I was a bit Rusty on movies 😉  

A few years ago, I was watching an overseas auction that was going to end in the middle of the night. The bidding was still quite low, so I put in an amount before I went to bed. Much to my amazement, the next morning I'd been notified that I'd won the auction! Woot! I'd bid a high amount of $50. The end amount was $150. I thought, what the absolute eff? How could I have won it? When I went back in, somehow the decimal point hadn't registered, so I'd actually bid $5000, not $50.00.

 

To be fair, the item was actually worth around $1000, so I still got a bargain, but my point is, sometimes, shyte happens and you stuff up your amount. So, people will cancel their bid, and not rebid. It's not the end of the world. As others have said, it's better than realising someone isn't going to pay for the item and you have to wait X days before you can cancel to relist.

Sorry stawks... points were only for sandy... who had a slack attack.

 

You would have been marked down for not mentioning the full title... however I like your taste in movies.

....................................................The Far Side of the World.

 

Spoiler
Rusty learned the fingering for the violin, so he didn't look like a d1ck.  Great music by Boccherini

(4) MASTER AND COMMANDER FINAL SONG - YouTube

I don't know if I am laughing more at slack attack or

 

Spoiler
learning fingering so as not to look like a d1ck

 

 

The 2nd - broke me up. 

 

Thanks Stawks - you have a wonderful way with words. lol

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Thank you, thank you........I'm here all week............try the chicken.

Richard Tognetti (ACO) spent 3 months teaching Russel Crowe to play the violin.

 


@repentatleisure1952 wrote:

Richard Tognetti (ACO) spent 3 months teaching Russel Crowe to play the violin.

 


Mebbe.     But only so he didn't look like a d1ck.

 

He didn't play in the actual soundtrack though.

 

No-one plays the violin that well in 3 months.

Spoiler
For the role of Captain Aubrey in Master and Commander, Russell had to look as convincing as possible, playing Boccherini's La musica notturna delle strade di Madrid and Mozart's Violin Concerto no.3. We began from scratch. He kept reminding me that he had to be seen to be playing the violin, not just affecting the movements. Fairly early on he realised it was a difficult task and that you can't just fake it. And so he was as thorough about learning the violin as he possibly could be within the given three months.
Double Acts: actor Russell Crowe and violinist Richard Tognetti | Focus | The Strad