posted
Eight. The number of people who purchased a useless app for $999.99 through Apple's iPhone store. Also a significant figure in the Games of the XXIX Olympiad, set to begin at today 8:08 AM Eastern.
--j_k
[ August 09, 2008, 09:35 AM: Message edited by: James Tiberius Kirk ]
Posts: 3617 | Registered: Dec 2001
| IP: Logged |
quote:Originally posted by James Tiberius Kirk: Eight. The number of people who purchased a useless app for $999.99 through Apple's iPhone store.
--j_k
They should have named the app "I am rich and dumb"! I bet they'd still have found someone who'd have bought it...
Posts: 4519 | Registered: Sep 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
Great. Now I have Count von Count singing in my head. "Number of the day, number of the day, number of the day, of the day, of the day... (Hey! Hey! Hey!)"
Posts: 21182 | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged |
posted
Totally unrelated, but Why is this news?. It reads like something from the Onion, but it sounds real. Is it a parody of something? If not, why is it news? Is this a famous school or something?
posted
That's called a "human interest/local interest" story. It's more interesting if you actually live here. I know kids who go to that HS (they attend my ward.)
Plus, with the LA Times laying off reporters and other staff right and left, they're scrambling to fill space some days lately.
Posts: 21182 | Registered: Sep 2004
| IP: Logged |
posted
Yeah, well, we get local interest in my local paper, but not in the city-wide one. Even so, it's usually "local kid/adult/senior does something extraordinary", not "local kid/adult/senior goes on a holiday and has a good time." It sounds like the reporter was somehow with them, too.
Surely, surely, in a city as large as Los Angeles there are kids doing things more extraordinary than going on a rather standard school trip and buying a lot of souvenirs. For example, there was a local interest story on the front of my local paper this week. A group of kids had made a movie together. No, it's not breaking news or even that unique, and I did think it rather stretching for front page, but they did create something and we've had a spate of kids being idiots recently, so I think they were looking to balance it.
The headline of the LA Times article should have been "Drama Kids go to New York, have the best trip ever" and it would fit right into The Onion.
Posts: 8473 | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged |