Nathan for You (2013–…): Season 4, Episode 2 - Chili Shop/Massage Parlor - full transcript
Synced
by Bakugan
My name is Nathan Fielder,
and I graduated from one of
Canada's top business schools
with really good grades.
Now I'm using my knowledge
to help struggling small
business owners make it
in this competitive world.
This is "Nathan for You."
If you're a fan of delicious chili,
there's a small chance
you've heard of the Lie-N-Den
Bar & Grill in Bakersfield, California,
where owner Robert
Bryan has been serving up
his famous family chili
recipe for decades.
Just about done.
Robert's longtime dream
has been to sell his chili
to the hordes of hungry hockey fans
who attend Bakersfield
Condors home games
at the nearby Rabobank Arena,
but so far, he hasn't had much luck.
I did call Rabobank Arena.
I asked them,
"How would I get on your vendor list?"
"Oh, we have our own vendors.
We don't have a list." So.
I tasted his chili just to make sure
it was as good as he said, and it was.
Mmm.
The flavors and spices
felt awesome against my tongue,
and I was stunned that Rabobank Arena
turned him away,
but fortunately, I had a plan
to get him in the door.
I have a pretty good handle on the law,
from, you know, just
experiences I've had.
- Okay.
- And here's the thing.
If they never know that
you're selling chili,
then what's the consequence?
Well, I don't know how I would sell it
without them... without their knowledge.
Although it violates
the stadium's policy,
there's no law against sneaking
chili into a hockey game
for the purposes of selling it,
so if we could make a
custom-design body suit
that could be filled with
a massive payload of chili,
Robert would finally be able to sell
his signature dish at Rabobank Arena
without stadium management
ever catching on.
That's interesting.
I'm just curious as to how...
what it would look like.
You know, I put a lot of
thought into this idea,
and every time I run
it through in my head,
it works perfectly.
Okay.
Robert was on board, so later that week,
I hired a professional tailor
to help design the chili suit
based on a detailed sketch I had drawn.
The easiest way is probably
to put the chili in...
I guess from the neck part, right?
Sure.
Our plan was to have
the chili reservoirs
mimic the distribution of
fat on a larger man's body
so it wouldn't look
suspicious under clothing,
and with the help of
a guy from Craigslist,
our tailor was able to take
all the measurements he needed.
- The chili is gonna go here.
- Mm-hmm.
And we can get more in here too.
You could probably do,
like, a cup there, right?
- Yeah. Yeah.
- Cup or so?
- Yeah, a cup, yeah.
- Yeah. Okay.
All right, so we'll
see you around, then.
Yeah. Thank you so much.
And a few days later, we received
a completed prototype
of a heat-resistant
polyvinyl fluoride suit
designed to hold over 100 servings
of fresh chili.
The individual
reservoirs would be linked
by a network of tubes
that would all lead
to a battery-powered peristaltic pump
for dispensing the chili.
Using our intake funnel,
we loaded in over 30
pounds of Robert's product
that had been blended into a thin paste
to ensure an even flow without
compromising the flavor.
So with that, I activated the pump,
and it was time to
see if this could work.
As I had hoped,
the pump dispensed the chili
at a steady pace,
which was good,
but I realized we had overlooked
a crucial detail.
The chili suit prevented
bathroom access,
and because of its weight,
removing it during a game
would not be an option.
So I experimented with a design
that would allow me to
deposit my excretions
directly into custom rubber underwear
connected to a secondary pumping system
so I could eject it into a toilet
via a second tube down my right arm.
But once I had some clothing on,
I realized the potential
for a costly mix-up
was too great.
So I had the bottom part of the suit
redesigned with strategic holes
in the groin and buttocks region
that would allow the wearer
to relieve him or herself
without taking off the suit.
But there was still the
issue of the temperature.
To meet health department standards,
Robert said the chili
would have to remain
above 135 degrees
Fahrenheit at all times.
But when I put it on,
the heat was so intense
that I could barely
have it against my skin
for more than a few seconds.
So I tracked down some
heat-resistant polymer gel
that could insulate the body
against the most extreme temperatures.
Feel anything?
- No.
- Good.
I did a preliminary test
with a blowtorch on
various parts of my body
to ensure the gel would protect
even my most sensitive regions.
And after getting gelled
up from head to toe,
the burning sensation
had completely vanished.
Yeah.
It seemed like we had
solved every problem,
but there was still one final
thing I had to take care of.
