Tag Archives: USA

Comedy Club

We stayed for a couple of days with a medical student in Providence, Rhode Island where the main bit of excitement (even more exciting than hearing me singing the Eagles song The Last Resort loudly and incompletely as I couldn’t remember any more of it than – “She came from Providence, the one in Rhode Island, where the something, something, something, something in the air” and something about packing “her hopes and dreams like a refugee something, something father something across the sea”) – yes, even more exciting than me repeating that over and over again was that we went to a Comedy Club.

It was staging a qualifying round of a national competition to find a new comic talent. The two winners from that night’s heat would win a trip to Vegas to compete in the next stage. There were 9 comedians lined up. We got there early. We were hungry and they did sort of bar food there so we went in to eat. They put us at a table for two slap bang in front of the stage.

Basically, the front row – – was us. Ordinarily, I would have moved because it didn’t take a genius to figure that it was extremely likely that we would become involved in some of the stand up and we were a little worried it might not go well and would be awkward for them knowing there were two vicars sitting smack in front. But the thing that kept us there was that this trip was about new experiences and well, what was the worst that could happen?

What was the worst that could happen in a grungy flea-pit comedy club in a beat-up part of a rundown town where there were only two items on the menu; a menu which was a testament to the art of de-cluttering and keeping things simple. There were only two words on it. One was “Ribs”. No indication where the ribs had once lodged. Just, Ribs. And the other was “Burger”. “Do you want ribs or burger?” asked the barman when I enquired about food. I was just about to ask what the low fat gluten free super-food vegetarian option was tonight when I realised I would never say that.

We had burger.

The compere got up to get things rolling. He was large, round and very, very bitter. Like a 6 foot aspirin.

He clearly resented being there. He’d been in the business for 20 years he said (several times) and yet there he was, nowhere else. He couldn’t think why he hadn’t made it. We could have given him some ideas but he was too bitter and angry to risk telling. I think he had decided long ago to take his anger out on his audience.

Maybe 20 years experience had taught him that people weren’t going to laugh if he tried to tell jokes, that they weren’t going to laugh if he engaged them in wry observational humour or situational comedy and, basically, with him they just weren’t going to even snigger. I think he assumed we would only laugh if we were afraid he would hurt us if we didn’t.

Shall we engage the audience? Nah, let’s not look for engagement, let’s go for an acrimonious divorce.

And two middle aged vicars were sitting immediately in front of him. We were close enough to actually hear his mind unhinging. We nibbled nervously on our burgers and hoped that if we had our mouths full he wouldn’t ask us to speak.

To kick things off he spent a few minutes picking on the drunken stag party lurking around several tables near the back, asking them questions, ignoring the answers and begging to be heckled. He then moved on to make fun of the guy at the bar who couldn’t help coming from Wisconsin. Warming up, his eyes then ranged around the room: he looked straight at me: leaned back slightly and, as I stuffed an entire burger bun in my mouth we were saved. Saved, it must be said, by an unlikely source.

A gay suicide bomber.

He spotted a suicide bomber sitting at one of the tables in the third row. A suicide bomber sitting on his own. A suicide bomber, therefore, with no support. Nor, it must be said, with any form of explosive device. We only know that he was a suicide bomber because the compere told us he had to be because he was Arabic. Repeatedly told us. And then we learned that he must be gay because he was sitting on his own and so obviously had no girlfriend. The compere’s brain didn’t necessarily follow logical pathways. Having someone whom he could call a gay suicide bomber in the club seemed to be the answer to all the compere’s wildest dreams and so he spent a few minutes of what he probably considered “jolly banter” but what sounded more like the recipe of a hate crime until he eventually tired of that and, as contentedly as a cat that’s just left an unpleasant present in your slipper, introduced the first comedian.

In one respect he was a great warm-up for the contestants. After that opening it was easy for them to look better.

