Rychly Prachy Dvaasedmdesaty Ulovek Praha 04.03.2013 < Browser SECURE >
He bit. I won’t bore you with the logistics of hauling 72 items across Prague on a broken luggage cart from Hlavní nádraží. Here’s the money part.
For me, that date is .
I offered 8,000 CZK. I had 1,200. I pulled the oldest trick in the Prague playbook: I pulled out an envelope with 1,200 visible, patted my other pocket (empty), and said “Zítra do oběda, zbytek. Nebo nic.” (Tomorrow by noon, the rest. Or nothing.) rychly prachy dvaasedmdesaty ulovek praha 04.03.2013
I had exactly 1,200 CZK in my pocket (about 60 EUR back then). Rent was due in three days. My then-girlfriend had just left a note saying “Nejsi podnikatel, jsi snílek” (“You’re not an entrepreneur, you’re a dreamer”). He bit
In 2013 Prague, that was three months’ rent. That was freedom. That was rychly prachy . Of course, there’s always a shadow. Two of the 72 items didn’t sell. One was a dictaphone with a strange Russian voice on it (I threw it into the Vltava). The other was a hard drive wrapped in a sock. For me, that date is
I found my old moleskine notebook last night. Between the coffee stains and the faded metro tickets, one line screamed off the page: “04.03.2013 – Rychlý prachy – 72 úlovek – Praha.” Let me translate the slang for the new generation. Rychlý prachy isn’t just “quick money.” It’s the dangerous kind. The money that arrives faster than a tram going downhill from Karlovo náměstí. The kind you don’t ask questions about. And úlovek (the catch)? That’s what we called a successful flip—be it a vintage guitar, a forgotten painting, or a suitcase full of something that fell off a truck near Holešovice. Prague in early March 2013 was a grey, wet sponge. The tourists hadn’t arrived yet. The Charles Bridge was for locals only. Desperation was cheap, but information was cheaper.