The pump on my chest that
made the chili suit function
was made out of metal,
and to get into Rabobank Arena,
every ticket holder has to
pass through a metal detector.
So I figured if I
could convince security
that I had a medically
necessary pacemaker,
they wouldn't be suspicious
when the alarm went off.
So I taped a real pacemaker to my chest
and then headed to a walk-in clinic
to request an X-ray
that would hopefully trick the physician
into writing me a doctor's note.
I would need to actually examine you
and see why is it that
you need the X-ray.
I have to have a reason why.
Well, I'm paying you for it,
so what do you care?
- I'm actually...
- legally, it's being...
monitored to see why
we're ordering an X-ray.
Oh.
Well, what's the minimum I need to say
to get one?
Either some area hurts
of your chest or...
- Sure.
- You're having a cough.
Okay. Yeah.
- Are you...
- what are you experiencing?
Yeah, both those. Yeah.
Mm-kay.
Just step as close as you can,
and you're gonna take
this shirt off, okay?
_
Your undershirt will be fine,
but I gotta get rid
of the buttons, okay?
Okay. Okay, sure.
Take a big breath.
Hold it.
And once the doctor saw
the pacemaker on my X-ray...
It looks like it's in well position
and no abnormalities.
She wrote me a doctor's
note that would hopefully
get me through security.
Thank you so much, Doctor.
And that meant it was
finally time to buy a ticket
to the next Bakersfield
Condors home game.
So an hour before puck drop,
I headed to the Lie-N-Den
to fill up the suit
with a fresh batch of chili.
I then put on some extra large clothing
that made me look like
a typical hockey fan
but was also secretly designed
so I could carry everything I would need
for our customers.
Along with a special pocket
built to hold cups and spoons,
I also had a cane with a secret trigger
that could dispense organic
sour cream on demand,
a trucker hat with a
built-in cheese grater
to deliver fresh cheddar cheese,
and lastly, a cargo
pocket full of chives.
Got a little bit of an aftertaste,
but I don't know if it's the chives
or the sour cream.
It's close.
With everything set
and just minutes until game time,
I arrived at Rabobank Arena
and nervously approached
the security checkpoint.
Hi. I have a medical condition.
This is my pacemaker ID card.
So I have a pacemaker, so
it might beep when you do it
over my chest area.
Okay.
Yeah, so that's my pacemaker.
- Okay.
- Okay.
_
Thank you so much.
Getting inside was a huge victory,
but for my plan to work,
I would need to be able
to sell chili for an entire game
without getting caught,
so I decided to start
in the upper levels
where security was thinner.
Hi, there, would you
like any fresh chili?
_
Two dollar chili?
I faced some rejection at first,
but it wasn't long until
I had my first sale.
It's chili.
- Do you want one?
- _
As my confidence grew,
I ventured down to the lower level,
where I got a second sale
from a guy in section 109.
I used my big body to
block the view of security
as I covertly squirted out his serving.
Here you go. Two dollars, please.
And after that, I began
to feel invincible.
Hi, there.
I moved through the
stadium like a ninja,
switching sections after each sale
so I couldn't be tracked.
At one point,
I thought security was on my tail,
but I was able to lose the guy
by ducking into a handicapped bathroom,
after which I reemerged
and resumed my operation.
I can serve it to you right now.
I have it right under my clothes.
I sold 16 bowls of
delicious chili that night,
right under the noses
of stadium management,
and that meant, from this day forward,
Robert had a proven
method to sell his chili
at Rabobank Arena.
This is $32.
And the ticket was only 12.
So that's $20 profit in one game.
Okay.
So I'll just leave all
this here for you, then?
Yeah.
- Bye.
- Bye, now.
Nothing feels better than a massage.
Nothing.
Which is why Anna Davis of Swan Day Spa
in Los Angeles, California,
has made it her livelihood.
But with plenty of
competition in the area,
Anna has been forced to
lower her prices so much,
she's barely making a profit.
Now we have a lot of competition,
so the client, when they got in,
they were looking for the cheaper price.
We have a deep tissue one,
which is, you pay more, $15.
I think I'll try the
$40 one for right now.
Okay. Okay, that's fine.
With customers going
for the cheapest price
and ignoring her more
profitable premium massages,
it was clearly a problem.
So I paid Anna a visit with a unique way
for her to upsell her customers.
