Let’s face it, we’d all like to know an easy way to get rich. Some of us – all of us, even – would be willing to cheat. But how? Jeff Kreisler, with his would-be corporate motivational speaking crash course, claims to have ‘proven schemes’.
Be advised to set aside ten minutes before seeing Get Rich Cheating to find a cash point. Insert your credit/debit card and select to withdraw the daily maximum £250. You’ll be presented with up to twelve twenty-pound notes and at least one ten. Take the twenties, leaving only the ten. Now, stand there and wait a dozen or so seconds for the machine to eventually suck the sole remaining note back up. Now check your balance, you’ll have been re-credited the full £250, all the while having £240 cash in your hand.
After you’ve endured the glossy, ankle-deep and repetitive Get Rich Cheating, which is disappointingly tailored almost entirely and exclusively to an American audience’s cultural references, and which seems little more than an afterthought by its author to advertise his £10 book of the same title, you’ll at least be satisfied in the knowledge that today you learnt one technique by which to get rich cheating, made your money back and more, and, in the process, gave ten pounds to a worthy cause. A waste of a concept brimming with potential, Jeff Kreisler does David Brent, badly.
2/5 
Nick James
