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Think quickly about what types of insurance you have. Health (if you’re lucky), renter’s/homeowner’s, car, and maybe a few other policies, right? If you think you’ve got as much coverage as you could ever need, think again. What happens if you get bitten by a werewolf? In fact, there are many other facets of your life you could be insuring. Here are a few of our favorites.
Celebrities are often known for a single physical feature, so it seems natural that they would want to protect their livelihoods by insuring these innate gifts. Enter the world of body part insurance. In this market, insurers, most notably Lloyd’s of London, offer policies that pay out if something mars the precious body part. Keith Richards’ fingers, Mariah Carey’s legs, silent film star Ben Turpin’s crossed eyes, and Dolly Parton’s breasts were all rumored to have been covered by hefty policies at one time.
So are these policies worth it? After all, how often do peoples’ eyes uncross? A 2006 piece on Slate’s always-terrific Explainer says no. While these policies are great for building up publicity and media buzz (after all, who wouldn’t want to talk about Mariah Carey’s billion-dollar legs?), the policyholders would be just as well off with general disability insurance. These traditional policies would also pay off if an injury or other misfortune ruined the body part and kept the star from being able to work, but the rates would be lower. As a publicity stunt, though, it’s hard to beat affixing a price tag to your famous appendages.
If you’ve ever played in or attended a golf tournament, you’ve probably seen a hole-in-one prize glittering at the front of a course. Anyone who scores a hole in one during his or her tournament round will score a new car, a boat, or some other fancy toy. Lots of these amateur tournaments are sponsored by charities, though, so is the Red Cross actually risking a $45,000 car each time it has a tournament? Nope. It insures against the possibility of any weekend hacker stumbling into a hole in one and winning the new wheels.
A hole-in-one insurance policy is part of a broader class known as prize indemnification insurance, a type of coverage that also covers top prizes on game shows and in other contests. The event sponsor pays a premium to an insurer, and if someone manages to find the cup on his first swing, the policy picks up the price of the prize. The premium is based on a number of factors, including the length of the holes (since it’s easier to get a hole-in-one on a short par three; it’s nearly impossible for even a pro to hole one on a long par five.) The value of the prize, the number of golfers playing in the tournament, and their respective skill levels also affect the premium. These type of policies can be affordable even for expensive prizes because the odds of an amateur golfer scoring a hole in one are so slim. A 2000 article in Golf Digest pegged the odds of a player scoring an ace on any given round at roughly 5,000 to 1, while a 2006 USA Today article offers the less optimistic estimate of 12,500 to 1.
As wedding costs keep skyrocketing, brides and grooms have started to realize that planning their big day entails taking on quite a bit of financial risk. With all of the logistics and separate vendors required to get the wedding party dressed, the reception catered, and a church booked, there are dozens of places where any hitch could lead to a serious setback, like if your reception venue explodes the night before your wedding. Instead of blindly sinking thousands upon thousands of dollars into these risks, couples have the option of insuring their weddings through companies like WedSafe.
Such a policy will cover all sorts of unforeseen problems that could derail a wedding, like a serious illness or injury in the family, military deployment, inclement weather, or vendors not showing up. If any of these events lead to a cancellation or postponement of your wedding, the policy will cover your costs. One thing these policies definitely don’t cover, though, is a bad case of cold feet. A change of heart is considered a circumstance within the control of the couple and doesn’t warrant any reimbursement. [Image courtesy of WeddingAccessories.net.]
Let’s say you’re working for a multinational firm that dispatches you to some fairly risky areas. What if you get kidnapped and held for ransom? Ugh, having to pay all that loot to the kidnappers would ruin your day. If you have a ransom insurance policy, though, you don’t have to worry any longer. (Well, you still have to worry about being held by kidnappers. Most of the financial burden’s gone, though.) These policies, which are typically held by businessmen working in iffy areas, offer indemnity coverage for any loss incurred by whoever pays the ransom, whether it’s the kidnapping victim or the captive’s company. Such losses can include the ransom itself, any ransom money lost in transit, expenses for the response team to deliver the ransom, the hiring of negotiators, and rewards offered for the safe return of the kidnapped. Of course, since paying the ransom doesn’t always guarantee the safe return of the victim, these policies also indemnify the holder against death, dismemberment, disablement, and blindness as a result of the kidnapping.
Simon Burgess, a former underwriter at Lloyd’s of London, has parlayed his quirky sense of humor into a niche in the insurance industry. Over the years his companies have provided coverage against all sorts of unlikely events. He’s sold over 40,000 policies that insure against alien abduction; he’ll pay off more than a million pounds to any policyholder who can pass a lie detector test, has video or photographic evidence of his abduction, and has a reliable third-party witness. Worried about being eaten by the Loch Ness Monster? Burgess has written policies for people like you. He’s also sold policies covering vampire and werewolf transformations, temporary impotence on Valentine’s Day, and Yeti attacks. His policies covering virgin births were especially popular as the millennium approached, just in case a young woman be blessed with the Second Coming via immaculate conception.
