4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

If I'm going to buy a thing and its intended purpose is to get dirty, I'm not going to go for the most expensive version of that thing. Some people who are mega-rich apparently don't have that understanding.
4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

If I'm going to buy a thing and its intended purpose is to get dirty, I'm not going to go for the most expensive version of that thing. That's a basic understanding of the world most of us share. "Most" being the key word.

Some people who are mega-rich apparently don't have that understanding. I know this because there are products that are normally inexpensive (for a reason) that come in decadent versions crafted specifically for the wealthiest people in the world. I'm talking everyday, basic things we all use and don't think twice about, yet some rich people apparently prefer to have gold-plated and diamond-studded and slapped with price tags so outlandish they defy all logic and taste.

Out there in the world there is actually a market for ...

A $4,200 Toothbrush

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

Are run-of-the-mill toothbrushes just not cutting it? Do they lack a certain intangible sense of opulence that you can't get from the toothbrushes all the other gutter swill humans use every day? If you answered yes to these questions as you read this sitting atop a tiger with platinum teeth, then the Reinast toothbrush is the exact mouth-scrubbing tool you need to give your morning routine the same undeserved sense of superiority you contemptuously unleash upon every human you meet.

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs
Youtube.com/GQ Magazine

If 2 Chainz uses one, shouldn't we all?

The Reinast toothbrush is $4,200. It's made of solid titanium. Included in the price is three years of bristle replacements, but after that you'll need to opt-in to one of the replacement plans, which start at $400 for five years' worth of bristles. The Reinast toothbrush isn't just a toothbrush; it's a statement. You won't get out of bed for less than a million, and your plaque and swamp mouth won't scrub off for anything less than what most people use as a down payment on a new car.

This thing is for monsters, really vile human trash heaps. The kind of people you imagine sitting in on an Illuminati-style board meeting deciding the fate of the world. There's a Middle Eastern sheik, a Texas oil tycoon in a cowboy hat, and a pile of money with eyes and a menacing laugh. They all use the Reinast toothbrush to cleanse their mouths of the poor people they eat for lunch before deciding which world leader to assassinate.

There is no reason relating to function that explains the $4,200 price tag. Seriously, it's been tested:

It's all a matter of opulence and how much of an asshole you want your teeth to perceive you as. It's not even electric. It's a $4,200 stick for your mouth that serves the same purpose as the toothbrushes the worst neighbor on the block gives out for Halloween every year. It's the kind of product that would get a special mention in a lottery winner's suicide note after they'd spent themselves into financial ruin.

A $1,175 Gold-Plated Toilet Brush

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

After you wash down your wildly expensive seven-course meal with your exorbitantly priced bottle of wine and cap it all off with a ludicrously priced dessert, you're going to need the absurdly expensive Windisch 24-carat-gold-plated toilet brush to scrape those stubborn turd streaks off the inside of your toilet bowl.

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

Congrats! You just paid $1,175 for the opportunity to clean a toilet!

On the Venn diagram of people who would buy a gold-plated toilet brush and people who are actually cleaning their own toilets, there is very little overlap. The people who buy this are essentially buying it for their housekeepers, which is the most extravagant gift a person can give a housekeeper besides the millions in child support they'll fork over after they plow the housekeeper.

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs
Kevin Winter/Getty Images Entertainment/Getty Images


You think he bought one for the housekeeper he impregnated?

Who is the vapid, soulless creature who needs to tuck a $1,175 fuzzy shit stick within the shadow of their toilet to feel good about themselves? When they're feeling down and life isn't giving them a break they can pay their way out of, do they think about how they are the owners of a golden shit wand and then smile?

On the positive side, it's tarnish-free, which is nice. You and your family of snobby pricks can drench this thing with your misfired urine streams without a care! It won't corrode like your souls did long ago.

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

A Million-Dollar Fishing Lure Made of Gold, Platinum, Diamonds, and Rubies

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs

You know what never needed to be diamond-encrusted and have its price inflated by an astronomical percentage? A thing that rips fish's faces apart. Three pounds of platinum and gold along with 4,753 diamonds and rubies are brought together to make the million-dollar fishing lure. Or maybe it's a high-priced Vegas stripper's nipple tassel?

