2. The Customer is Cussible. If you have a few thousand hours to spare I highly recommend Not Always Right, a website designed for people in retail to complain anonymously about customers. They have since added: Not Always Legal, Healthy, Family, etc.
So far I have collected three short story ideas from the website. Here is an example of what they offer:
I work at a musical instrument store. A customer is trying to buy something when the checkout shows me a code indicating that the card is registered as stolen.
Me: “Sorry, the checkout is buggy today and it’s locked. I just need to fetch my manager to fix it.”
I tell my manager, and he and the salesman stall long enough for the cops to get there. Three or four officers come in, ask the guy a few questions, and then arrest him.
The best part is that, as the guy is being hauled out in handcuffs, he starts shouting back at us.
Thief: “The service here is terrible! I’m going to tell everyone I know not to shop here!”
3. Play Free Bird. This next piece is off-topic but it is certainly about publishing. In November 1951 a group of friends went hunting in Ireland. One of them, Sir Hugh Beaver, fired at a golden plover and missed. This led to a debate over which was the fastest game bird in Europe.
Unable to find the answer easily, Beaver realized that a book which provided this sort of information would be hugely popular (and profitable) to settle arguments in pubs. So he convinced the brewery for which he worked to publish one: the Guinness Book of World Records has been selling millions ever since. So a failed hunting trip was one of the most profitable expeditions in publishing history...
4. Definitely not me. Do you ever vanity google yourself? No? Liar.
I had a nasty shock recently when I did that. In 2019 Salvatore Lopresti and his son Robert Lopresti of Bristol England, were accused of Modern Slavery for forcing a disabled man to work in their ice cream shop. Nasty story.
5. Is the Rule Forgotten? Take a look at the photo here. Does that actress (Nicola Walker) have blond hair? If not then ITV has violated the international rule I have pointed out in the past: All police shows about cops who investigate cold cases must be headed by blond women.
Whaver their hairstyle the show is worth watching, although Season Four was, well, forgettable. I hear Season Five is coming soon.