Archive for the ‘Humour’ Category

Blind date desired

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

I’d love to meet “this”. All my friends on Facebook seem to like her.

Hello, my baby

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Always loved this.

My New Book: Nuanced Relationships

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Check out my new book! Loads of people have liked it already, which is great news.

A book called "Nuanced Relationships: Moving beyond 'like' and 'dislike' in our everyday lives", by Alex Metcalf, Ph.D. Below the book is a Facebook 'like' button.

The Worst Jigsaw Puzzle in the World

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Another idea that came to mind on the walk home. Don’t ever buy a jigsaw puzzle like this.

Jigsaw puzzle box proudly displaying it has 999 pieces, with the guide picture of a woman having a small, piece-shaped white hole in it.

Apple announces new digital camera?

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

A compact=

I thought of this idea walking up the hill to get home, and it took approximately seven minutes to Photoshop. I gotta do more stuff like this, it makes me chuckle and my heart sing.

(Original digital camera picture © iStockPhoto / jsemeniuk. Legal stuff: in case it has to be said, this is not an Apple camera, it’s just for fun. Sigh.)

Five flawed reasons for hating Apple

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

(Yes, I appear to be in a combative mood again.)

5. Making bizarre leaps of logic when assessing Apple’s motives.

“The iPhone is a closed platform, and Apple sometimes seems inconsistent in how they approve apps for the store, therefore OMG IT’S 1984 ALL OVER AGAIN EVIL DICTATORSHIP I’M MOVING TO NORTH KOREA WHICH IS FREE IN COMPARISON WON’T SOMEBODY PLEASE THINK OF THE CHILDREN.”

4. Mistaking hatred of your job for hatred of fun in Apple products.

“Stupid genie animations don’t help me write the quarterly ROI report on bulk-buying staples for the 4th floor cubicles. Some of us have valuable work to do.”

3. Believing that if an Apple product doesn’t support something you want then it’s completely useless.

“iPad as laptop replacement? Yeah, right, in the store I tried hooking it up to my RKV-8DZ camcorder to do some Final Cut Studio editing and oh wait that’s right THERE’S NO FIREWIRE PORT. Why would anyone buy one?”

2. Trying to apply logic to emotion.

“Why does Apple get so much press? GenPlusPC Research shows they only have 3.9% marketshare across a midrange of pro-level consumers, yet they achieved a year-on-year increase of 26.4% in national press column inches! And now I’ve spent thirty seconds talking about them, which isn’t reflective of how much I like the products. Oh god, I’m stuck in an Apple loop. And now I’m talking about being stuck in an Apple loop. Help me.”

1. Taking marketing messages too literally.

“You think the iPad is revolutionary? Uh, hello, it has a battery, a technology that’s been around for over two hundred years. And magical? Waved it around in the kitchen, dishes still not done. Fail, waiting for revision two.”

Those rascals are at it again

Monday, May 17th, 2010

A quote from an article, with the attribution line repeated twice, and a mysterious extra underline.

Does the BBC even proofread their stories? Geez, guys. Does the BBC even proofread their stories?

EDIT: Twelve hours later and it’s still there, so it’s not like it was an upload error or anything. It’s as if no one actually looked at the page. Pushes my buttons!

Peas In Our Thyme

Friday, May 14th, 2010

Yes, I know Chamberlain actually said peace for our time, not peace in our time, but the misquote makes the whole joke work. No, I don’t know why I spent four hours making this.

It still makes me giggle though, that’s got to be a good sign.

Neville Chamberlain holding a thyme pot with peas in it, with a caption "Peas in our Thyme".

Terms and Conditions and Hilarity

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

So a slap on the wrist and twenty low-fat bagels for me: last night I followed an enticing web ad ‘exposing’ acai berry diets, literally the first ad I’ve clicked on in years.

Suffice to say, the word ‘exposing’ must have changed since I were a wee lad, as it now seems to mean “wow yes acai berries are incredible buy them as a blend in pill form and by the way use our promo code”.

Luckily, great amusement can be had — and thus the equilibrium of the world restored — from the terms and conditions at the bottom of the page.

Awards are needed.

The runner-up prize, which I will designate the Legalese In A Can Award, goes to this poorly proofread paragraph:

“If you are dissatisfied with any product you have purchased, you may contact the Seller at [provide Seller’s address, phone number, and email link]. If you submit a complaint regarding the Seller to us, you agree that our sole responsibility to you is to forward your complaint to the Seller. result achieved by a single user.”

No, the square brackets are not mine, they were in the text, but luckily that was the only mistake in the paragraph. result achieved by a single user.

First prize, however, goes to this peach:

“It is important to note that this site and the comments/answers depicted above is to be used as an illustrative example of what some individuals have achieved with this/these products. This website, and any page on the website, is based loosely off a true story, but has been modified in multiple ways including, but not limited to: the story, the photos, and the comments.”

So, and let me see if I understand this correctly, we started with a true story, then based a story loosely on it, and then we modified it in multiple ways. It now resembles a sausage.

Terms and conditions are the secret sauce spicing up our otherwise dull and non-sauced lives.

Ah, the holidays

Saturday, May 1st, 2010

BBC News:

Bank Holiday travel and weather misery on the way

I miss you guys.

(Entertaining aside: headline on the front page puts ‘misery’ in quotes. In case they get sued I guess.)