I have no idea if this thing's intended purpose is actually served, but I assume if it does it attracts only the most refined and affluent fish. None of those lazy lower-income fish like whatever McDonald's uses for their fish fillets. Only the crazy Russian oligarchs of the fish world are drawn to this nightmare of opulence.

If I were a fish, I would think it was a crazy space squid and I would, of course, want to put it in my mouth, as I do even though I'm not a fish. Maybe I'm underestimating fish, but I feel like they're all a bunch of dipshits who will shove anything that squiggles in their mouths. I doubt they have the cognitive ability to choose an expensive meal over a cheap fast-food meal. I don't even think fish know how to choose. They float and do things and they don't know why. A fish's entire life is just accepting what's in front of it, not caring one way or another.

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs
BLUEXHAND/iStock/Getty Images

Idiot.

Why spend $1 million on a tool used to catch a thing that's cognitively incapable of caring about how much money was spent catching it? If a guy escapes prison and a state-wide manhunt ensues that costs the state a huge amount in cash and redirected resources, that escapee will feel mighty proud of the fuss he's stirred up. No fish will ever be caught with the million-dollar lure that will be pulled out of the water and say, "Wow, I'm so honored. I must have been worth it." It'll flop and die, and you're going to have to rip the fish's head apart to retrieve the $1 million you willingly allowed it to eat because you're a stupid person.

A Single $240 Roll of Toilet Paper Embossed With 24-Carat Gold

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs
REUTERS/Michael Dalder

Your butthole is one of the few things on your body that requires almost no pampering. Well, literal pampering up to a certain age, but pampering in the sense of going the extra mile to take care of it, showing it love and attention. For example, when fine oil is rubbed on a butthole, it's not to make the butthole feel luxurious or youthful; it's to prepare it for a much more intense experience to come.

They're tough. They can handle a lot. They're the crazy old coot down the block who shuns any hoity-toity, highfalutin modern convenience and luxury. Life's been tough to buttholes, and that's the way they like it. That's why wiping your ass with toilet paper embossed with a 24-carat gold motif is so very stupid.

4 Absurdly Expensive Versions of Products For Filthy Jobs
Jovo Marjanovic/iStock/Getty Images

Buttholes.

Firstly, the word "motif" should be nowhere near a butthole, even when using "motif's" second definition of "a distinctive feature or dominant idea in an artistic or literary composition." You shouldn't be creating art or literature on the subject of buttholes. That's how you get made fun of.

Secondly, and on the subject of wiping away poop with gold: what the fuck, man? Let's put aside the obvious message people who spend $240 for a single roll of toilet paper embossed with gold are sending: "I literally wipe my ass with money." That's a given. What I find even more bizarre, and even offensive, is that the gold-embossed motif is customizable. The need for a human to have a toilet paper they can call their own, a toilet paper unique to them, with their own insignia that only their butthole will be able to truly appreciate, is a bit much. Buttholes don't want luxury rubbed in their faces a couple of times a day. Your butthole is a no-frills Virginia coal miner who just wants a beer after work, a steak for dinner, and two uninterrupted hours of TV every night. If it wanted fancy, it would shit in an Applebee's.

I
Photodisc/Photodisc/Getty Images

Also buttholes.

It's a body part of simple, unsophisticated pleasures. Don't give it golden toilet paper crafted by a German ass-paper artisan; give it some two-ply, a wet wipe, and a hemorrhoid donut, and it's the happiest part of your body. Wiping your asshole with gold-embossed toilet paper basically creates a body-swap movie plot: your asshole becomes the mature voice of reason standing firmly against lunacy, and you become the asshole who wants to wipe away feces with gold.


Luis is gold-plating his plunger. In the meantime, you can find him on Twitter and Tumblr.

For more from Luis, check out 4 Everyday Activities that Are Way Scarier than You Expect and 4 Incredible Modern Technologies That Have Lost Their Luster.

Click the Facebook 'share' button, and maybe you can get a wildly expensive toothbrush for Christmas.

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