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Classic Public Blunders

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BJCooperIT

Programmer
May 30, 2002
1,210
US
I went to my local grocery store and saw the following sign:
Bananas, the prefect snack food!
The irony of which word was mispelled was not lost on me. Have you other examples of a mistake that is a real classic?

[sup]Beware of false knowledge; it is more dangerous than ignorance.[/sup][sup] ~George Bernard Shaw[/sup]
Systems Project Analyst/Custom Forms & PL/SQL - Oracle/Windows
 
It seems now, a "cool" name for a store/restaurant must be misspelled. All this "Krispy Kreme", and plenty of others."

I been told that you can't copyright/trademark English words. So the 'correct' spelling of "Crispy Cream" wouldn't pass muster.

mike

 
madelca100
I guess, you misunderstood something here. You, probably, can't copyright a word, but a name using correct spelling of those words you sure can. Are you saying that all correctly spelled trademarks are illegal? Like "Banana Republic", "Strawberry", "Amazing Savings", you name it.
 
At the weekend I discovered a shop called Collectors Bizzare, I couldn't decide if they were just trying to be ironic about their clientele (particularly after having a look round).
 
Was the store selling bananas aiming for snob appeal or was it near a private school?

Misspelling seems to work well as a promotional tool too. Makes you remember what you saw.
 
i took this from a book:

An advertisement for trips on donkeys:

"Ride on ur own a**"

(Note: i know bad content is banned, but i thought i could share it)...

Known is handfull, Unknown is worldfull
 
Silkscreened on the gas pumps at a comercial fueling station:

"Service is are best product
 
There's a sign on a "busy" street in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii with a sign that says: "Stop for pedestrians when flashing." I really wanted to wait to see pedestrian flashers...
 
Just a salute to D-Day but I remember an headline from those days:

'British Army thrust bottles up Germans' (there should be a comma in there somewhere)

So much for the Geneva Convention.
 
Similarly, a newspaper headline from the 80s:

"British Left Waffles On Falkland Islands"

Did they also leave maple syrup and butter?

De mortuis nihil nisi bonum.

 
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