Are these policyholders serious? Not all of them. In a 2001 interview with The Scotsman, Burgess admitted that around half of his customers were probably buying his policies, which usually run around 100 pounds, as jokes or gifts. However, that doesn’t seem to bother him a bit. In a 2006 interview with Money Marketing, he quipped, “Let’s face it—insurance is so tedious that if I can enlighten my dreary life with a bit of humor every now and again, I will.” Even if you’re buying coverage on a lark, though, it must be nice to know you’re totally financially protected in the unlikely event of a vampire attack.
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Great post. I really enjoyed it as I work in the insurance industry. You see some pretty crazy stories and my co-workers and I always remind each other that we DO insure stupidity. If you want insurance, no matter how ridiculous, there is someone out there who will sell you a policy.
By the way, I believe many homeowners policies will cover a reception hall you rent for weddings or parties.
posted by Justin on 5-27-2008 at 2:23 pm
Some people need wacky insurance for their non-traditional items. I have a friend who lives in a dome house. For whatever reason, the house cannot be covered by traditional homeowner policies, so they have to have it insured with Lloyd’s of London.
posted by Genevieve on 5-27-2008 at 2:45 pm
Back before the use of sonograms for checking the wellbeing of a baby there was “Twin Insurance”. The parents would plan for 1 child and if twins (or more arrived) the policy would payout a sum allowing the new parents to purchase all the needed items for the additional child.
posted by owen on 5-28-2008 at 12:49 am
The organizers of the TdF bought a policy that would pay if Lance Armstrong won race number 5. The poliy holder balked at paying, due to drug rumors. Eventually it went to court (big suprise) and was settled.
posted by fixedgear on 5-28-2008 at 5:36 am
Justin – I work in insurance, too – and have seen my fair share of stupidity. Of course, telling non-insurance people about it just gets me the “deer in headlights” look.
FYI to Ethan – there is a wedding insurance carrier that insures against the bride or groom’s “cold feet”. :)
posted by Carly on 5-29-2008 at 7:54 pm
The picture number two is of a National Hole-in-one Association golf tournament that we covered. http://www.HIO.com
We have been in business since 1981 and have paid out over $50 million in cash and prizes. We also insure field goal kicks, basketball and hockey shots among numerous others. Hole in ones do happen. Thanks…nice article.
Brad
posted by Brad on 6-3-2008 at 8:27 am
A cost consideration in Japan when playing golf is that of “hole in one insurance”.
When someone is fortunate (unfortunate?) enough to use their skills to sink the elusive “hole in one”, the golfer celebrates the event by paying for all fellow member’s fees that day, as well as having to purchase expensive gifts on those present. The average cost for such a feat is $15,000.
As a consequence, insurance was made available to cover the expenses for those skillful enough to make this difficult shot.
(This insurance costs 2,000 yen per year, and may save the average golfer 100,000 yen or more in the long run.)
posted by William John on 8-29-2009 at 9:48 pm
Sorry, Catholic pet peeve! The Immaculate Conception relates to Mary being conceived without original sin. It is NOT the same as the Virgin Birth.
Sixteen years of Catholic school, here.
posted by loripop on 8-30-2009 at 11:14 am
I just read last week that you can get your fantasy football team insured in case your star player gets injured.
posted by Stephen on 8-30-2009 at 12:50 pm
Anyone remember Joe Theismann’s policy on his legs? He had a $1 million policy with Lloyd’s that paid off after his career was ended by the Cardinals breaking his leg.
And thanks loripop for catching that issue with the Immaculate Conception thing… silly non-Catholics! LOL
posted by Gordon Daily on 8-31-2009 at 11:56 am
You can also insure the weather (not just for weddings). My company actually purchased weather insurance on a commercial shoot a few years back. We were shooting in Colorado in December, and heavy snow would have ruined the shoot. So we got insurance that would reimburse production costs if it snowed more than an inch and a half. It has to be verified by a meteorologist on set, or the nearest national weather station. We did get snow, but it was 1/4″ shy of the cutoff. We got the shots we needed, so all was well.
posted by bre on 8-31-2009 at 1:07 pm
Sorry Gordon, but Theismann’s leg was broken by Lawrence Taylor of the Giants; the ugly image is etched into the memories of Redskins fans forever.
posted by BigSkinsFan on 8-31-2009 at 3:56 pm