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Answer» [highlight]13.[/highlight] He'll Huff and He'll Huff and… The Smoking Gun pretty much dedicates itself to showing people during their most humiliating moments, but the celebrity mugshots of James Brown, Nick Nolte, and Yasmine Bleeth have nothing on poor Patrick Tribett, who was nabbed for "abusing harmful intoxicants," namely huffing gold spray paint. [highlight]12[/highlight]. Putting as Much on America Online as Possible When AOL posted the search records of 658,000 subscribers (ithe names were redacted and replaced with a unique number), the company couldn't even FALL back on the "It was an accident!" excuse. The release was intentional, part of a HORRIBLY misguided research project to give academics a data set to see what people were searching for online. Turns out folks were looking for the usual stuff: American Idol, Britney Spears, cheap plane tickets, and a whole lot of porn. AOL removed the data, but only after it had been well mirrored, searched, and REPORTED on. The company's apologies fell on deaf ears: AOL is currently being sued over the matter. [highlight]11[/highlight]. Meow! A little Photoshop can be a dangerous thing. Cat Schwartz had some professional photographs made of herself and posted them on her blog. As they were obviously cropped into odd shapes, it didn't take long before admirers started to wonder what had been cut out of the pics. [highlight]10[/highlight]. OMG U R SO F1R3D!11!1! TTFN! Laying off 2500 people means bringing in an army to provide loss counseling, job placement programs, a pile of severance checks, and a truckload of tissues to stem the tears, right? Not! In 2003 British Amulet Group "made redundant" thousands via an SMS text message sent en masse to employees' cell phones. At least the company had a quasi-excuse: It had just gone bankrupt and was in receivership [highlight]9.[/highlight] Just a 'Conversation Malfunction' Women are known to engage in a little private chitchat in the ladies' room, but how would they feel if the conversation was broadcast on CNN during a presidential speech? When newsreader Kyra Phillips made a pit stop, she unfortunately left her microphone on, broadcasting the news that her sister-in-law was a "control freak," among numerous other pronouncements. Phillips later laughed it off and even provided a Late ShowTop Ten list of excuses for why it happened. Sample: "How was I supposed to know we had a reporter embedded in the bathroom?" [highlight]8.[/highlight] I'm Not Dead Yet! It's common practice for major media outlets to prepare obituaries in advance--known in the news biz as "pre-bits"--for luminaries who seem as if they might croak soon. But in 2001 some intrepid Web spelunkers discovered that CNN's obituaries for some famous but not-quite-dead folks were publicly accessible. Obits for the likes of Fidel Castro, *censored* Cheney, and Nelson Mandela were widely disseminated before CNN.com caught wind and, much chagrined, yanked the pages. [highlight]7.[/highlight] Two Words: Ketchup Trousers Who says the British are eternally polite? After his secretary spilled a little ketchup on his pants, London lawyer Richard Phillips demanded restitution from her--via e-mail--in the amount of a measly £4. The subject line of that e-mail: "Ketchup Trousers." The secretary failed to pay immediately, owing to her mother's sudden death, but quickly made the David vs. Goliath matter public, humiliating Phillips. His firm later said that Phillips had resigned, but it was careful to NOTE that the departure had nothing to do with the trousers incident. Which we totally believe. [highlight]6.[/highlight] The Case of the Wrong 'Guy' It was an honest mistake. The BBC, seeking to interview a technology expert in the "Apple Computer vs. the Beatles' Apple Corps" dispute, booked Guy Kewney to appear on the air. But someone goofed and instead brought one Guy Goma to the set . His stunned look, when a reporter started asking him questions, is something you just can't fake. Goma, originally reported to be a cab driver, actually turned out to be at the studio for a job interview. [highlight]5.[/highlight] Well, It's Not How PF Usually Works A lot of companies make in-house motivational videos to rally the troops, but rarely do the films feature racial slurs and nudity. Kirk Reynolds, public relations DIRECTOR for the San Francisco 49ers, probably didn't think his cheeky 15-minute primer on dealing with the press would actually be seen by the press, but of course it was quickly leaked. Reynolds was immediately fired, having forgotten the fundamental rule in his own tape: "Everything you say and do is being covered by the media." [highlight]4.[/highlight] The Force Is With Him In 2002 a 14-year-old Canadian boy named Ghyslain Raza innocently swung a golf-ball retriever around in a quiet corner of his high school, pretending he was The Phantom Menace's Darth Maul. But he videotaped it. And he left the tape at school, where it was found several months later. Raza immediately became an Internet sensation, known today as the "Star Wars kid,"
Look for part II , SOON.......................... 8-)
Look for part II , SOON.......................... ?
So, where is part II ?
This is now SOON...........Some of those a quite comical. Nicely done. Can't wait for Part II .So, Where is Part II ?I think thats the comical part he left us all hanging.it's here , I found last week on page 8 (look for the post- say's [highlight]Part Duex[/highlight] * page 3 (this morning) 3-17-07
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