But gee willikers it was stereotype central. The old Jewish guy only did jokes about being an old Jewish guy, the gay guy solely did jokes about being a gay guy, the menopausal woman exclusively did jokes about being a menopausal woman, the massively overweight guy limited himself to singularly doing jokes about being massively overweight. And so on. And on. Each of the 9 hopefuls were drawn with a broad brush deeply dipped in a big pot of cliché.

The language was often stronger than the jokes, but hats off to them, 9 very brave individuals; and it was brilliant fun. A small sweaty club full of vocal locals. Some material to laugh at, some to groan at and you could even download an app to vote for your favourites as it went along.

And then, once they’d all had their 5 minutes of fame the compere got back up to change the tone. With the judges off compiling the votes and deciding on the two winners Missed-a-Personality returned to fill in.

By now the stag party were pretty far gone and he wasn’t getting any coherent response from them. The suicide bomber, fair play to him, had stayed and this defiance brought with it less “comic” potential. The Wisconsin lad had moved from being sat at the bar to being slumped over it, which meant new blood was needed.

The compere breathed in and smelt the sweetest aroma a bully’s nostrils can snort on. The smell of fear. He looked down with veloceraptor eye.

“Soooooo, where are you guys from?”

We no longer had burger to protect us.

“England.”

At least, I’m pretty sure that I said England but from his response what I think I must actually have said was “I bet you can’t scream at me for 5 minutes.”

Impressively he didn’t seem to draw breath during the whole tirade. When he did pause, having finished off with a rapid and increasingly rabid version of “I’m Henery the Eighth I am” he leaned close and said “And what do you English *&^$$$! ++$$^&* do in England?”

“Urrr, well, we’re both priests, actually.”

“Ohhhhh ****!”

The audience seemed to think this was the funniest thing that had happened in their entire lives.

And you never know, maybe this would be the cue for him to enter into some clever witty banter with us.

Or maybe we’d just thrown a meaty bone to a doberman. He launched. Verbally. Though most of the verbs were variations of fairly intimate activities. He had a very loud voice. He also had a microphone. This was only going to be very one way traffic. I got the impression that even the stag party were feeling a little uncomfortable with it all and the suicide bomber had stopped entering codes into his phone. Eventually one of the judges came onto the stage to stop him and produced an envelope within which was the name of the two winners. The neurotic new dad who had told jokes about being a neurotic new dad and the massively overweight guy had made it through. We all clapped.

People started leaving. The menopausal comedienne came up to us and said hi and thanked us for coming. Then the compere came up and wanted to know why on earth we had come to something we knew would be offensive and where we clearly would never be welcome.

We told him perfectly truthfully that we hadn’t been offended by any of the 9 comedians. Admittedly, we probably wouldn’t be able to use much of what they’d said in a typical Sunday sermon but this was a comedy club and we wanted to experience it and so why should a priest not be there? You choose whether or not to take offence at something and there was nothing in what they had said that would cause us to do so.

The only thing we did find offensive about the evening was him – and that was only because his brand of humour was bullying and vicious. The others were just trying to get people to laugh: I think he was just trying to get people.

He said that the audience expected that sort of humour from him.

He’s been doing it for 20 years so I guess they do expect it.

But it doesn’t mean they can’t hope for something more.

Drive in Movie

We spent a few days on Cape Cod, staying in an Air B&B run by an interesting guy who looked a little too much like a serial killer for my liking. Still, we needed a room at short notice and he had one (serial killers will always make room for one more.)

Please note I am not saying that he was a serial killer. I’m sure he probably wasn’t. Not even a bit. At least, I have no reason to suspect that he was: I’m just saying he did have that sort of look about him. The sort of look that means you do NOT turn your back on him and that Ella and I always tried to make sure we were either side of him so that if he went for one the other could escape.

Apart from his day job in the healing profession (obviously wants to give something back) in his spare time he played in an incredibly unlikely looking band and invited us along to watch them on our first evening. The venue was a small bar on the beach and we spent the night eating excellent local chowder and talking for the locals. I say for, rather than to cos they lurrrved our accents and kept getting us to say stuff.