You see, the key to upselling
is advertising a low
price to bring people in
but then ensuring that
once they see the product,
they'll definitely want to upgrade.
So if customers arrived at Swan Day Spa
and discovered that the $40 special
was done exclusively by someone
with a contagious disease,
like viral warts,
customers would be a lot more likely
to upgrade to one of
Anna's premium options.
upsell customers
by making the $40
special a wart massage.
I think... I think you're right.
Nobody want to get the wart massage.
For sure.
Anna was intrigued,
but she was a bit worried
about what her customers might think.
They might be upset.
They might be sue me.
Sue the business.
But I assured her that
no one would complain
as long as they believed
it was for a good cause.
Have you ever done any
charity work before?
- Oh, never.
- So with Anna's blessing,
I created a real charity
whose mission was to place
people living with warts
into the workplace.
I then distributed our flyers
at dermatology clinics across the city
and posted an ad on Craigslist
seeking people with active viral warts
who were looking for
work, and later that week,
I met with the two men who responded.
I think I've had every
kind of wart invented.
I don't know.
Oh, whoa.
But probably the worst
case of warts that I had
was on my penis.
Okay.
And it was, like, a circle around my...
I mean, it was...
Made it so that...
sex was not an option.
- Right.
- Right?
- Yeah, 'cause...
- Yeah.
I just took a soldering iron.
Burned it off myself.
- Whoa.
- Like, why go to a doctor
and have him do it?
I know what he's doing.
Just burned it off.
- You drop something?
- I did, yeah.
A little device here.
- A device?
- Yes.
- What is that?
- This is a wellness wand.
- What's that mean?
- Well, it's...
Right now,
the way that the unit works
if I have it sitting right...
if I set it right here,
it's putting out a signal
that's coming out to
the edge of the table,
maybe a little beyond.
- Uh-huh.
- All right?
And the signal is matching
with whatever the needs are
that you select from the files.
- Are you a healer or something?
- Yes.
- Oh.
- Yeah.
Okay.
- Yeah.
- What...
Uh, what...
How, um...
Okay.
After carefully vetting the candidates
to be sure they had at least one wart,
I officially signed them
on to the CityWarts roster.
But before they could be
placed at Swan Day Spa,
there was still one
thing our charity needed:
an endorsement.
It seemed like every credible charity
had the endorsement of a public figure,
like a mayor or a city council member,
and I was worried that if
CityWarts didn't have one,
the public would never accept the idea
of a wart-infected masseur.
So I rented out the ballroom of
the historic Oxford Palace Hotel
and then reached out to every
local politician I could find,
inviting them to be the guest of honor
at a gala event for the
launch of a new charity.
And after a few days,
we finally got an RSVP
from Councilman Ed Reyes,
a 12-year veteran of LA's city council.
So on the day of the event,
I decorated the ballroom
with the finest and fanciest things
in the hopes that this
gala would be enough
to dazzle Councilman Reyes
into legitimizing CityWarts
with his official endorsement.
- Hi, Nathan.
- Hey.
Oh, my gosh. You look nice.
- Thank you.
- How are you?
- Nice to see you.
- Nice to see you too.
Okay, so.
What do you think?
- I like it.
- It's pretty.
Once Anna took her seat,
we opened our doors
to the crowd of random people
I had paid to attend the event
so that Councilman
Reyes would be impressed
by the charity's popularity
when he arrived.
Since every real charity gala
is hosted by a beauty queen,
I hired Miss California
2013, Mabelynn Capeluj,
to be the evening's host.
It's here in Los Angeles, and they help
people in Los Angeles
with warts get jobs?
- Yes.
- That's their mission, okay.
Do you get nervous before
these things at all?
- Um, sometimes, sometimes.
- Yeah?
But I feel like this will be easy.
Hopefully I don't jinx myself.
- You're so beautiful...
- Thank you.
You could probably go out there
and just go, "Blah, blah, blah,"
and no one would know the difference.
- Thank you. Hopefully.
- Yeah. No problem.
As the crowd settled in,
Councilman Reyes entered the room
with all the confidence
I would have expected
from an elected official.
I only hoped that this gala event
would be enough to win
his coveted endorsement.
So, growing up, I actually
had a friend who...
he had warts on his hand,
and I believe his mom or he said
it was from handling a frog.
He was able to seek medical attention,
and they were able to
freeze and remove the wart,
and he's just fine now,
and that's why I'm so
proud to introduce to you
CityWarts and their mission
to put warts to work.
