This might just be the best one I've read so far - and that's some statement as I've enjoyed (and often hugely enjoyed) just about all of them.
I like this one in particular because there was a time when I behaved like an "AK."
Obnoxious, but doing well so didn't care what others thought of me.
I'm IMO a lot milder now in older age, I still think caring overly what others think of you can be a debilitating personality trait, but it only took one robust character many years ago to answer me with: "I'm sorry, I don't recall asking you for your opinion" to make me realise there was only one cool person in this particular encounter - and it wasn't me.
I've learned to cut offering unsolicited opinions out of my (real) life, I'm a lot more quietly reactive in recent years and I'm a lot happier for it.
However, I digress.
What did he actually think the coins on the table were for?
Why did he even ask?
If he didn't already know the answer he's none too bright.
And if he did he was just being crass and overbearing - the world doesn't need his unsolicited opinion on literally everything he sees.
I agree with so much of the general thrust of this.
Social media brings out the worst in so many and racing betting social media is full of people who think they are more intelligent than they are.
There are no "geniuses" in this game.
Not Aidan O'Brien or even Willie Mullins and certainly no one in the betting industry.
It's also full of vested interests.
Pro punters trying to argue why them being allowed to win fortunes would be good for the image of racing, bookies trying to argue why them instead continuing to be allowed to win fortunes would be good for the health of racing.
And bitching - lots of bitching.
You have to wonder about people who spend more time trashing others than offering their own take.
I've been in and around this game for literally 44 years and it's absolutely rammed with people I wouldn't cross the road to do the proverbial on if they were burning to death.
It's why I don't accept invitations into private boxes any more - they always contain at least one individual I could happily see fall off the balcony by the second race, so best I steer clear.
AK sounds awful, absolutely awful - not least because (whisper it quietly) the more I read Slim the more I realise we have some (not all, but enough) shared value systems.
Slim's take is often my take - only more contemporary than mine and that's what makes it interesting, he frequently brings me up to date on an industry I'm thankfully only on the periphery of nowadays.
Essential reading this, because it doesn't just tell you about AK - it tells you (if you need telling) about Slim and how to do have a bit of empathy (putting himself in the financial shoes of a waitress).
Cracking.