We returned to our room late leaving our host playing mellow jazz and I wondered about sleeping in the chair and putting pillows in the bed so it looked like we were there which might buy us a valuable few seconds of confusion if he rushed in and we needed to escape.

We made it through the night un-killed and next day, as we drove up to the top of the peninsular we passed a sign for a drive in movie theatre. The place looked exactly like it should look. A huge field with an old style diner stuck in the middle of it and rows of original 1950s poles and speakers as far as the eye could see. A wellying great big screen gave a pretty good indication of where you should be pointed towards – – and it was $7 for a double bill! That would be our evening sorted.

How could we not.

It started after dark with Jurassic World, followed by San Andreas. You can’t get much more All-American than those. We arrived about an hour before kick-off and pulled up in a bay about 3 rows from the front. The field was already filling up and, although this was a Monday evening we ended with several hundred cars and pickups by the time the films started. People were having barbecues behind their cars, picnics all over the place – many vehicles were pointing away from the screen with tailgates open and people lying in the back. It looked, felt, smelt, sounded just exactly as you’d hope it would and if Sandy Olsson and Danny Zuko had skipped round the corner belting out “You’re the one that I want” it wouldn’t have seemed out of place.

The national anthem exploded through the speakers and all around people instantly stood up. Quite a few of them banged their heads on car roofs but once they’d realised their error and got out of the cars all around were hands thrust across chests and lusty singing filling the night air. It was great – and let’s face it, they do have a far better anthem than us so why not.

I loved the fact that in between the two films when we all piled in to the fast-food booth to stock up on snacks I found that they only served two sorts of popcorn: plain or salted. They didn’t serve sweet, the lady told me, as it was less healthy for you. So far so laudable. What they do have however, at the end of the counter, was a massive container of syrup with a tap at the bottom where people were taking their plain popcorn and covering it with rivers of golden goo. That has my seal of approval. Unsweetened popcorn is a waste of space.

At the end of San Andreas, which is basically a film about an earthquake managing to destroy everything on the West Coast of America except Dwayne Johnson’s family they, and a few other survivors are wandering up a hill away from the devastation and one of them asks “What do we do now?” and Dwayne stoically replies “We rebuild!” and from the pick-up truck next to us the dramatic stillness is rent by a guy shouting “Yeah! Yeah! That’s why they call us Ameri-CANS”.

Cue car horns.

I love Americans. They’re just so…. American.

Awaiting nightfall.

Awaiting nightfall.

A very grand canyon

Sometimes you just have to embrace the tack. Don’t fight it, you’ll only come across as a grump. Embrace the kitsch and allow the awfulness to wash over you like a warm, badly made, slightly smelly blanket.

And you never know, you might end up enjoying some of it.

We embraced the tack – we went for the full experience. There’s no point merely going to the Grand Canyon, seeing how big it is and then going home. No siree. Not when there are other ways….

So we went on the train to the Grand Canyon. Not just any old train – but THE Grand Canyon train which takes you from Williams, Arizona to the south rim of the canyon in a gloriously tacky way.

They wouldn’t call it tacky, mind you. Indeed I didn’t find the word tacky mentioned even once on their website. They call it things like “exciting” and “adventurous” and words like that. They’re obviously entitled to choose their own words – I’m happy to stick with mine. I’ll stick with tacky.
The day starts authentically in exactly the same way it would have done in the good ol’ bad ol’ Wild West with an early morning cowboy shoot out in a mock-up Wild West street next to the platform: the Cactus Creek Gang had a run in with the sherif and he filled them full of lead. There was audience participation, mockery of Wisconsin folk, a bit of slapstick – all good clean fun.


(Another one bites the dust)

 

Once boarded, we had “entertainers” come along the train to “entertain” us. A guitar playing chap on the way out who had a moustache and a mouth organ, and then a truly manically and almost certainly drug inducedly-enthusiastic accordion player on the return journey who led a repeated singalong. A repeated singalong is where they play and carry on playing each song until you singalong. The trick was to avoid eye-contact at all costs or she stole your soul.

