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April 29, 2005
The $20 million scissors
This story made my day. As a person who often uses rock-paper-scissors to resolve a dispute, I am impressed that it made it this far up the food chain.
t may have been the most expensive game of rock, paper, scissors ever played.
Takashi Hashiyama, president of Maspro Denkoh Corporation, an electronics company based outside of Nagoya, Japan, could not decide whether Christie's or Sotheby's should sell the company's art collection, which is worth more than $20 million, at next week's auctions in New York.
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He did not split the collection - which includes an important Cézanne landscape, an early Picasso street scene and a rare van Gogh view from the artist's Paris apartment - between the two houses, as sometimes happens. Nor did he decide to abandon the auction process and sell the paintings through a private dealer.
Instead, he resorted to an ancient method of decision-making that has been time-tested on playgrounds around the world: rock breaks scissors, scissors cuts paper, paper smothers rock.
In Japan, resorting to such games of chance is not unusual. "I sometimes use such methods when I cannot make a decision," Mr. Hashiyama said in a telephone interview. "As both companies were equally good and I just could not choose one, I asked them to please decide between themselves and suggested to use such methods as rock, paper, scissors."
Officials from the Tokyo offices of the two auction houses were informed of Mr. Hashiyama's request on a Thursday afternoon in late January.
They were told they had until a meeting on Monday to choose a weapon. The right choice could mean several million dollars in profits from the fees the auction house charges buyers (usually 20 percent for the first $200,000 of the final price and 12 percent above that)
Posted by oz115 at April 29, 2005 06:35 PM
Comments
As a seasoned veteran (and often loser) of rock-paper-scissors, I think that guy is AWESOME!
How would you handle a $20 million game? I wouldn't be able to take it. I get stressed out and contemplate my strategy for a game where the loser has to sit in the back seat of a car and winner gets shotgun. Imagine if $20 million was on the line. Wow!
Posted by: Stat Boy at April 30, 2005 10:16 AM
