Overheard Cockfarmers In Restaurants/Bars - Classic or Dud?

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Curry house in Reigate on Friday night - very fine fish balti somewhat spoiled by three of the primest cockfarmers I've ever overheard at the next table. Middle-aged men, all sinfully ugly, the alpha of the group instructing his younger friends on which titty bars to go to in Washington. The conversation moved on to Hooters - he told a story of how he'd taken his 8 year old niece there and then his sister-in-law had the temerity to get annoyed by it. "Feminists, eh?" he ended. They then talked about one of the younger men's firm and how it was doing. "Much better since we kicked all the shirtlifters out." was the answer. Finally the third guy only spoke once - he was the group's whipping boy. Oldest bloke asked him what he'd got at university and the guy said "Well I left school at 16, never went to university." and the old guy gave a really vile smile and said "Oh that's right. You didn't, did you."

Actually though they were entertaining because they were so surreally horrible, you couldn't quite believe they existed. It was like The Office but 20 years older and more ghastly. So ultimately overhearing cockfarmers is CLASSIC!

Tom (Groke), Monday, 30 December 2002 15:51 (twenty-three years ago)

"shirtlifters"?

I say CLASSIC, of course. Usually when we overhear cockfarmers, we start a conversation of equal volume talking about how pathetic people like the cockfarmers in question are. (OH NO NOW WE ARE COCKFARMERS THE TERRORISTS HAVE WON except that we're still laughing at them so WE WIN YAY HOME TEAM)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 30 December 2002 15:55 (twenty-three years ago)

It's only classic if you reckon their lives are awful (as a result of their cockfarming). If you reckon they are happily farming cock and far more satisfied with life than you - then dud.

I was in an Indian restaurant once in Stratford once sitting near these three work party people, one of whom was really drunk and talking shite in a loud voice. It was kind of amusing, and then to compensate us for having to sit near them the restaurant gave us a brandy each. So CLASSIC. if you get free booze out of it.

DV (dirtyvicar), Monday, 30 December 2002 15:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Classic only if it prompts a chain of events that ends with a Swedish guitar-god loudly and drunkenly "unleashing the fuckin' fyooooreee" at 13,000 feet.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Monday, 30 December 2002 18:21 (twenty-three years ago)

Actually I did happen upon a good encounter like this not too long ago.

I was out to brunch with two of my musician friends who happen to be women who happen to be a couple of the lesbian variety. The next table over, some people were talking about how homosexuals, single-parents, and liberals are destroying America.

The thing is, it was just hilarious. Everything they said was the worst stereotyping you can imagine, with lots of hearty agreement. All we could do, as two lesbian-lovers and a single-father, was laugh hysterically at each thing they said. I'm sure they realized we were laughing at them, 'cause they stopped after awhile.

Some choice quotes: "it's 'cause of the gays that AIDS exists, they deserve to get AIDS", "I'm tired of single-parents stealing my hard-earned money", "the ACLU is just one of many faces of Satan"...verfuckinbatim.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Monday, 30 December 2002 18:54 (twenty-three years ago)

(heh I should add to the resolutions thread that I will write more like the way I did on this thread)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 30 December 2002 18:55 (twenty-three years ago)

When you're the one who has to sit at the same table, dud.

My older brother used to be one of these cockfarmers. Right after he hit puberty, he developed a fondness for smothering all family conversation with epic tirades about everything, not just the usual slander about jews and blacks and asians and gays, but also EVERYONE was out to get him and how NOBODY understood (quite literally and in so many words) that he was the only perfect human being on the planet. This lasted a couple of years until my parents basically stopped going to restaurants with him.

In retrospect, it seems that he would save up these rants for family occasions, mainly certain holidays and most casual outings, trips to restaurants included. It was so mind-numbingly boring and upsetting to hear that the stares from strangers were the least of the problem.

He's quite rational now, oddly enough.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:26 (twenty-three years ago)

Jesus Nick where were you eating lunch? at the Eagle Forum's cafeteria?

Loud people annoy me period. anyone who talks on cellphones at restaurant tables or while out with other people (w/out excusing themsevles to a private corner) is a cockfarmer.

That Girl (thatgirl), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:29 (twenty-three years ago)

Mike, surely your brother was just trying to entertain himself by embarrassing your parents in public.

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:41 (twenty-three years ago)

Michael is right: I was at a Christmas lunch for the comic company I once worked for, the publishing and distribution arms together. One fool I hardly knew from the latter started explaining how Hitler had the right idea about those homosexuals, and they should all be killed. I argued, at which point he decided I must be a fucking queer too, therefore deserving of death. You do come across things like this occasionally, but what appalled me was that colleagues thought I was the one behaving badly for starting an argument about this.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:45 (twenty-three years ago)

Perhaps they feared for their lives Martin.

That Girl (thatgirl), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:47 (twenty-three years ago)

It was at a Waffle House here in Lexington, KY, in the good ol' US of A, on a Sunday afternoon. They were dressed real nice, so I'm guessing they had just come from church.

I don't mind too much, most people around here who feel this way keep it to themselves, with the exception of Rev. Jeff Fugate, who has gotten lots of local press for his intense hate-filled rants against everyone not exactly like him and his followers.

Once, Rev. Fugate came door-to-door to my apartment, and as I was talking to him, my upstair's neighbors came home. They're Muslims, from Jordan, and came through the door speaking Arabic. This was Oct. '01. He didn't say one word as they passed through the hall, and had broken out in a sweat. I loved watching him deathly afraid of this couple and their three children.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Some did tell me afterwards that they agreed with me but didn't want to cause a fuss by arguing. I don't know what statements would have been sufficiently wrong to provoke them to express their disagreement.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:50 (twenty-three years ago)

That would have been the perfect point to mug him, Nick. (If you hadn't been standing in the door of your own apartment, that is; no need to make things easier for the police than they have to be.)

Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:52 (twenty-three years ago)

Ah Waffle House. A den of narrow-minded thinking but they have great hash browns.

That Girl (thatgirl), Monday, 30 December 2002 19:55 (twenty-three years ago)

Is that their official slogan?

rosemary (rosemary), Monday, 30 December 2002 20:01 (twenty-three years ago)

Classic - if it's in a pub I usually try and join in if I'm drunk enough and see how much I can take the piss/insult them without them realizing it.

Dr. C (Dr. C), Monday, 30 December 2002 20:41 (twenty-three years ago)

Mike, surely your brother was just trying to entertain himself by embarrassing your parents in public.

This possibility never really occurred to me before. Now that I think on it, it was probably part of the thrill, but only a part -- the sheer intensity of his behavior keeps me from believing he was doing it to entertain himself. Also, he would invariably try to draw my parents in some way or another (much more my mom than my dad), but he'd also do this at home or in the car, too.

Michael Daddino (epicharmus), Monday, 30 December 2002 21:29 (twenty-three years ago)


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