Banks
Your Ginger Fuhrer froths, "I hate my bank. Not because of debt or anything but because I hate being sold to - possibly pathologically so - and everytime I speak to them they try and sell me services. Gold cards, isas, insurance, you know the crap. It drives me insane. I ALREADY BANK WITH YOU. STOP IT. YOU MAKE ME FRIGHTED TO DO MY NORMAL BANKING. I'm angry even thinking about them."
So, tell us your banking stories of woe.
No doubt at least one of you has shagged in the vault, shat on a counter or thrown up in a cash machine. Or something
( , Thu 16 Jul 2009, 13:15)
Your Ginger Fuhrer froths, "I hate my bank. Not because of debt or anything but because I hate being sold to - possibly pathologically so - and everytime I speak to them they try and sell me services. Gold cards, isas, insurance, you know the crap. It drives me insane. I ALREADY BANK WITH YOU. STOP IT. YOU MAKE ME FRIGHTED TO DO MY NORMAL BANKING. I'm angry even thinking about them."
So, tell us your banking stories of woe.
No doubt at least one of you has shagged in the vault, shat on a counter or thrown up in a cash machine. Or something
( , Thu 16 Jul 2009, 13:15)
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Four digits...
“Sex Museum or coffee shop?”
“You what?”
The six foot seven, blond, dutch policeman sighed and pushed a piece of paper towards me.
“Sex Museum or coffee shop? When tourists get their wallets stolen, it’s usually in one of these two places.”
“Oh, I see. Sex Museum. I was so busy watching a raddled old Russian hooker getting anally fisted by a dwarf that I didn’t notice my bag was open. Plus I’m really rather stoned.”
“Yes. Happens a lot.”
So there I am, in Amsterdam, with no money, cards or train tickets and a boyfriend who is so clueless with cash that his bank have actually forbidden him from having a debit card. Through the miracle of the phone, tears and the Royal Bank of Mother, I arrange for a Western Union payment to pick up at the station the next day. And I managed to get my mum to cancel all my cards. Not bad considering I was so out of it I could barely spell my own name by this point.
The rest of the holiday passes without incident (unless you count the boyfriend projectile vomiting in the hotel room) and I return home to find that my bank, Twat West, have delivered me a new card. It’s the Friday of a bank holiday weekend, my housemates are away, so I decide to pop to the local petrol station to buy tobacco and snack food products and spend a couple of days lounging around on the sofa.
Snacks duly selected, I ask the nice chap behind the counter for a pack of Drum and hand over my spanking new card for payment. It swipes, it beeps, it… Oh. It’s been reported as stolen and has to be cut up? Say what now? Sheepishly, the chap snips my card in two and asks if I want to use the phone to call the bank. I surely do, and when I manage to navigate the computer system to finally speak to a real person I am informed that instead of cancelling my stolen card, they had cancelled my new card instead, mistaking it for the stolen one. So not only do I have no card, but my stolen card could have been used by anyone for the last week. I’m appalled.
I realize that not only have I no money on me and more worryingly I have no access to money for three days. And I have no food in the house and more importantly, no fags or booze.
Then the unexpected happens. The guy behind the counter rings up my shopping, throws in an extra packet of baccy, hands me the bag and £20 from his wallet and says “It’s okay, I know you’re good for it, you can pay me on Tuesday…”
The morals of the story are: people can be unexpectedly nice; if you make enough noise to the bank and the banking ombudsman, they’ll apologize, give you £50 and the phone number of the branch so these things can be sorted out quicker in future and that whilst standing gaping at a film of a Chinese woman pissing on an amputee, it is a good idea to keep an eye on your wallet…
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:19, 10 replies)
“Sex Museum or coffee shop?”
“You what?”
The six foot seven, blond, dutch policeman sighed and pushed a piece of paper towards me.
“Sex Museum or coffee shop? When tourists get their wallets stolen, it’s usually in one of these two places.”
“Oh, I see. Sex Museum. I was so busy watching a raddled old Russian hooker getting anally fisted by a dwarf that I didn’t notice my bag was open. Plus I’m really rather stoned.”
“Yes. Happens a lot.”
