Have you ever felt unappreciated for the lengths you’ve gone
to when it comes feting a friend or business associate? Instead of going to the
Stop and Shop or the Food Emporium, you’ve spent the extra bucks at Citarella’s
to get those porterhouse steaks, which while he or she's wolfing them down, you
want to say, you know those came to over a bill. Does he or she even fathom the
expense you’ve gone out to? Or say you let it fly at one of the local trendy
bistros and tell the crowd of friends you’ve invited for your birthday, it’s on
me. Sure everyone is smiling and especially the waiter? Who doesn’t like being
given carte blanche? But after everyone has ordered all the things they wouldn't normally want to foot the bill for and are moaning how they couldn’t eat
another morsel, don’t you feel a certain let down? They're not thinking about
you and how much you’ve spent, but only about how full their tummies feel. Imagine
a world where it becomes fashionable to let everyone know how much you're paying, a world where you actually put little cards in front of people’s
plates, like the seating tags that are sometimes provided at dinner parties, indicating
how much their meals cost? Everyone knows that you serve expensive food to
people you want to impress and more modest fare to those you could easily do without. So in order to make it worthwhile to spend a lot on
someone, you want monetize how much people meant to you. If you've forked out for a two
pound lobster, you want your guests to know that the $75-100 you've spent is a recognition of the depth of the friendship. After all, there are those for whom you would only buy the
1and ¼ pounder for $49.
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