Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / BlackMarketProduce

Go To

1%%
2%%
3%%
4%%
5%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
6%%
7%%
8%%
9%%
10%%
11%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1574715984008599400
12%% Please do not replace or remove without starting a new thread.
13%%
14[[quoteright:338:[[Webcomic/FreakAngels https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/freakangels.png]]]]
15%%
16In many stories set in a CrapsackWorld where civilians subsist on nothing else but PovertyFood, [[ArtificialMeat synthetic substitutes]], and [[MysteryMeat adulterated foods]], a character is shown buying fresh food in the BlackMarket for an exorbitant price. At least one of the items being bought is something very sensuous, for example, either an orange, a bag of coffee, or a steak. That character will either stand back and marvel at how wonderful the orange looks against the gray/sepia world, or press the coffee against his nose to absorb the aroma, or take a precious bite of chocolate and perform a milder version of slow, sensual, EroticEating. To be most effective, the work should first show us the grim, tasteless gruel that the proles have to subsist on.
17
18Sometimes, a character might be shocked to find one of these foods in a rich person's house. If only elites are able to obtain luxury foods, as in a totalitarian state, if a new character is shown carving up a sirloin, this reveals that they are either from the Inner Party or TheSyndicate.
19
20In-universe, this could be explained by OnlyElectricSheepAreCheap, or the authors are trying to evoke parallels to RealLife (see examples below). Also, because {{Dystopia}} tends to be set in [[GrimUpNorth northern climates]], it makes sense for people in northern climates to find foods from tropical areas as rare and sensuous because of the implied expense. In science fiction settings such as space stations, access to luxury foods suggests both wealth and power.
21
22However, an astute viewer might note that the foods selected by the authors are generally those that can be dramatically used by the actor/director to reinforce the crapsackiness of the CrapsackWorld and the greed and evil of the elites. It's never something that is dull but nutritious, like peanut butter or spinach. If it's an orange or strawberries, the color is used to make a stark contrast against the background.
23
24You can find black market food in a [[SecretShop hidden store]], perhaps behind a [[BookcasePassage hinged shelf at the back]]--but only if you tell the shopkeeper the secret password. No time to get to the secret shop? Find TheScrounger at the [[MyLocal local pub]] and he can probably sell you some food that FellOffTheBackOfATruck.
25
26See also MundaneLuxury.
27
28----
29!!Examples:
30
31[[foldercontrol]]
32
33[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
34* In ''Manga/BarefootGen'', Gen's mother Kimie, who was pregnant at the beginning of the story, [[MaternityCrisis goes into premature labor]] after watching her husband and her two other children burn to death. She gives birth to a girl, whom Gen names Tomoko. Because Kimie (and everyone else in her community) was starving thanks to food prices ''already'' being high, her milk dries up, and Gen goes to get Tomoko some formula, or powdered or evaporated milk. He finds ''exactly'' what he was looking for, being offered by Americans...for ''far'' more than it's worth. He takes odd-jobs (despite being only six years old), including caring for an old man with ''terrible'' gangrene, and is ''finally'' able to afford the milk. By the time he does get to buy it and returns home with it, [[ShootTheShaggyDog Tomoko has died of starvation]].
35* In ''Manga/{{Beastars}}'', eating meat is frowned upon, but because carnivores still have instinctual urges to eat meat, there is a black market that sells the meat of those who've died in hospitals or of suicide, although some sell their own body parts as food. It's said to be a natural place that most carnivores will end up going and for good reason, as without an ethical source of meat many carnivores would kill and eat the flesh of other people.
36* In ''Anime/SpaceBattleshipYamato2199'', one of the crew members of the ''Yamato'' learns that his family has been forced to rely on the black market for food. Since the surface of the Earth had been rendered uninhabitable due to the Gamilons' planetary bombing, food was becoming increasingly scarce.
37[[/folder]]
38
39[[folder:Comic Books]]
40* In the Franchise/{{Batman}} series ''[[ComicBook/BatmanNoMansLand No Man's Land]]'':
41** Gotham has been devastated by an earthquake, and abandoned by the government. With the bridges bombed and the waterways mined, the population is cut off and food supplies are limited. A journalist hires a pilot to fly him over so he can drop food and get footage of people fighting over it. One of the items, an apple, is considered so precious that it eventually makes its way to The Penguin, who auctions it off to a crowd in return for ''[[WorthlessYellowRocks a 20 carat diamond]]'' - '''after''' he takes a bite out of it!