So there I am, in Amsterdam, with no money, cards or train tickets and a boyfriend who is so clueless with cash that his bank have actually forbidden him from having a debit card. Through the miracle of the phone, tears and the Royal Bank of Mother, I arrange for a Western Union payment to pick up at the station the next day. And I managed to get my mum to cancel all my cards. Not bad considering I was so out of it I could barely spell my own name by this point.
The rest of the holiday passes without incident (unless you count the boyfriend projectile vomiting in the hotel room) and I return home to find that my bank, Twat West, have delivered me a new card. It’s the Friday of a bank holiday weekend, my housemates are away, so I decide to pop to the local petrol station to buy tobacco and snack food products and spend a couple of days lounging around on the sofa.
Snacks duly selected, I ask the nice chap behind the counter for a pack of Drum and hand over my spanking new card for payment. It swipes, it beeps, it… Oh. It’s been reported as stolen and has to be cut up? Say what now? Sheepishly, the chap snips my card in two and asks if I want to use the phone to call the bank. I surely do, and when I manage to navigate the computer system to finally speak to a real person I am informed that instead of cancelling my stolen card, they had cancelled my new card instead, mistaking it for the stolen one. So not only do I have no card, but my stolen card could have been used by anyone for the last week. I’m appalled.
I realize that not only have I no money on me and more worryingly I have no access to money for three days. And I have no food in the house and more importantly, no fags or booze.
Then the unexpected happens. The guy behind the counter rings up my shopping, throws in an extra packet of baccy, hands me the bag and £20 from his wallet and says “It’s okay, I know you’re good for it, you can pay me on Tuesday…”
The morals of the story are: people can be unexpectedly nice; if you make enough noise to the bank and the banking ombudsman, they’ll apologize, give you £50 and the phone number of the branch so these things can be sorted out quicker in future and that whilst standing gaping at a film of a Chinese woman pissing on an amputee, it is a good idea to keep an eye on your wallet…
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:19, 10 replies)
yay
this has everything: sex, snack foods, vomiting, holidays, shit bank shaming and lovely kindess too! cickclickclickclicklickcliclkclicllclciclkclciclkcic
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:33, closed)
this has everything: sex, snack foods, vomiting, holidays, shit bank shaming and lovely kindess too! cickclickclickclicklickcliclkclicllclciclkclciclkcic
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:33, closed)
that guy...
sounds like a saint. i feel your pain on the amsterdam experience but at least it happened in a relatively well-functioning country. it was even less pleasant when it happened to me in a tiny village in turkey. course i'm a spacker for counting on plastic as opposed to cash in a situation like that though.
how's things?
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:35, closed)
sounds like a saint. i feel your pain on the amsterdam experience but at least it happened in a relatively well-functioning country. it was even less pleasant when it happened to me in a tiny village in turkey. course i'm a spacker for counting on plastic as opposed to cash in a situation like that though.
how's things?
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:35, closed)
I do like the way all dutch police speak English.
WWII had it's plus sides.
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:55, closed)
WWII had it's plus sides.
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 13:55, closed)
Obviously
this has all the ingredients required to pique my interest...
Gets a click for the great tale, and if only I could click again for the mental image of interacial amputee watersports hot sex piss action.
Cheers
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 17:02, closed)
this has all the ingredients required to pique my interest...
Gets a click for the great tale, and if only I could click again for the mental image of interacial amputee watersports hot sex piss action.
Cheers
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 17:02, closed)
Morals
People have them, many large corporations don't. You normally have to kick and scream to get the smallest of apologies for the largest of cock-ups.
The shop bloke though? A fucking gent!
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 17:10, closed)
People have them, many large corporations don't. You normally have to kick and scream to get the smallest of apologies for the largest of cock-ups.
The shop bloke though? A fucking gent!
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 17:10, closed)
Ha ha...
I was all ready to click anyway, but the last sentance had me laughing so much I almost forgot to do it.
Very good.
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 17:29, closed)
I was all ready to click anyway, but the last sentance had me laughing so much I almost forgot to do it.
Very good.
( , Fri 17 Jul 2009, 17:29, closed)
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