This is for fun but is there anyone out there that can answerer this?
In the UK around about the mid 1970s there was a program called That's Life. Headed by a BBC TV presenter Esther Ransen. Somewhere in the north of England a man was annoyed that the council would not empty his bins. He decided to take revenge by withholding what he believed to be the amount of money for the bin collections. A year later he is held to account for not paying his council tax.
He goes to a fish monger and buys a plaice. He paints it to look like a cheque and posts it to the council. As a valid document the council had to process the rotten fish and take it to the bank who had to store it for up to 6 years.
When Esther Ransen told the story on national TV, thousands of people did the same thing. An urgent act of parliament was created Making it illegal to send rotting fish through the post as cheques.
Anyone out there that can uncover this?
In the UK around about the mid 1970s there was a program called That's Life. Headed by a BBC TV presenter Esther Ransen. Somewhere in the north of England a man was annoyed that the council would not empty his bins. He decided to take revenge by withholding what he believed to be the amount of money for the bin collections. A year later he is held to account for not paying his council tax.
He goes to a fish monger and buys a plaice. He paints it to look like a cheque and posts it to the council. As a valid document the council had to process the rotten fish and take it to the bank who had to store it for up to 6 years.
When Esther Ransen told the story on national TV, thousands of people did the same thing. An urgent act of parliament was created Making it illegal to send rotting fish through the post as cheques.
Anyone out there that can uncover this?
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