And right now, I'd like to bring out
some CityWarts Angels
to talk about their own
experiences with warts.
My name is Daniel,
and I have warts.
My hope is that some personal stories
from our CityWarts Angels would help
garner sympathy from Councilman Reyes.
I had a wart right here.
Nine warts made, like,
a number six on my hand.
A ring of genital warts around my penis.
Remember, wart pride.
Thanks, CityWarts.
Thank you very much.
I appreciate everything
that CityWarts is doing
for our community,
and because of CityWarts,
I had a opportunity for a
job placement with massage.
You guys have a great night,
and thank you.
The speeches were a hit,
and after concluding the night
by recognizing the Swan Day Spa
as CityWarts' newest partner,
it was time to approach Councilman Reyes
for his endorsement.
Councilman, hi.
Would I be able to get a photo with you
and Anna over here?
This is Anna.
- Nice to meet you, sir.
- Hi, Anna.
Okay, come on over here.
With a photo of Anna
standing next to
a respected city councilman,
it was now impossible to deny
that he was a supporter of our cause.
Thank you for that endorsement.
Thank you so much.
So with proof of our credibility
now proudly displayed
behind the desk at Swan Day Spa,
it was finally time for our wart angels
to meet their new boss.
It is such a honor
to be in a location
where...
you're creating a
wart-positive environment.
- Thank you so much.
- Thank you so much.
But before moving forward,
Anna wanted to be sure
they had the right skills for the job.
Have you ever trained to massage before?
Are you a licensed massage therapist?
I'm not a licensed massage therapist,
but I stay in practice
with my girlfriend,
because she gets foot reflexology
every single night,
and then I just work my
way up from the ankles.
Apply. Release. Apply. Release.
Dig a little bit.
- Okay.
- Every night.
She's a lucky lady.
Oh, that's nice. How about you, Albert?
Well, I've had experience.
I used to give massages
to my grandmother.
- Okay.
- Just a little bit at a time.
Like, and I... the main focus
was for her to feel good
and not for me to be...
because a massage is
not supposed to be...
it's supposed to be...
- You know.
- Yeah.
Just making the person relax and...
Okay, so you approve
them? They meet your standards?
For right now, I mean,
we have to learn more.
For now, yeah, we have to see.
Anna was satisfied with
their qualifications,
so the Angels took their stations
while Anna and I waited
for customers up front.
Yes, I'd like to have the massage.
Yeah, it's... how you like it?
We have so many kinds.
I want to get that one that
was the special for $40.
- Okay.
- As usual, the customer chose
the cheapest option available,
so once she was ready
and waiting on the table,
it was time to see if
the new upsell would work.
- Hi, there.
- Hi.
Hi, so I'm not sure if you're aware,
but the $40 massage
special that you selected
is done in conjunction with
a charity outreach program
- called CityWarts...
- Uh-huh.
That puts people living with
warts into the workplace.
Okay.
Is that something
you're comfortable with?
Yeah, that's okay 'cause
it's not a contagious thing.
Oh, actually, warts are contagious.
- Oh, they are?
- Yes.
- Oh. They're contagious?
- Yes.
Does he wear gloves or what?
He will be wearing thin gloves.
After telling the client about
our full range of massages,
she could now see the benefits
of the premium options.
So how much are the other massages?
It's just $15 more.
All right, I'll take one of the others.
My plan worked perfectly.
All right, so this is
your therapist, Mamie.
She does not have any warts.
- All right, thanks.
- At all.
Okay, great, enjoy your massage.
- Thank you.
- And Anna was thrilled.
- She upgraded.
- Oh!
And as the day went on,
more and more customers
opted to upgrade to the premium options.
I guess I just want the one
with the non-wart worker.
Yeah.
Anna was upselling her clients
at an unprecedented rate,
and any time a customer was skeptical,
we had all the credibility we needed.
This is me and a city councilor.
I mean, I don't know how much more legit
you can get than an LA city councilman
endorsing the charity, but...
- Yeah, it seemingly...
- it seems safe
if the city's working with it.
I did feel a little bad
that no one wanted anything to do
with our wart angels that day,
but it was nice to know
that at least they had each other.
I love baking cakes.
Pies.
Is it the baking that you like,
or is it the look in the person's eyes
that you baked it for?
Both.
Absolutely.
Type of pacemaker you have?
Um...
