Before billionaire businessman Warren Buffett started auctioning off private lunches to benefit the Glide Foundation, he was sceptical of the San Francisco charity where his first wife was volunteering.
But once Susie Buffett, who died in 2004, showed Warren the work Glide does for the poor and homeless, he was sold on the organisation - so much so that he's raised nearly US$16 million ($18.9 million) for the charity since 2000.
"It was one-on-one working with people society had given up on," Buffett said. "And experience showed society was wrong to give up on those people."
The 15th annual lunch auction started yesterday with a US$25,000 minimum bid on eBay and runs all week.
The lunch auction has become an important source of money for Glide, which has an US$18 million annual budget. Glide's co-founders, the Reverend Cecil Williams and Janice Mirikitani, hope the lunch will draw another seven-figure price tag, but they also appreciate the exposure.