I watched some of this myself, and it was amazing to see Mikey claim that he would only spend lots of money on a suit along with a fitting service. His personal suit-buying preferences were somehow 'connected' with a tag hanging off a very cheap-looking off the peg suit sold via a shopping channel that we were supposed to want to buy instead, because using his logic he would steer well clear of what he was actually selling. Very strange!
Also saw his Klaus Kobec watch presentation and they had no problem shifting a gold tone watch for more than £80 probably because he kept saying: "I don't like that watch; I LOVE it!" (quite convincingly it has to be said, so he must have liked the overall look of it). From memory, at no point in the sale did he mention gold tone, and although I wasn't paying that much attention to the sale at the time, I thought that it was gold plated until I read the on-screen product description towards the end of the sale. Perhaps a new deception is to never mention at all what the watch looks like or what it could be made of, which is just as bad as not mentioning p&p despite the fact it's displayed on the screen (as is hopefully what the watch is made of).
Verbal product descriptions are just as important as the on-screen captioning, and it's all too easy to listen to the presenter without reading the screen. This is why it's important for the presenter to verbally mention things like p&p unlike what some people seem to think.
Plus whilst on the subject of Mikey Mason, during the Eco-stepper electric bike presentation he pretended to be surprised at the small size of the charging adaptor. He's probably sold this bike many times before, therefore stop deceiving the viewers Mike - how are we supposed to believe anything else he says as a consequence? At least Paul Becque has the honesty to say that he has sold this bike several times before.