I think it's a...
Sony?
Synced
by Bakugan
by Bakugan
My name is Nathan Fielder,
and I graduated from one of
Canada's top business schools
with really good grades.
Now I'm using my knowledge
to help struggling small
business owners make it
in this competitive world.
This is "Nathan for You."
If you're a fan of delicious chili,
there's a small chance
you've heard of the Lie-N-Den
Bar & Grill in Bakersfield, California,
where owner Robert
Bryan has been serving up
his famous family chili
recipe for decades.
Just about done.
Robert's longtime dream
has been to sell his chili
to the hordes of hungry hockey fans
who attend Bakersfield
Condors home games
at the nearby Rabobank Arena,
but so far, he hasn't had much luck.
I did call Rabobank Arena.
I asked them,
"How would I get on your vendor list?"
"Oh, we have our own vendors.
We don't have a list." So.
I tasted his chili just to make sure
it was as good as he said, and it was.
Mmm.
The flavors and spices
felt awesome against my tongue,
and I was stunned that Rabobank Arena
turned him away,
but fortunately, I had a plan
to get him in the door.
I have a pretty good handle on the law,
from, you know, just
experiences I've had.
- Okay.
- And here's the thing.
If they never know that
you're selling chili,
then what's the consequence?
Well, I don't know how I would sell it
without them... without their knowledge.
Although it violates
the stadium's policy,
there's no law against sneaking
chili into a hockey game
for the purposes of selling it,
so if we could make a
custom-design body suit
that could be filled with
a massive payload of chili,
Robert would finally be able to sell
his signature dish at Rabobank Arena
without stadium management
ever catching on.
That's interesting.
I'm just curious as to how...
what it would look like.
You know, I put a lot of
thought into this idea,
and every time I run
it through in my head,
it works perfectly.
Okay.
Robert was on board, so later that week,
I hired a professional tailor
to help design the chili suit
based on a detailed sketch I had drawn.
The easiest way is probably
to put the chili in...
I guess from the neck part, right?
Sure.
Our plan was to have
the chili reservoirs
mimic the distribution of
fat on a larger man's body
so it wouldn't look
suspicious under clothing,
and with the help of
a guy from Craigslist,
our tailor was able to take
all the measurements he needed.
- The chili is gonna go here.
- Mm-hmm.
And we can get more in here too.
You could probably do,
like, a cup there, right?
- Yeah. Yeah.
- Cup or so?
- Yeah, a cup, yeah.
- Yeah. Okay.
All right, so we'll
see you around, then.
Yeah. Thank you so much.
And a few days later, we received
a completed prototype
of a heat-resistant
polyvinyl fluoride suit
designed to hold over 100 servings
of fresh chili.
The individual
reservoirs would be linked
by a network of tubes
that would all lead
to a battery-powered peristaltic pump
for dispensing the chili.
Using our intake funnel,
we loaded in over 30
pounds of Robert's product
that had been blended into a thin paste
to ensure an even flow without
compromising the flavor.
So with that, I activated the pump,
and it was time to
see if this could work.
As I had hoped,
the pump dispensed the chili
at a steady pace,
which was good,
but I realized we had overlooked
a crucial detail.
The chili suit prevented
bathroom access,
and because of its weight,
removing it during a game
would not be an option.
So I experimented with a design
that would allow me to
deposit my excretions
directly into custom rubber underwear
connected to a secondary pumping system
so I could eject it into a toilet
via a second tube down my right arm.
But once I had some clothing on,
I realized the potential
for a costly mix-up
was too great.
So I had the bottom part of the suit
redesigned with strategic holes
in the groin and buttocks region
that would allow the wearer
to relieve him or herself
without taking off the suit.
But there was still the
issue of the temperature.
To meet health department standards,
Robert said the chili
would have to remain
above 135 degrees
Fahrenheit at all times.
But when I put it on,
the heat was so intense
that I could barely
have it against my skin
for more than a few seconds.
So I tracked down some
heat-resistant polymer gel
that could insulate the body
against the most extreme temperatures.
Feel anything?
- No.
- Good.
I did a preliminary test
with a blowtorch on
various parts of my body
to ensure the gel would protect
even my most sensitive regions.
And after getting gelled
up from head to toe,
the burning sensation
had completely vanished.
Yeah.
It seemed like we had
solved every problem,
but there was still one final
thing I had to take care of.