And we had a real life train robbery. On the return journey those pesky Cactus Creek Gang members reacted surprisingly well to having been shot dead that morning by riding alongside the train and, following a wonderful announcement from the conductor that for health and safety reasons we would have to bring the train to a complete stop for the robbers to be able to board safely (no one, not even hardened desperate cowboy baddies are allowed to board a moving train nowadays), they then came along the carriages robbing people.

It was all good natured, though you didn’t get anything back that you gave them!

I think the key ingredient missing from our carriage was children. There were no children. I think we probably needed some.

I inadvertently became the guy diagonally across from us’s best buddy by pouring him a glass of lemon from the buffet as I had the jug in my hand and he had an empty glass in his. This was apparently the secret sign that meant we’re blood brothers. He was on the trip celebrating 30 years of marriage. His wife uttered only one line the whole journey (coming up later). At one point, Hilarious Hal turned to me and said: “Hey buddy, I’ve got a drink problem!” at which point he put the open end of the glass against his forehead and spilled half of it down himself. He thought this was probably the funniest thing that had ever taken place.

His wife looked out of the window.

I smiled, politely, but hopefully not too encouragingly.

The most telling line of the trip was when the train robbers came along the carriage and one of them stopped by Hilarious Hal and said to Hal’s wife: “is this man bothering you ma’m?” She replied wistfully: “I wish!”

Hal, however, had just the best time.

They released a buffet shortly after the trip started and you would have thought people had been injected with poison and then told the buffet was the only known antidote. I think the received wisdom was get the antidote first or it may run out. It was also fairly clear they thought the more antidote you could get the better you’d recover. It was like velociraptors had been thrown a burger.


(“This man bothering you, ma’m?”)

But, say what you will, the day was memorable. I can remember every second of it. I’m even remembering the bits where Hal was involved in slow motion no matter how much I try not to.

And it was fun.

And the Canyon, when we got there, was absolutely spectacular.

A boy of about 13 had the best response. He was there with his family and as he approached the edge he kept repeating “that is so amazing: it’s incredible: it’s just beautiful,” and similar. Over and over again. I thought at first he was sweet-talking his mum, showing he loved it in exchange for a guaranteed ice cream, but a little later when the rest of the family were off away I saw him again, this time on his own and he was taking photos, still saying quietly to himself: “this is so amazing, it’s just too beautiful….” Even though my normal response to things is more along the lines of “it was alright” or, on an exceptional day, “it was alright” but with an upward inflection on the “right”, on this occasion, I was with the kid.

It’s one place where photos fall so desperately short of capturing the true scale and scope of the scene. I could have happily sat for hours, just looking out over the extraordinary scale of just a fraction of the Canyon. I think they said it was 270 miles long and, at this point, 18 miles wide and a mile deep. Not everything in America is bigger and better, but in terms of canyons, I think they’ve got it sewn up.


(Photos don’t even get close to the scale. There are actually buildings down there you can just make out sitting just before the stretch of trees you can see in the valley foreground – – maybe they are actually matchstick houses but I think they’re probably bigger. I did suggest they should dump a double decker bus or similar onto one of the big stacks in the distance to give an idea of scale but the warden thought it might not be in keeping with their desire to keep things natural.)

I also had my first “birthday cake flavoured ice cream” from one of the shops there.

I’d been out in the sun for 2 hours and I think I was missing Hilarious Hal.

McDonald’s: no place for young men

We popped into McDonald’s, mainly because they offer free wifi. We felt we should order something but couldn’t bring ourselves to get any food, so I ordered two coffees. It was proudly displayed on the board that coffee was one dollar for any size of cup. Sounded reasonable so, two coffees it was.

