pocket the takings from the sales of said gin and tonic. Don’t ring it into the till. The stock is as is. You’ve just sold from your own stash. There’s about 28 gins to a litre bottle of gin in Ireland. Let’s just say a bottle of gin costs €28 and a tonic costs €1. So that’s €2 per gin and tonic. If you’re selling it for €7, that’s €5 in your sky rocket per drink. €140 a bottle.

    I saw this being done in the U.S. but with kegs of beer. The guy was literally bringing his own leg. He was also paying somebody to cover a couple of hours of his shift so that he could Uber/limo drive!

    Thats how bars in upstate New York work as payment for the bartender, he/she gets to bring a bottle in and their mates "buy" it.

    They get €50 for the shift and whatever is sold from their bottle, the bar makes money from them buying other **** on an otherwise empty night.

    Strange practice.


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