The pump on my chest that
made the chili suit function
was made out of metal,
and to get into Rabobank Arena,
every ticket holder has to
pass through a metal detector.
So I figured if I
could convince security
that I had a medically
necessary pacemaker,
they wouldn't be suspicious
when the alarm went off.
So I taped a real pacemaker to my chest
and then headed to a walk-in clinic
to request an X-ray
that would hopefully trick the physician
into writing me a doctor's note.
I would need to actually examine you
and see why is it that
you need the X-ray.
I have to have a reason why.
Well, I'm paying you for it,
so what do you care?
- I'm actually...
- legally, it's being...
monitored to see why
we're ordering an X-ray.
Oh.
Well, what's the minimum I need to say
to get one?
Either some area hurts
of your chest or...
- Sure.
- You're having a cough.
Okay. Yeah.
- Are you...
- what are you experiencing?
Yeah, both those. Yeah.
Mm-kay.
Just step as close as you can,
and you're gonna take
this shirt off, okay?
_
Your undershirt will be fine,
but I gotta get rid
of the buttons, okay?
Okay. Okay, sure.
Take a big breath.
Hold it.
And once the doctor saw
the pacemaker on my X-ray...
It looks like it's in well position
and no abnormalities.
She wrote me a doctor's
note that would hopefully
get me through security.
Thank you so much, Doctor.
And that meant it was
finally time to buy a ticket
to the next Bakersfield
Condors home game.
So an hour before puck drop,
I headed to the Lie-N-Den
to fill up the suit
with a fresh batch of chili.
I then put on some extra large clothing
that made me look like
a typical hockey fan
but was also secretly designed
so I could carry everything I would need
for our customers.
Along with a special pocket
built to hold cups and spoons,
I also had a cane with a secret trigger
that could dispense organic
sour cream on demand,
a trucker hat with a
built-in cheese grater
to deliver fresh cheddar cheese,
and lastly, a cargo
pocket full of chives.
Got a little bit of an aftertaste,
but I don't know if it's the chives
or the sour cream.
It's close.
With everything set
and just minutes until game time,
I arrived at Rabobank Arena
and nervously approached
the security checkpoint.
Hi. I have a medical condition.
This is my pacemaker ID card.
So I have a pacemaker, so
it might beep when you do it
over my chest area.
Okay.
Yeah, so that's my pacemaker.
- Okay.
- Okay.
_
Thank you so much.
Getting inside was a huge victory,
but for my plan to work,
I would need to be able
to sell chili for an entire game
without getting caught,
so I decided to start
in the upper levels
where security was thinner.
Hi, there, would you
like any fresh chili?
_
Two dollar chili?
I faced some rejection at first,
but it wasn't long until
I had my first sale.
It's chili.
- Do you want one?
- _
As my confidence grew,
I ventured down to the lower level,
where I got a second sale
from a guy in section 109.
I used my big body to
block the view of security
as I covertly squirted out his serving.
Here you go. Two dollars, please.
And after that, I began
to feel invincible.
Hi, there.
I moved through the
stadium like a ninja,
switching sections after each sale
so I couldn't be tracked.
At one point,
I thought security was on my tail,
but I was able to lose the guy
by ducking into a handicapped bathroom,
after which I reemerged
and resumed my operation.
I can serve it to you right now.
I have it right under my clothes.
I sold 16 bowls of
delicious chili that night,
right under the noses
of stadium management,
and that meant, from this day forward,
Robert had a proven
method to sell his chili
at Rabobank Arena.
This is $32.
And the ticket was only 12.
So that's $20 profit in one game.
Okay.
So I'll just leave all
this here for you, then?
Yeah.
- Bye.
- Bye, now.
Nothing feels better than a massage.
Nothing.
Which is why Anna Davis of Swan Day Spa
in Los Angeles, California,
has made it her livelihood.
But with plenty of
competition in the area,
Anna has been forced to
lower her prices so much,
she's barely making a profit.
Now we have a lot of competition,
so the client, when they got in,
they were looking for the cheaper price.
We have a deep tissue one,
which is, you pay more, $15.
I think I'll try the
$40 one for right now.
Okay. Okay, that's fine.
With customers going
for the cheapest price
and ignoring her more
profitable premium massages,
it was clearly a problem.
So I paid Anna a visit with a unique way
for her to upsell her customers.
You see, the key to upselling
is advertising a low
price to bring people in
but then ensuring that
once they see the product,
they'll definitely want to upgrade.