42** Later in the storyline, Batman finds a rare breed of pear in Penguin's possession, and determines that the only specimen in the area of that tree is in Robinson Park, which has been taken over by [[GreenThumb Poison Ivy]]. Turns out she and a group of orphans have been enslaved by Clayface and forced to grow and harvest produce to sell to Gotham's starving populace. Batman frees her, and allows her to keep looking after the children if she continues to provide food.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Film -- Live-Action]]
46* In ''Film/DeadlyHarvest'', Mort Logan and his gang roam the countryside stealing what remaining agricultural products they can get their hands on and then sell them on the black market.
47* In ''Film/DemolitionMan'' you can find in the UndergroundCity of the Scraps stuff you can't find on the surface city of San Angeles. Including (otherwise banned) real burgers... [[ReducedToRatburgers just as long as you don't mind not asking what's in them.]] Still doesn't stop John Spartan reckoning it's the best he's had in years.
48* Creator/MichaelPalin's film ''Film/APrivateFunction'' deals with the shenanigans involved in keeping an undeclared pig out of view of inspectors from the Ministry of Food in wartime, so that its meat can be otherwise used without anyone official finding out and confiscating it for the common good.
49* In ''Film/SoylentGreen'', Thorn steals real food from the home of a wealthy murder victim. He and his roommate Sol Roth later eat everything from lettuce to apples.
50* In ''Film/Tekken2010'', the main character buys an orange for his mother.
51* In ''Film/VForVendetta'', on Evey's first morning in the Shadow Gallery, she is given toast with her breakfast and is astonished to find real butter. V explains that he stole it from the Chancellor's supplies.
52[[/folder]]
53
54[[folder:Literature]]
55* In ''Literature/NineteenEightyFour'', the heroine brings real tea and coffee to her hideout. She comments that there has been a surprising amount of tea available lately, and deduces that Oceania (the superstate in which she lives) must have conquered India. Also, Winston meets a prole couple on a train who confide in him that they are hoping to get hold of some black-market butter while visiting relatives.
56* In ''84 Charing Cross Road'' by Helene Hanff, the author was a poor, aspiring writer living in New York City during the late 1940s. When she discovered a London used book shop that sold books by mail order, she began ordering vintage, yet inexpensive, works of English literature from them, as she loved old English things, especially books of non-fiction, such as Samuel Pepys diary. She found out about the food shortages the English people had to put up with, so she began sending holiday packages of food items that were difficult or impossible to obtain in England at the time to the store to be shared by the employees. She eventually developed a friendship with the store that spanned over 20 years, and the book documents the letters that were sent back and forth between them.
57* In Gabrielle Zevin's ''Literature/{{Birthright}}'' trilogy, chocolate and caffeine products are illegal. Mafias, like the one the heroine Anya controls, run all trade and sales of them. In-universe, however, both chocolate and caffeine are considered to be as luxurious and psychedelic as [[GRatedDrug cocaine]], differing slightly from this trope.
58* In ''[[Literature/TheBooksOfEmber The City of Ember]]'', the people of the city live mainly on canned food stored for decades in huge cellars. By the time the story takes place, the supply is getting low and only the most basic kinds of foods are left. Canned fruit is thought of as an exotic luxury enjoyed by previous generations. The few items (such as pineapple and applesauce) that do show up aren't being sold on the black market, but they are being stolen, hoarded, and jealously guarded. Lina has several "beautiful things" stuck up on her bedroom wall. One of them is the label from a can of peaches.
59* In ''Literature/TheHungerGames'', the heroine makes her living poaching game and selling it on the black market, as District 12, the coal mining district, has no agriculture and isn't permitted any on a public scale.[[labelnote:Clarification]]She mentions peas can be grown in the garden in an attempt to reassemble a Capitol meal, her family owns a nanny goat that can produce milk and cheese, and some of the richer merchant families own goats and pigs, but she also explains that the ration grain is barely, if ever, enough to subsist a person, and death by starvation is very common in District 12.[[/labelnote]] In addition, most food that isn't made from grain rations is expensive and rather rare in the Districts. The decadent Capitol, on the other hand, has tons of food of all kinds, to the point some residents may vomit up the food they had previously eaten to eat ''more''.