The 14 year old behind the counter looked at me, asked if I wanted cream or not to which I replied that milk would be fine – he said something to the effect of not having milk but cream was milk and then mumbled in juvenile-speak and asked me for one dollar twenty eight and lolloped off to fill something. I presumed he must have misheard my order and would return with a cup of something that wasn’t coffee as even with my dodgy maths I could figure that two lots of one dollar is a relatively straightforward calculation.
He returned with two cups that actually looked and smelt of coffee and placed my change and a receipt in front of me. On the receipt it said two snr coffees. We’re not a million miles from Mexico: there is a lot of Spanish speaking going on round about here and so I initially thought the snr meant señor, though why it mattered if you were male or female to order coffee escaped me. But the amount was clearly wrong.

Excuse me, I thought the coffees were a dollar each.

Yes sir, that is correct.

But you only charged me one dollar twenty eight.

That is correct sir.

That’s less than two dollars.

It is indeed sir. Would you like anything else?

No, just the two coffees really.

Very good sir. Have a good one.

Thank you. You too. But why are the coffees cheap today?

They’re not sir, they’re always a dollar.

I’m confused.

Did you want a larger cup? They are the same price.

No. I just wondered why you charged me less than 2 dollars.

Oh, I gave you a senior discount.

A what?

(Looks a little apprehensive and starts speaking as one might when faced,with a grizzly bear) A senior discount, sir.

When do you get those?

When you order, sir.

But how old do you have to be to get a senior discount? How old do you think I am?

Umm, over 50, sir. The manager doesn’t like us to ask so we just guess and if someone looks over 50 we give them a discount. (He looked awkward and stared over my shoulder to the next person in line hoping I would go quietly.)

I went quietly, hoping my joints didn’t creak too loudly and walked slowly off to join Ella at the booth, trying not to shuffle as I went. Happy to get cheap coffee of course, and pretty good coffee at that, but confused (it comes with old age I guess) that the 12 year old server had thought I was over 50.

Nobody thinks I look 50. I don’t look anything like 50. Admittedly I will be 50 in December but nobody thinks I look fifty.

OK, one person obviously does.

And where there’s one there are bound to be others. This sort of thing spreads like nasty disease.

50!

That’s what happens when you employ 10 year olds.

And what am I doing having coffee after 6 pm? I’ll never sleep.

So, that’s it. I officially look over 50 even though I’m not. I don’t want to return to McDonalds, ever – but they have free wifi and cheap (even cheaper, now) coffees and we’re sleeping in our car.

I’m an old, homeless, jobless person living in a car and existing on McDonald’s coffees, hmmm, I think it’s time we booked into a hotel. So I turned to Ella, (who looked to be suffering early signs of claustrophobia – the car roof is only 18 inches above us as we lie on the inflatable mattress) and say the words everyone woman is waiting to hear:

“Let’s go to Vegas, baby!”

Las Vegas

We drove into the night, partially through the night and, having been pleasantly surprised at how much the petrol (or, gas, apparently although it’s obviously not gas) plummeted when you got into Arizona, had our first glimpse of Vegas from a full 45 miles away. It was still on the other side of some mountain range, but sat nav said 45 miles still to go and we could see a clear, strong glow in the sky from the city lights even at that distance.

We arrived after midnight and thought the most sensible thing to do would be to head for the main strip and see if it looked like it did in the films. Not knowing where it was we pooled our Vegas film knowledge and came up with a few likely candidates to put into Ms Sat Nav. Caesar’s Palace, Planet Hollywood and Bellagio’s were our finalised list. They must be on the main strip – they’re on the telly. Caesar’s palace was acceptable to Ms Sat Nav and she directed us downtown.

Our sunglasses, having been placed in the cup holders in the doors earlier in the day when the sun had gone, came out again to protect tired eyeballs from the fallout of the sun’s explosion which seemed to have been captured and then poured over every building as far as the eye could (so long as you had sunglasses on) see. It’s like a Dulux paint shop had been hit by a sunburst and the whole lot had landed in a Fluorescent tubing factory.

