Anyway, I wonder why Pedro felt the need to say this:
Yeah, I wondered.
It's a very good thing I keep my mind flexible, to adjust to perceptions of primitives as time goes on.
I had thought Pedro Picasso's wife came from money, because it's obvious that she brings home the bacon, while Pedro Picasso brings home a 99-cent bag of pork rinds.
Well, apparently she didn't come from money.
That is, unless Pedro Picasso is lying.
So that leaves Pedro Picasso himself as the source of inherited wealth.
Pedro Picasso has admitted that his mother is Old Family and Old Money from Massachusetts, who oddly married an ethnic way below her socioeconomic status. Pedro Picasso's late paternal ancester (his maternal ancestress has remarried) became some sort of professional--engineer, perhaps, but don't quote me on that--and they moved down to Florida, where Pedro Picasso grew up as a product of the 1960s; incessant television, suburbia, blond kid Aryana, all that.
Those are things all admitted by Pedro Picasso; I got them nowhere else but from the mouth of Pedro Picasso.
So one has to adjust the image of Pedro Picasso a little bit; his wealth comes from his mother.
Now I'm starting to look at all the other cans of worms Pedro Picasso presents.
Pedro Picasso "owns" a second home in rustic Connecticut, by a lake.
Now I'm starting to wonder if it's one of those cases where the parents bought and own such a place, and all their adult children and grandchildren just use it. Pedro Picasso has an older brother and an older sister, as he tells us. Since his mother is Old Family and Old Money from Massachusetts, it's possible she owned, or owns, some Connecticut real-estate too, some place to get away from the fetid stench of Boston during the summer.
But all in all, this does not deflect from the stark fact that Pedro Picasso is much more affluent than his fellow primitives.