60* In the ''Literature/InDeath'' series by J.D. Robb, set in the 2050-2060s, real meat and coffee are expensive luxuries that only the mega-rich can afford. In the first novel of the series reformed (mostly) bad boy billionaire Roarke woos Lt. Eve Dallas by giving her a present of genuine coffee beans from the Brazilian plantation he maintains at great expense for his own personal supply. It's so immeasurably superior to the vile sludge that usually passes for coffee that Dallas's coffee becomes the envy of the entire Homicide division.
61* Characters in ''Literature/TheLeonardRegime'' must resort to this in order to feed and arm themselves.
62* Nicky's house in Creator/RobertWestall's ''Literature/TheMachineGunners'' is being used a billet by a group of naval ratings; there's fresh bread and huge tins of real butter lying around open in the kitchen. Turns out these and a steady supply of booze are being smuggled off navy destroyers by several of the sailors.
63* ''Literature/MindstarRising'': The communist government ruling an alternate history Britain is undermined by having computers and other electronic goods flown in by stealth aircraft and distributed by an army of spivs. The local versions made in state-controlled companies simply can't compete and thus are only used by government offices.
64* The Literature/NeroWolfe short story "Before I die", by Creator/RexStout, is set in 1946, at the height of [=WWII=] rationing and meat shortages. Wolfe is so desperate for meat that he agrees to take a case offered to him by one of the most notorious gangsters of the area. What he demands as his fee is an in with the black market of meat. Archie lampshades it:
65-->'''Archie:''' I gazed at my boss in bitter disgust. He had lost all sense of proportion. For the sake of making a wild grab for a rib roast, he had left his chair, walked clear to the front room, opened a window, and invited the most deadly specimen between the Battery and Yonkers into his house.
66* In ''Literature/SuperMinion'' meat is very expensive, especially during Odd Summer. This is because, just like humans, animals can mutate or gain superpowers when in danger or under stress, so keeping them locked up during Odd Summer and especially trying to slaughter them is very dangerous.
67* In the ''Literature/ThursdayNext'' books, characters from the [=BookWorld=] want things from the Outland (the real world), and those things include foodstuffs. In response to requests and along with other non-food items, Thursday brings back a jar of Marmite, Moggilicious cat food (for The Cat Formerly Known as Cheshire), and Mintolas (for Marianne Dashwood, who describes them as, "A bit like like Munchies but minty").
68* ''Literature/TheWindUpGirl'': The novel is set after the complete exhaustion of the world's petroleum reserves, without which shipping highly perishable goods around the world isn't expensive - it's impossible. Moreover, crops are constantly falling prey to various engineered plagues. When the American Anderson Lake visits Thailand and has his first taste of a local fruit (heavily implied to be a rambutan or lychee), miraculously free from disease, he's blown away by the flavour.
69* In the ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' short story anthology ''Fear The Alien'', the protagonist of one story moonlights as a teacher for a rich man's daughter, and is paid in fresh food.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
73* Downplayed in ''Series/BabylonFive''. Babylon 5 has a large hydroponics section, which grows a wide variety of fruits and vegetables. However, these are designed to provide a nutritionally complete diet, not provide a wide selection of food. Anything NOT grown in Hydroponics will need to be shipped from Earth, three weeks away, and while [[CasualInterstellarTravel interstellar travel may be common, it's still a bit risky]]. This means that any perishables will likely be spoiled when they arrive, and the shipping costs stellar.
74** Garibaldi manages to get ingredients for a birthday treat (canned anchovies, olive oil and butter, sealed in airtight packaging) and at one point wins fudged paperwork which will allow him to have a steak transported from Earth in a stasis pod in a bet with the Doctor. This is shown only to be possible since Garibaldi is Chief of Security and has contacts ''everywhere''.
75** Ivanova has managed to sneak a few coffee plants into hydroponics to not have to drink instant, and is at one point gifted a meal of eggs and bacon. This impresses Garibaldi to no end, since he has spent months trying to get eggs on board before they go off.
76** Sheridan mentions that the two real privileges he has are a proper water shower in his quarters and that he can occasionally get his hands on enough oranges to make worthwhile amounts of orange juice.