Which had then been struck by an atom bomb.

Our black Jeep Patriot was just about cool enough to hold its own among the glittercarti strutting up and down the street, though it looked like the tiny baby of some of the ridiculous Hummers that towered over us. (Those, the eye-wateringly ugly cube cars and Fiat Multiplas are on my list of top three awful looking vehicles that should be banned from the roads.)

Having been well and truly wowed by the fantastic over the topness of the Strip we found a room in one of a large chain of cheap uncheerful hotels (spell check wanted to change that to cheap ‘n’ cheerful but cheap uncheerful sums it better). It was a hotel whose aspirations had long ago been knocked out of it and whose joie de vivre had become, after many disappointments and let downs, a tired, world-weary sigh.

On the bright side it had a bed and the bed wasn’t in a car.

I asked the guy behind the desk if there was a gym in the hotel. He said it wasn’t hotel policy to give out names of guests. I smiled. He didn’t. Even though I had had a very long day he looked like his had been longer. I went to search for the stairs.

While the hotel was cheap uncheerful, breakfast was included, though it wasn’t to be found in the hotel. To achieve breakfast you had to go into a neighbouring casino, in one corner of which was a tiny add-on in which you could decant a bowl of the dust that’s left at the end of a box of normal cereal when you’ve taken out all the reasonable sized bits, a glass of either vaguely orange or in another container, not quite green, and as many waffles as you wanted.

Five was the answer before I had one.

Not even one was the answer when I’d bitten into the first.

Even at 8.30 in the morning the casino was about a fifth full. Rows and rows of slot machines, many of which had people who looked like they were surgically attached, on some sort of bizarre life support machine as many of them had credit sized cards on leads that were attached to their belts while the other end was inserted into the slot machine. This joined human and machine and it wasn’t clear which thought it was benefiting more from the arrangement. Was adrenaline being pumped into the people through the wire connection, or was hope being drained out? I’ve not understood what’s going on with slot machines since the 1980s, simpler times when you simply had to line up fruit and then occasionally you could nudge wheels up or down and would peer up into the machine to try to see what symbol was three away. Now? Not a clue. There was certainly an awful lot of “winning” music blaring around – but I didn’t see anyone who looked like they’d won.

Slightly less zombified were the people playing on the craps tables (long oval tables with lots of numbers on and someone throws two dice to the other end and everyone cheers or groans at the same time depending on what’s thrown). There were, maybe, two dozen small tables for a whole variety of black jack type card games.

Add to that a smattering of roulette wheels and you had the carbon copy of every casino on the strip. Lots of drinks waitresses rushing drinks to people at the tables to keep them topped up lest they sober up and leave.

How I wished there’d been a table at which you could just have a simple game of Snap. Or a table at which 8 fancily dressed gamblers were engaged in a nail biting game of Happy Families.
People didn’t look too happy, but it was early morning and most of them probably hadn’t had breakfast yet and no one looks happy before breakfast and so we left them and went to explore the town.

Every 15 minutes the long, fancy fountains outside Bellagio’s hotel fire into life and shoot dozens of water jets high into the air to music. Some of the shows were brilliant, and the big lake also gives a great natural meeting place for people and draws in street entertainers and people dressed up so you can have photos taken with them. I had mine taken with a minion who must have been 300 degrees inside the huge sponge suit.

On the flip side, the city exposed its greasy underbelly on each and every section of pavement along the strip. For every 100 metres you walked there would be at least one and up to four individuals or in some cases what looked like entire family groups handing out business cards promising to have girls delivered to your room. Lots of tee shirts declaring the same as well as A-Frame boards, advertising trucks and stands at the side of the pavement filled with leaflets.
People had brought young children to Vegas. Are they nuts? Are they selling them? Are they in any way shape or form responsible to look after children? You know the big buzzer on Family Fortunes that sounds when a contestant gets an answer wrong. (“Uh uh!!!) That was the sound that blasted in my head every time I saw families with children on the main Strip in Vegas.