So if customers arrived at Swan Day Spa
and discovered that the $40 special
was done exclusively by someone
with a contagious disease,
like viral warts,
customers would be a lot more likely
to upgrade to one of
Anna's premium options.
upsell customers
by making the $40
special a wart massage.
I think... I think you're right.
Nobody want to get the wart massage.
For sure.
Anna was intrigued,
but she was a bit worried
about what her customers might think.
They might be upset.
They might be sue me.
Sue the business.
But I assured her that
no one would complain
as long as they believed
it was for a good cause.
Have you ever done any
charity work before?
- Oh, never.
- So with Anna's blessing,
I created a real charity
whose mission was to place
people living with warts
into the workplace.
I then distributed our flyers
at dermatology clinics across the city
and posted an ad on Craigslist
seeking people with active viral warts
who were looking for
work, and later that week,
I met with the two men who responded.
I think I've had every
kind of wart invented.
I don't know.
Oh, whoa.
But probably the worst
case of warts that I had
was on my penis.
Okay.
And it was, like, a circle around my...
I mean, it was...
Made it so that...
sex was not an option.
- Right.
- Right?
- Yeah, 'cause...
- Yeah.
I just took a soldering iron.
Burned it off myself.
- Whoa.
- Like, why go to a doctor
and have him do it?
I know what he's doing.
Just burned it off.
- You drop something?
- I did, yeah.
A little device here.
- A device?
- Yes.
- What is that?
- This is a wellness wand.
- What's that mean?
- Well, it's...
Right now,
the way that the unit works
if I have it sitting right...
if I set it right here,
it's putting out a signal
that's coming out to
the edge of the table,
maybe a little beyond.
- Uh-huh.
- All right?
And the signal is matching
with whatever the needs are
that you select from the files.
- Are you a healer or something?
- Yes.
- Oh.
- Yeah.
Okay.
- Yeah.
- What...
Uh, what...
How, um...
Okay.
After carefully vetting the candidates
to be sure they had at least one wart,
I officially signed them
on to the CityWarts roster.
But before they could be
placed at Swan Day Spa,
there was still one
thing our charity needed:
an endorsement.
It seemed like every credible charity
had the endorsement of a public figure,
like a mayor or a city council member,
and I was worried that if
CityWarts didn't have one,
the public would never accept the idea
of a wart-infected masseur.
So I rented out the ballroom of
the historic Oxford Palace Hotel
and then reached out to every
local politician I could find,
inviting them to be the guest of honor
at a gala event for the
launch of a new charity.
And after a few days,
we finally got an RSVP
from Councilman Ed Reyes,
a 12-year veteran of LA's city council.
So on the day of the event,
I decorated the ballroom
with the finest and fanciest things
in the hopes that this
gala would be enough
to dazzle Councilman Reyes
into legitimizing CityWarts
with his official endorsement.
- Hi, Nathan.
- Hey.
Oh, my gosh. You look nice.
- Thank you.
- How are you?
- Nice to see you.
- Nice to see you too.
Okay, so.
What do you think?
- I like it.
- It's pretty.
Once Anna took her seat,
we opened our doors
to the crowd of random people
I had paid to attend the event
so that Councilman
Reyes would be impressed
by the charity's popularity
when he arrived.
Since every real charity gala
is hosted by a beauty queen,
I hired Miss California
2013, Mabelynn Capeluj,
to be the evening's host.
It's here in Los Angeles, and they help
people in Los Angeles
with warts get jobs?
- Yes.
- That's their mission, okay.
Do you get nervous before
these things at all?
- Um, sometimes, sometimes.
- Yeah?
But I feel like this will be easy.
Hopefully I don't jinx myself.
- You're so beautiful...
- Thank you.
You could probably go out there
and just go, "Blah, blah, blah,"
and no one would know the difference.
- Thank you. Hopefully.
- Yeah. No problem.
As the crowd settled in,
Councilman Reyes entered the room
with all the confidence
I would have expected
from an elected official.
I only hoped that this gala event
would be enough to win
his coveted endorsement.
So, growing up, I actually
had a friend who...
he had warts on his hand,
and I believe his mom or he said
it was from handling a frog.
He was able to seek medical attention,
and they were able to
freeze and remove the wart,
and he's just fine now,
and that's why I'm so
proud to introduce to you
CityWarts and their mission
to put warts to work.
