One evening, a man casually walks into a bar with a relaxed attitude and a glimmer of mischief in his eyes. He scans the place for a moment, then confidently approaches the bartender and points to a glass sitting all the way down at the far end of the counter. With a grin, he says, “See that glass way over there? I’ll bet you a hundred bucks I can take a leak into it from right here.” The bartender, caught off guard by such a wild and ridiculous proposition, can’t help but laugh.
Thinking this will be the easiest hundred dollars he’s ever made, he leans on the bar and says, “You’re on!” The man steps back, unzips, and lets it fly. What happens next is nothing short of chaos. His aim is wildly off, and instead of hitting the glass, he sprays everything else—the bar top, the floor, a couple of barstools, and to the bartender’s shock and dismay, even the bartender himself gets soaked. It’s a complete mess. Patrons nearby look over in surprise, while the bartender, now dripping wet, bursts out laughing and says, “Ha! You owe me a hundred bucks, buddy!” Without uttering a single word, the man zips up, turns away, and calmly strolls over to a guy playing pool in the corner of the bar.
He leans in and whispers something in the man’s ear, and after a brief exchange, the two shake hands, and some cash changes hands. Then, the man walks back to the bar with no sign of embarrassment, reaches into his pocket, and hands the bartender a crisp one-hundred-dollar bill. Still wiping himself off and chuckling, the bartender looks at the guy, completely puzzled, and asks, “Okay, seriously—what was that all about? You just lost a hundred bucks, made a mess of my bar, and soaked me in the process. And yet, you seem like the happiest guy in the room.”
The man leans in a little closer with a sly smile and says, “Well, I just bet that guy over there a thousand bucks that I could pee all over your bar, hit you while doing it, and you’d still be laughing by the time I was done.” For a moment, the bartender is stunned. He blinks, looks back toward the pool player, then down at the mess on the counter, and finally back at the man. Then he laughs even harder than before, realizing he’d just been part of an elaborate, perfectly executed prank.
What seemed like a stupid stunt turned out to be a clever hustle, and the man who looked like a fool ended up walking away nine hundred dollars richer. The brilliance of the whole situation wasn’t just in the act itself but in how smoothly it was planned and delivered. The man knew he’d lose the initial bet and be out a hundred bucks, but he also knew he had a thousand riding on the bigger picture. He didn’t flinch when he missed the glass. He didn’t argue or protest when it was time to pay up. He just played his role perfectly, never breaking character. It takes a special kind of confidence—and let’s face it, guts—to pull off a stunt like that. And the beauty of it is that no one really felt like they lost. The bartender got a good laugh and a story to tell for years, the patrons witnessed something unforgettable, and the man walked out a winner. It’s one of those moments that becomes bar legend, retold time and time again, growing funnier with every version. Some people go to bars for a drink. Others, apparently, go to win bets in the most ridiculous and entertaining ways possible.