Come to Vegas. Bring the kids. Uh uhhhh!

(If the French want their tower back, Vegas have got it)

We thought Caesar’s palace was going to be way over the top in its tackiness but I think the Trafford Centre out-tacks it. (Go Britain!) We drifted around and saw the sights, some of the free shows and played a fairly long game of “find the exit”. Planet Hollywood with its “Miracle Mile” of shops was great to window shop in and we saw an awesome Turkish ice cream seller who had a brilliant routine which involved elaborate methods of taking back the ice cream cone he’d just handed someone. One of the routines lasted about ten minutes until the hapless child finally got to gobble their cornet, followed by him dancing to hyped up dance music (the Turkish guy! not the child). He had a lot of photos taken of him but I bet his boss wondered why his ice cream sales were so low.

We went to a recommended restaurant in the evening which did big plates of steak and salad for about £4. Unsurprisingly it was a little busy and we were handed a buzzer thing which would buzz when a table was ready and we were asked to come promptly when it buzzed as they had lots of people waiting. Meanwhile we were to wait, unsurprisingly, in the accompanying casino.
Well, we managed to avoid putting a single cent into a slot machine or onto a roulette table the whole time we were in Vegas. But we didn’t stay entirely gamble free. While we were waiting for our buzzer to buzz we stood next to a craps table trying to figure what was going on. Lots of numbers, lots of people, four staff, one of whom kept pushing chips round with a long stick. Dice being thrown and people throwing chips round like they were confetti. The couple to our left decided we needed educating and tried to explain the game.

I am monumentally poor at describing games to people and always make things sound far more complicated than they are. These good people were from right out of my stable. In the end they said it would be good luck for everyone round the table if a dice virgin (I think he said dice virgin – he might have had a cold) threw the dice. Gamblers are superstitious sorts, he said, and someone who’s never thrown before always brings luck. Having less than no idea what she was aiming to do, Ella was handed the dice and told to throw them to the other end of the table. She duly obliged and was allowed another throw. Whatever she threw seemed to make people happy as they all shouted “hooray”, or American equivalents, and asked her to try the same again. They said throw a nine and lo and behold, Ella threw a nine. A couple of throws later they had changed their mind and seemed to want a 10. Duly dispatched. It was becoming the table to be at. Ella, the dice machine, churning out the numbers. It was a little like on the Bond films (and she had her sparkly dress on too). Bet, bet, bet, dice throw, roll, bated breath, stop. roar!! People were coming across to see what all the fuss was about. I expected a tap on the shoulder from security accusing us of dice counting, or something equally frowned upon.

Then, disaster. The buzzer went off and we said the words that not many hard core gamblers utter in casinos in Las Vegas:

“Terribly sorry, but we have go for dinner.”

You’d have thought we had just burned an American flag and said guns were bad. Apparently when you’re on a hot streak you don’t go for supper.

If that lot were superstitious before, they’ll only be extra so now because with the buzzer of doom vibrating merrily on the side of the craps table (couldn’t switch it off), Ella immediately threw a 7 (losing throw) and the bubble was burst. The couple who had drawn us in insisted we take the winnings they had bet for us as you can’t throw without being in the game so they had apparently staked us in and placed chips accordingly. We declined but they said that everyone around the table had won from Ella’s awesome throwing. They had both won handsomely themselves and even taking back their original stakes that they’d placed for Ella she had still cleared $110 from the small amounts they’d bet on her behalf. They had own much more themselves, so we said thank you very much and went to eat cheap steak. And ended up getting through three days in Vegas 110 dollars up on the house having bet nothing at all.
And yes, it was tempting to try again. But no, we didn’t. We still have a few weeks to go and the budget’s still just about on target.

As it is we’re sleeping in cars and in hotels that smell of sadness.

Vegas. Tick. Next stop, the Grand Canyon….

(They’re probably putting this photo out all round the casinos to warn them about the English broad who’s breaking the bank, little by little…..)