77** Subverted when G'Kar has a friend from Narn over for dinner. His friend is amazed that G'Kar could get breen, a native delicacy, from the Narn homeworld, but G'Kar reveals that the "breen" is in fact an identical Terran recipe, Swedish Meatballs.
78* ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'' has the black market ship [[MeaningfulName Prometheus]] which, in addition to smokes, drugs, prostitutes and jewellery, supplies the non-military members of the Fleet with the last remaining fresh fruit. It both serves to underscore that many civilians lack what the protagonists have been taking for granted and acts as a plot point to hint Ellen Tigh's connections when she shows up with a bowl full of grapes.
79* The TV series ''Series/{{Bootleg}}'' was centred around a pair of kids setting up a black market chocolate operation after chocolate is banned by the government.
80* ''Series/DadsArmy'': Local spiv Private Walker sometimes dealt in produce as part of his black market activities. It plays a major role in "We Know Our Onions" where he has been using Jones' van to fulfill a black market order for Warden Hodges, the greengrocer, and has half a ton of onions hidden in the back when the platoon is ordered to take part in a Home Guard efficiency test and travel there in the van, towing a Smith gun with them.
81* In the ''Series/DoctorWho'' story "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS2E2TheDalekInvasionOfEarth The Dalek Invasion of Earth]]", an old woman reports the main characters to the Daleks and is rewarded with food, including an orange. "I haven't tasted an orange in years..."
82* ''Series/TheExpanse'': Cheese is ''the'' hot commodity in the Belt. Fruit and vegetables can be hydroponically grown, legally or illegally, with minimal fuss, the vat-grown ArtificialMeat is not as good as the real deal but still a passable substitute and, while more diffcult, it isn't impossible to keep chickens or other small livestock for eggs and meat in Belt habitats. Cheese, on the other hand, requires either a large, female animal be kept alive and in good enough health to give milk, which is extremely difficult both to do and get away with, or wheels of cheese to be smuggled at great expense and risk from the Inner Worlds.
83* In the television production of Creator/NgaioMarsh's ''Final Curtain'', Alleyn appears on Troy's doorstep after escorting a fugitive from South Africa bearing a pineapple, and Troy makes a quip about painting a still life of it. The scene cuts to the same fruit on her dining table, prepared and being eaten by the pair of them.
84* ''{{Series/Firefly}}'':
85** In the pilot episode, we get Kaylee enjoying a strawberry and the crew getting excited about fresh vegetables and herbs. Explained in the RPG. Fresh produce doesn't keep as long aboard ship as packaged protein, and some voyages last weeks.
86** At one point, the crew is hired to smuggle cattle.
87* In the ''Series/FoylesWar'' episode "Bleak Midwinter", set in rationing-bound UsefulNotes/WorldWarII England, Foyle busts an operation that's been smuggling restricted food, leading to a subplot for the rest of the episode about who's going to end up with the food once it's done being held as evidence. It also comes up in other episodes with farmers and grocers who reserve a private stock to sell at higher prices to rich customers.
88* ''Series/{{Fringe}}'' has a background element that something happened to Hawaii in the other universe, making coffee something of a black market staple. As such, tea has pretty much taken its place.
89* On ''Series/{{MASH}}'', the occasional real food was quite a treat. One time a farmer gave the unit a bunch of real eggs, not the reconstituted stuff they usually get. Another time Radar went through a ChainOfDeals in order to supply Col. Potter with fresh tomato juice after some accidentally got shipped to them and Potter liked it - but then after all that trouble, it turns out Potter is mildly allergic. He'd been without it for so long he forgot. In another incident, a wounded quartermaster that Hawkeye had operated on thanked him by diverting a side of beef meant for the table of the general who had gotten him wounded in the first place to the 4077th - the unit ends up rushing to thaw and cook the beef before the [=MPs=] sent by the general to recover his dinner arrive. (They arrive just as Potter is about to start carving the roast, and he tells them to sit down and [[EatTheEvidence have a slice]].)
90* ''Series/TheMeetingPlaceCannotBeChanged'' is set in Moscow right after UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, in the autumn of 1945. There's no famine, but food is being rationed, and anything above the set limits costs a lot. The Black Cat gang rob stores (murdering people for food and money) and then sell food through an accomplice in a cafeteria. The scene in their hideout is a feast honest people cannot afford, with fresh cucumbers and tomatoes.
