Pathological Liars
Friz writes, "I recently busted my mate who claimed to have 'supported the Kaiser Chiefs in 2001' by gently mentioning that they weren't even called that back then."
Some people seem to lead complete fantasy lives with lies stacked on lies stacked on more lies. Tell us about the ones you've met.
BTW, if any of you want to admit to making up all your QOTW stories, now would be a good time to do it.
( , Thu 29 Nov 2007, 12:17)
Friz writes, "I recently busted my mate who claimed to have 'supported the Kaiser Chiefs in 2001' by gently mentioning that they weren't even called that back then."
Some people seem to lead complete fantasy lives with lies stacked on lies stacked on more lies. Tell us about the ones you've met.
BTW, if any of you want to admit to making up all your QOTW stories, now would be a good time to do it.
( , Thu 29 Nov 2007, 12:17)
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Some lad when I was about 15
He was 16. In this lifetime, he'd:
-Left the SAS as he was 'bored'
-Been married but divorced for the money
Oh, and he used to walk about in £20 khakis and a yellow jacket, with a walkie talkie from Tesco. Saying he was an ambulance man. When a girl's little sister went missing, he even put on a big front about 'radioing the ambulance boys' to get them to look too (WTF, and obviously a silent walkie talkie) and then told everybody work had phoned him and he had to go (presumably so nobody cogged on). But about three of us were near enough to his phone at the time to hear his mother squalking at him to 'stop talking like that' and to 'get home now for your tea or you're grounded'.
Oh fun!
( , Fri 30 Nov 2007, 1:07, Reply)
He was 16. In this lifetime, he'd:
-Left the SAS as he was 'bored'
-Been married but divorced for the money
Oh, and he used to walk about in £20 khakis and a yellow jacket, with a walkie talkie from Tesco. Saying he was an ambulance man. When a girl's little sister went missing, he even put on a big front about 'radioing the ambulance boys' to get them to look too (WTF, and obviously a silent walkie talkie) and then told everybody work had phoned him and he had to go (presumably so nobody cogged on). But about three of us were near enough to his phone at the time to hear his mother squalking at him to 'stop talking like that' and to 'get home now for your tea or you're grounded'.
Oh fun!
( , Fri 30 Nov 2007, 1:07, Reply)
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