I want to fire the company that has been doing my plumbing for like the last five or six years, what do you think?
They:
Charge an assload, for everything. (Including $1K for the recent replacement of a sink hose.) Recommend jobs that cost six assloads. (I can’t even bear to tell you.)
Want me to watch while they work they do that they think is cool. “This is going to be all asses and elbows!” the guy said while they put some kind of plastic liner inside my sewer pipe.
Have–and this is one of my very gravest concerns–hold music that sings to the tune of the Irish sea shanty, “What Would You Do With a Drunken Sailor,” “What would you do with a leaky faucet, what would you do with a broken toilet, pick up thee phone and call _ _, day or night or morning.” I am not shitting you.
Make their plumbers ask you, at the end of a gruesome job on a rainy Monday morning, to give them a five-star review and do a selfie with them (and your dog, sometimes?) for a dogfood charity, or some shit.

***
And uncharge so obviously, every fucking time. A callback, an hour after the plumber’s gone: “We fixed your faucet. Did you have some water damage we could also repair?”
I’m sure you’re telling yourself right now: Murray is a fucking idiot. Of course he should fire that company. How hard could it be to find a less manipulative, self-regarding, marketing-driven corporate corrosion than this?
Except the problem is, Murray doesn’t know the answer to that question. For at least three years, he’s been part of the “No-Drip Club” with this plumber, which garners him an annual check-up (otherwise known as an annual upsell opportunity) and a 10% discount on the exorbitant rates of this plumber, which will always be needed to attend to his 1911-constructed home.
Poor Murray, would be my thought. Well, that’s my thought a lot of the time, about a lot of things. Still, my experience from my youth—when my parents constantly bitched about and put up with a plumber named Bill Hill who talked to them about their septic system and their sump pump and the “mell of a hess” that system was always in—tells me: Murray, this is how life is.
What’s your thought, wise guy?