91* ''[[Series/ThatMitchellAndWebbLook The Mitchell and Webb Situation]]'' has a sketch with a farmer acting like everything he did was some sort of black market get-rich-quick scheme.
92-->'''Farmer:''' Hey... you want to make a bit of money? ''[{{beat}}]'' You should do what I did: get into farming. ''[pulls out a wad of bills]'' See this? I got this sellin' ''corn!''
93* On ''Series/MyNameIsEarl'', Catalina comes from a poor village in a BananaRepublic [[note]] [[WhereTheHellIsSpringfield Its exact location is unknown]]. It has been said (variously) to be in Mexico, Bolivia, and even "Guadelatucky." [[/note]] , that has been overrun by drug cartels. When Dodge asks if she's ever played the game "Hot Potato," she assumes he's asking if she's ever had an ''actual'' hot potato. She tells him that hot potatoes were rare in her village, and were reserved for birthdays only. Even before that, a little girl on the bus to that village is so happy to have a churro, because she only gets one per year. She shows it to Earl, who assumes she's offering him a bite.
94* In the setting of ''Series/SeaQuestDSV'' produce is plentiful and readily available year-round as everything is grown hydroponically and genetically engineered to provide maximum nutrition and flavor. Meat, on the other hand, is hard to find as beef and pork are declared illegal due to the negative impact livestock has on the environment. ArtificialMeat is available but the older generations find it to be a poor substitute.
95* ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'': in one episode, Quark is stated to had run a black market selling food to Bajorans during the Cardassian occupation.
96* In ''Series/TerraNova'', the father brings an orange to the family in the opening scenes.
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Myths & Religion]]
100* In Literature/TheBible, ''Literature/{{Revelation}}'' has this to say about the manifestation of Famine; in context, these are astronomical prices expected for staple foodstuffs equivalent to a week's wages for the basics of life and imply both shortages and a lot of black-marketeering going on.
101-->And I heard a voice in the midst of the four beasts say, A measure of wheat for a penny, and three measures of barley for a penny; and see thou hurt not the oil and the wine. (Rev.6:6)
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
105* ''TabletopGame/{{Paranoia}}'': Food is easy to come by in Alpha Complex. ''Real'' food is a rare luxury, only enjoyed by the higher security clearances. As such, the Infrared Market makes a tidy profit selling real food to citizens eager to try such luxuries. One of the reasons the Player Characters jump at the opportunity to become Troubleshooters is that this comes with a promotion to Red clearance, which guarantees them a piece of fresh fruit once every month.
106* ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}'' in terms of warzones is pretty much a prime place for black market produce. As described by Hard Exit: "You want food, you can get food, if you want corned beef in a can, you might be shit out of luck." Depending on the location, the trope can become a little more literal. The staple of the Fifth World is nutrisoy, supplemented with enough vitamins and minerals that it'll keep a metahuman alive. To call the taste 'lacking', though, is inaccurate, because that implies that there ''is'' a taste. In Denver, there's also a ban on any Aztechnology products -- and Aztechnology is one of the biggest biological providers in the world. As such, there's a thriving black market and smuggling circus around drugs, weapons, biomods, oranges, cashews and steak. It's a not entirely inaccurate joke that a 'runner is more likely to be fervently attacked over a pallet of beef than a case of [[FantasticDrug tempo.]]
107* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': The nobles eat the best food, imported from agri worlds. The masses... not so much (yes, Film/SoylentGreen included). Same applies to the Imperial Guard where Officers from nobility get actual food and the ordinary grunt's rations are indestructible bricks or goos of superdense nutrition. Though this varies wildly world to world. Your typical Civilized (Gamma-class) world citizen would eat much like a modern 1st world individual. Hive, Fortress and Forge worlds without a fraction of the agricultural capacity needed to support their population get the densest, cheapest sources for the masses (if they're lucky). Shipping halfway decent food through the warp is unreliable at best and incomprehensibly dangerous at worst, so the price goes up a bit.