And right now, I'd like to bring out
some CityWarts Angels
to talk about their own
experiences with warts.
My name is Daniel,
and I have warts.
My hope is that some personal stories
from our CityWarts Angels would help
garner sympathy from Councilman Reyes.
I had a wart right here.
Nine warts made, like,
a number six on my hand.
A ring of genital warts around my penis.
Remember, wart pride.
Thanks, CityWarts.
Thank you very much.
I appreciate everything
that CityWarts is doing
for our community,
and because of CityWarts,
I had a opportunity for a
job placement with massage.
You guys have a great night,
and thank you.
The speeches were a hit,
and after concluding the night
by recognizing the Swan Day Spa
as CityWarts' newest partner,
it was time to approach Councilman Reyes
for his endorsement.
Councilman, hi.
Would I be able to get a photo with you
and Anna over here?
This is Anna.
- Nice to meet you, sir.
- Hi, Anna.
Okay, come on over here.
With a photo of Anna
standing next to
a respected city councilman,
it was now impossible to deny
that he was a supporter of our cause.
Thank you for that endorsement.
Thank you so much.
So with proof of our credibility
now proudly displayed
behind the desk at Swan Day Spa,
it was finally time for our wart angels
to meet their new boss.
It is such a honor
to be in a location
where...
you're creating a
wart-positive environment.
- Thank you so much.
- Thank you so much.
But before moving forward,
Anna wanted to be sure
they had the right skills for the job.
Have you ever trained to massage before?
Are you a licensed massage therapist?
I'm not a licensed massage therapist,
but I stay in practice
with my girlfriend,
because she gets foot reflexology
every single night,
and then I just work my
way up from the ankles.
Apply. Release. Apply. Release.
Dig a little bit.
- Okay.
- Every night.
She's a lucky lady.
Oh, that's nice. How about you, Albert?
Well, I've had experience.
I used to give massages
to my grandmother.
- Okay.
- Just a little bit at a time.
Like, and I... the main focus
was for her to feel good
and not for me to be...
because a massage is
not supposed to be...
it's supposed to be...
- You know.
- Yeah.
Just making the person relax and...
Okay, so you approve
them? They meet your standards?
For right now, I mean,
we have to learn more.
For now, yeah, we have to see.
Anna was satisfied with
their qualifications,
so the Angels took their stations
while Anna and I waited
for customers up front.
Yes, I'd like to have the massage.
Yeah, it's... how you like it?
We have so many kinds.
I want to get that one that
was the special for $40.
- Okay.
- As usual, the customer chose
the cheapest option available,
so once she was ready
and waiting on the table,
it was time to see if
the new upsell would work.
- Hi, there.
- Hi.
Hi, so I'm not sure if you're aware,
but the $40 massage
special that you selected
is done in conjunction with
a charity outreach program
- called CityWarts...
- Uh-huh.
That puts people living with
warts into the workplace.
Okay.
Is that something
you're comfortable with?
Yeah, that's okay 'cause
it's not a contagious thing.
Oh, actually, warts are contagious.
- Oh, they are?
- Yes.
- Oh. They're contagious?
- Yes.
Does he wear gloves or what?
He will be wearing thin gloves.
After telling the client about
our full range of massages,
she could now see the benefits
of the premium options.
So how much are the other massages?
It's just $15 more.
All right, I'll take one of the others.
My plan worked perfectly.
All right, so this is
your therapist, Mamie.
She does not have any warts.
- All right, thanks.
- At all.
Okay, great, enjoy your massage.
- Thank you.
- And Anna was thrilled.
- She upgraded.
- Oh!
And as the day went on,
more and more customers
opted to upgrade to the premium options.
I guess I just want the one
with the non-wart worker.
Yeah.
Anna was upselling her clients
at an unprecedented rate,
and any time a customer was skeptical,
we had all the credibility we needed.
This is me and a city councilor.
I mean, I don't know how much more legit
you can get than an LA city councilman
endorsing the charity, but...
- Yeah, it seemingly...
- it seems safe
if the city's working with it.
I did feel a little bad
that no one wanted anything to do
with our wart angels that day,
but it was nice to know
that at least they had each other.
I love baking cakes.
Pies.
Is it the baking that you like,
or is it the look in the person's eyes
that you baked it for?
Both.
Absolutely.
Type of pacemaker you have?
Um...
I think it's a...
Sony?
Synced
by Bakugan