aslan
Well-Known Member
Don't laugh. I think she needed back surgery.Sharky said:a stripper w/ needed medical purposes...now that i would like to see :laugh:
Don't laugh. I think she needed back surgery.Sharky said:a stripper w/ needed medical purposes...now that i would like to see :laugh:
I had a guy in AC do about the same thing ,trying to give me advise & in the end tried to hit me up for $100 . I had to get nasty ,although I may have had a few drinks.No, the casino will feed you drinks until you fall out of the chair or run out of money,then the my escort you to the door. Pogolaserjet said:Sometime ago in Vegas while playing blackjack, drinking, and acting somewhat drunk, I was befriended by a stranger at my table. This guy claimed to be from out of town as I was and seemed to be more than a little concerned about my welfare. I'm not especially outgoing, particularly when playing, so this really made me wonder if the guy was a casino employee sent to watch out for me. I've used this drinking cover a lot of times and never has anyone been concerned about my drinking. Have any of you ever heard or experienced a casino employee watching out for a drunk?
When a patron appears to the casino staff to be vulnerable - such as having too much to drink - it's always the job of security to keep an eye on them. There's no way they would waste the resources of a plainclothes house detective on this. What if something urgently important came up when they really needed him? No; the guy was NOT a "baby-sitter". My opinion? Hustler.laserjet said:So far no one thinks I had a baby sitter.
Probably due to having to lug around those "medically altered" boobsaslan said:Don't laugh. I think she needed back surgery.
Las Vegas must have the largest number of boob jobs per capita than any other city in the world bar none. Even the young locals feel pressured to go under the knife. It's some kind of right of passage in Vegas culture.paddywhack said:Probably due to having to lug around those "medically altered" boobs
A very sharp good friend once said in Vegas there are two kinds of people, Sharps (i.e., the people who live there) and Squares (the people who visit Vegas). Even if you're a sharp square...and local you meet is a square sharp, they still try to take advantage of you. Cab drivers try to drive you through the tunnel, hookers try to drug you, and people try to get you to trust them so they can try to borrow money. It's all part of the Vegas experience.laserjet said:Sometime ago in Vegas while playing blackjack, drinking, and acting somewhat drunk, I was befriended by a stranger at my table. This guy claimed to be from out of town as I was and seemed to be more than a little concerned about my welfare. I'm not especially outgoing, particularly when playing, so this really made me wonder if the guy was a casino employee sent to watch out for me. I've used this drinking cover a lot of times and never has anyone been concerned about my drinking. Have any of you ever heard or experienced a casino employee watching out for a drunk?
Hookers try to drug you in LV? You mean they can't find guys who patronize hookers who also use drugs willingly? Sounds pretty crazy especially being you can get some federal time for product tampering and using chemicals as a weapon consecutive to your state time for robbery.bigplayer said:A very sharp good friend once said in Vegas there are two kinds of people, Sharps (i.e., the people who live there) and Squares (the people who visit Vegas). Even if you're a sharp square...and local you meet is a square sharp, they still try to take advantage of you. Cab drivers try to drive you through the tunnel, hookers try to drug you, and people try to get you to trust them so they can try to borrow money. It's all part of the Vegas experience.
I've been driven through the tunnel once. I refused to pay the fare. I asked the cab driver to call the police and said that I will tell the police that he took me through the tunnel. I'd easily be able to prove to the cop that I was coming from the airport and was taken through the tunnel (I had luggage and a boarding pass showing that I landed an hour ago, and the fare on the meter was high) He didn't call the cops and settled for no fare. No tip either.bigplayer said:A very sharp good friend once said in Vegas there are two kinds of people, Sharps (i.e., the people who live there) and Squares (the people who visit Vegas). Even if you're a sharp square...and local you meet is a square sharp, they still try to take advantage of you. Cab drivers try to drive you through the tunnel, hookers try to drug you, and people try to get you to trust them so they can try to borrow money. It's all part of the Vegas experience.
I asked to go through the tunnel, since it's the fastest way to my house on the West side.alwayssplitaces said:I've been driven through the tunnel once. I refused to pay the fare. I asked the cab driver to call the police and said that I will tell the police that he took me through the tunnel. I'd easily be able to prove to the cop that I was coming from the airport and was taken through the tunnel (I had luggage and a boarding pass showing that I landed an hour ago, and the fare on the meter was high) He didn't call the cops and settled for no fare. No tip either.
Good to see you again Aslan.aslan said:I had a guy come up to me while playing a blackjack slot machine in planet hollywood a couple of years ago claiming to have knowledge of how to beat the machine. He was a personable Asian fellow and I let him, first, instruct me what to do, then later actually let him play the game directly. He lost my money, lol, a few dollars. I can only imagine that he may have figured if he won I would give him part of those winnings, although he did not seem the least bit needy.
IF this story is true, then you were EXTREMELY lucky he DIDN'T call the cops. You would have gotten a free ride all right, but NOT in a taxicab, and NOT to the destination you were expecting! You simply CANNOT win an argument with a Las Vegas cab driver, no matter HOW reasonable your side of the story may be! The law will ALWAYS take their side; hands down.alwayssplitaces said:I've been driven through the tunnel once. I refused to pay the fare. I asked the cab driver to call the police and said that I will tell the police that he took me through the tunnel.
Here I thought you were a professor or some other scholarly person not a cab driver.FLASH1296 said:Sucker is right.
Incidentally, the cab driver can have you arrested for "theft of service"
Long ago and far away I had been a full-time taxi driver in a major metropolitan city.
A wealthy individual who was rather intoxicated had me drive him to the suburbs late at night.
Without cause, he refused to pay.
I drove him to a police station so I could have him arrested.
He later mailed me a check for 4 figures to encourage me to drop the charges.
I did so.
Two physicists, one of them is a PhD, have regular conversations. What does the non-PhD usually say in the beginning ?Eye of the Tiger said:Here I thought you were a professor or some other scholarly person not a cab driver.
Some of the smartest people I know are self educated. They never did well in school for a variety of reasons. They usually had to do with psychological make up or just being so smart school bored them to tears. They taught themselves so far ahead of everyone else school was just a boring review of knowledge that other students found challenging but was trivial basics to them.MangoJ said:Two physicists, one of them is a PhD, have regular conversations. What does the non-PhD usually say in the beginning ?
"I'll have two cheeseburgers".
Some of the DUMBEST people I know are COLLEGE-educated. Go figure.tthree said:Some of the smartest people I know are self educated.
A college degree provides you with credentials to get certain job interviews, nothing more. After that, you're on your own.Sucker said:Some of the DUMBEST people I know are COLLEGE-educated. Go figure.