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Theatre]]
111* ''Theatre/{{Cabaret}}'' has a musical number that is based on a gift of a pineapple. See Real Life below.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Video Games]]
115* A Jamaican restaurant owner you interview in the ''Film/BladeRunner'' PC game adds black market cheese to her soup. Your character lets her off with a warning since it's not his jurisdiction.
116* In ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}} V'', luxury items can become subject to a global prohibition by a United Nations resolution. Such items include oranges, salt and spices.
117* In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIVApocalypse'', Tokyo has been underground for the past twenty-five years, and demon meat is what's usually on the menu. Canned fruit and vegetables are some of the more expensive ShopFodder, and the flavor text notes that they're usually saved for special occasions.
118* In ''VideoGame/SunlessSea'', the denizens of [[BeneathTheEarth The Neath]] subsist on impossible varieties of mushrooms and fish, and it's strongly implied that there's much less food to go around than on The Surface. Consequently, Naples' supply prices are the lowest in the entire game, and every purchase gives an extensive description of what you're buying.
119* Backstory for ''VideoGame/{{Starsiege}}'' has both fresh fruit and vacuum-packed 'Old Food' as highly valuable commodities that are so expensive that two baskets of fruit or a single case of packed food can be traded for slaves. Earth was quite the CrapsackWorld after the RobotWar.
120[[/folder]]
121
122[[folder:Web Comics]]
123* In ''Webcomic/{{Drowtales}}'', the trope is [[http://www.drowtales.com/mainarchive.php?order=chapters&id=839 lampshaded here.]] [[http://www.drowtales.com/mainarchive.php?order=chapters&id=1294 Chocolate is considered a recreational drug.]] Drowolath cooking relies heavily on Soylent Green and mushroom beer. Elves who rely on such staples can be identified by their tongues, which have become permanently purple.
124* In ''Webcomic/StandStillStaySilent'', fruit must be grown in heated greenhouses, and is rare enough to make juice a "special occasions only"-treat for most of the population.
125-->'''Torbjörn:''' Although in the spirit of saving money, maybe we should stop celebrating with fruit juice.\
126'''Siv:''' You SNOBS bought juice when all I got was water?! ...might as well be drinking liquid gold.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Western Animation]]
130* In ''WesternAnimation/CarolAndTheEndOfTheWorld'', Luis meets a guy under a bridge and trades away some meds for what turns out to be a birthday cake. Considering this show takes place during an [[JustBeforeTheEnd impending apocalypse]], and the military have to manage ordinary grocery stores, the implication is that Luis had to resort to drug dealing because bakeries aren’t open anymore.
131* In ''WesternAnimation/DerFuehrersFace'', as a citizen of [[UsefulNotes/NaziGermany Nutzi Land]], WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck's breakfast consists of wooden bread, aroma of bacon and eggs, and coffee from a single bean he keeps locked in a safe.
132[[/folder]]
133
134[[folder:Real Life]]
135* In the United Kingdom, oranges were a particular Yuletide treat, associated with [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Nicholas Saint Nicholas.]] They recur (along with chocolate, butter, and meat) in works set in the austerity of post-WWII Britain, when wartime food rationing continued. Bananas, for instance, did not properly return to Britain until the early 1950s (''{{Literature/Redwall}}'' author Brian Jacques credits the FoodPorn in his novels to growing up with limited food, claiming the first time he'd had a banana was disappointing compared to dreaming about it).
136* Common throughout much of the world during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, given shortages in fresh produce and meats in cities. In some cases, farmers delivered meats, cheese, and produce to their clients in briefcases for exorbitant prices.
137* Transatlantic travel was dangerous in wartime. But sailors visiting North America and returning to Britain soon learnt what rare commodities could be cheaply obtained in the USA and Canada which would command extortionate prices at home. RAF pilots training in the USA or ferry pilots bringing American aircraft direct to Britain also exploited their privileged status. A significant proportion of the black market also involved US personnel with access to supply lines out of the USA.
138* [[http://www.businessinsider.com/russias-underground-cheese-market-2014-12 Russian Underground Cheese Market]]. Now that's ARareSentence.
139* During the early parts of the COVID-19 pandemic, food supply chains were disrupted in much of the world and many restaurants were closed for in-person service. This led both to people informally trading staples like eggs that were difficult to find in grocery stores and to a proliferation of 'dark kitchens' providing home delivery of prepared foods.
140[[/folder]]

Top