I was probably being an over-judgemental arsehole, is just that it seemed really weird to have a price in a foreign currency referred to in a piece as "a lot of mumbo jumbo to most people", especially in a business paper, though I would have found it out of place in the normal press as well.
I do not have any idea how your mother would react, however I am sure that prices in Guatemalan quetzales can be presented in an article for general readership outside Guatemala without worrying too much about how the audience might react and without describing the written price as mumbo-jumbo, or otherwise confusing.
You just tell them that the prices are in Guatemalan quetzales and how much it is in something more well known. There is absolutely no need to prepare people for the shock of the existence of obscure currencies.
The US journalist H. L. Mencken was quoted as saying:
"No one in this world, so far as I know - and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me - has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people."
For my money, writers taking this advice to heart has been one of the most damaging forces in journalism and the knock-on negative effects into the culture are incalculable in their horrendous variety.
I do not have any idea how your mother would react, however I am sure that prices in Guatemalan quetzales can be presented in an article for general readership outside Guatemala without worrying too much about how the audience might react and without describing the written price as mumbo-jumbo, or otherwise confusing.
You just tell them that the prices are in Guatemalan quetzales and how much it is in something more well known. There is absolutely no need to prepare people for the shock of the existence of obscure currencies.
The US journalist H. L. Mencken was quoted as saying:
"No one in this world, so far as I know - and I have searched the records for years, and employed agents to help me - has ever lost money by underestimating the intelligence of the great masses of the plain people."
For my money, writers taking this advice to heart has been one of the most damaging forces in journalism and the knock-on negative effects into the culture are incalculable in their horrendous variety.