The Goldman State

Episode 97: Behind Closed Doors

Ed Goldman Episode 97

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Have you been to the grocery or drug store lately and find your item under heavy security? For no good reason? I now know the answer.

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00:00 - Ed Goldman (Host)
Hi, this is Ed Goldman with the Goldman State Podcast. Routine visits to my nearby Safeway store have inspired me to resurrect a talent I stumbled on as a kid lock picking. You and any law officer hearing this should rest assured I never used this quirky bit of expertise to actually steal anything. I just liked knowing I could if I wanted and if I'd wanted, in tandem with that, if I wanted to do time. Now, a guy my dad knew when he became a claims adjuster, as his second career taught me how to do it. One evening when he came to our home for dinner, I'm sure my folks were less than thrilled when their guest he was a furniture refinisher in LA but in his youth had been a burglar in Brooklyn regaled their gape-jawed 12-year-old with what they considered his tales of daring do and daring don't. But when he went out to his car and came back with a box full of locks and rings of keys he'd managed to amass in his early years and found me such an eager and weirdly adept pupil, they kind of relaxed. He kept reassuring them Bob and Betty, nobody even uses these kinds of keys or locks anymore. So he gave me, with mom and dad's approval, a small ring of keys. 

01:16
The next day, when I came home from school and my parents were still at work, I fumbled around with my new toys, unlocked our front door and went inside. I was exhilarated. I wanted to take out ads on TV and radio saying Need a break-in for insurance purposes? This preteen may be your solution. But I wisely told no one what I'd done, except for my brother, stuart, and oh about a dozen friends. Lock-picking if that's what it was came in handy when I or someone I was in the company of got locked out of a car, home or even office, and it was definitely a gift with planned obsolescence built into it. Once electronics took over the field of security, even on the domestic front, my gifts were outmoded. To clarify, I wasn't smart enough to break into a smart home, nor could I ever open safes, even sometimes when I had the combination. We're not talking about my having a robust underground skill set here. 

02:12
Yet when I go to Safeway to buy, among other goods, vodka, advil, PM and toothpaste, I need to have three separate cases unlocked. Each requires me to walk down the individual aisle where it's kept and punch a glowing button which responds with a cheerful woman's voice, thanking me for shopping at Safeway and promising me that someone will be there in just a moment to assist me. This may be how it works if you choose to go shopping when no one else does. If you venture over in late afternoon or mid-evening when the store is bustling with customers, your wait is likely to extend past just a moment. Try 10 to 15 minutes and then just hope the first responder has keys to all of the cases containing your desired goods and that there aren't others waiting at any or all of those cases for the same employee. I already knew that if I want to use the bathroom in my Safeway store, that requires not only someone to be summoned to unlock the door, but also for it to be announced over the store's public address system the way they paid someone to clean up a spill on aisle nine. Fortunately, no one announces what your specific anatomical intention is when calling for someone to accommodate Customer at restroom. Not yet, that is I half expect to hear. Customer has to go number two please hurry, any day now. 

03:31
I asked one of the store's employees the other day what had prompted the sudden attention at many grocery stores to keeping merch under lock and key. He told me this particular store had suffered more than $50,000 in thefts in just one week. While I believe the employee, I'm finding the human race a little unbelievable. I get why booze and even some over-the-counter drugs might be objects of desire, but what's the street value of a tube of Crest toothpaste, even with added brighteners? Can it be crushed into some sort of minty-fresh methamphetamine, gum-strengthening fentanyl, cop 1, looking at a corpse? 

04:09
Well, this pipe finally got what he deserved. Why couldn't he just buy a generic branded toothpaste? I mean, I myself buy generic Bismol, but my stomach ain't so good. What a waste, yeah. But you gotta admit, sarge, that last breath you took smelled kinda nice. Yeah, there's that. Anyway, I think I'll look in my garage tonight for that key ring. I could use some floss and see no reason to wait 15 minutes for it. I'm Ed Goldman. My column, the Goldman State, comes out every Monday, wednesday and Friday. You can subscribe for free at GoldmanStatecom. Thanks for listening.