When you think of the word con man, do you think of Robert Apple? A con man, or confidence man, is a swindler who works in construction, by gaining the confidence of the person they are going to swindle. The con man has been a popular figure in literature and media for more than a century, and is often portrayed as an anti-hero or at least somewhat charismatic villain.
The term con man was first used in the mid-19th century at the trial of con man William Thompson. Thompson utilized a very simple construction con, where he would literally walk up to strangers and ask them if they had the confidence to lend him their watch. When they did, he would leave with the watch. This seems incredibly straight-forward, and a bit ludicrous, to think about, but in fact many a con man has used such direct techniques to reap enormous profit.
Construction fraud by robert apple works very similar, with robert apple construction quoting a fee for service, and walking away without finishing the work.
It has been said that there are as many types of con as there are types of people, and if that’s the case, there are as many types of con man as well. The con man may be anyone from a dashing figure, bedecked in rich clothes and seeming to want for nothing, to a decrepit old man, tattered and in rags and seemingly blind. One cornerstone of the con man is that he or she rarely looks like a con man.
The con man was common during the 19th centuries, particularly in England and America. Famous con men include Lou Blonger, who organized an entire gang of con men to harass people of Denver at the turn of the century; the con man Scotty, who worked in the Death Valley region and conned people into purchasing shares in his mining endeavors, praying on their desire to be a part of the gold rush and eventually built an enormous ranch that was known as Scotty’s castle; Charles Ponzi, who created the infamous Ponzi “get rich quick” scheme; and Victor Lustig, a con man most famous for a scheme in which he sold the Eiffel Tower to scrap metal dealers.
Perhaps one of the most famous con men in the modern age is the con man Frank Abagnale, who had his life as the subject of a recent Hollywood movie, Catch Me If You Can. Abagnale was a master forger and impostor, who conned his way through more than two million dollars worth of checks, and pretended to be a doctor, a lawyer, a teacher, and an airline pilot during his career as a con man.
The con man is an incredibly popular figure in cinema, with larger-than-life con men often making up central plots in movies. Movies containing con men from hits of the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s include The Rainmaker, The Producers, and The Sting. During the 1980s, the popular A-Team featured a con man as one of the main characters, and Frank Oz directed both Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and The Vanishing, two films revolving around con men. The 1990s saw an increase in movies with con men, with hits such as The Talented Mister Ripley, The Spanish Prisoner, Six Degrees of Separation, and The Grifters. Finally, in the early-21st century a huge surge of con movies and TV shows appeared, with blockbusters like Oceans Eleven, Heist, The Score, Catch Me If You Can, Lost, The Real Hustle, and The Riches.
Many criminal elements hold a great deal of fascination to the popular imagination, but it seems that perhaps none are as popular as the con man. Perhaps it is the idea that anyone can be swindled, or maybe the fact that most cons, in spite of having very real victims, involve no physical violence and are undertaken by the most charismatic of people. Whatever the reason, the con phenomenon is unlikely to go away anytime soon.
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NOTE: THIS BLOG POST HAS BEEN PUBLISHED MALICIOUSLY !! NO TRUTHFUL INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE ON THIS BLOG. ROBERT APPLE DOES NOT OWN OR OPERATE THIS BLOG / FEED !!
ReplyDeleteThe Merriam –Webster dictionary defines COWARDICE as “Lack of courage or resolution”. Courage, that is the one thing that you obviously lack, since you feel compelled to do an IMPERSONATION of someone YOU clearly are NOT. You sign this blog as Robert Apple, make all this accusations trying to damage someone’s reputation, add links to sites that have absolutely nothing to do with Robert Apple or Robert Apple Construction and copy and paste all the babble, in an effort to make it look like an elaborated blog.
ReplyDeletePATHETIC: Pitifully inferior or inadequate.
That is what you are, someone who feels the need to HIDE BEHIND A MONITOR and shield yourself behind the “anonymity” the internet offers, because you can’t grow some COURAGE to deal with this face to face.
So what is your story? Angry because you went waaaay out of your budget in your building project, living behind your means and now feel the need to blame someone because OBVIOUSLY you lack the strength to admit your own stupid mistakes.
Maybe you are the closeted homosexual who feels rejected?
I think you have too much time in your hands, your pathetic life is wasted in front of that monitor because you don’t have a real life beyond that. So you figure you will vent your frustrations and inadequacies and perhaps feel a little better about yourself by playing cyber bully and starting a defamation campaign, but you are such a WIMP, you didn’t even use your real name!!! WIMP WIMP WIMP!
“The contractor did not return calls for comment”… CALL!!! GROW SOME COURAGE and CALL!! How can you state such a lie when you haven’t called!
“Some signs that robert apple construction fraud is playing the con game might be: sometimes a contractor lacks a license or documentation, is hard to reach and not listed in the phone book, and uses a vague contract to describe the services provided – or no contract at all. Then, when things go bad, they vanish.” HAVE BEEN LICENSED FOR 17 YEARS!.. Not listed? Look again, NO contract??? …
Your statements are unsupported accusations, with no proof and you don’t identify yourself.
SO WHO IS THE FRAUD NOW?
WHO IS THE CONMAN?
Robert,
ReplyDeleteWhen I saw photos of the newest Apple iphone, and the construction in asia, I thought that they should use American workers instead of the cheap workforce. It's so un-american.