-
This is not a joke
plain and simple
i ll be giving 7 mt invite codes for the funnies 1st of April pranks/jokes
giveaway will end @ midnight (GMT + 2h)
-
-
Poster
BT Rep: +1
I would like to apply for one invite.
Thanks.
-
-
can i have one invite pls?
Last edited by DDDN; 04-01-2009 at 09:31 AM.
-
-
then... do a prank and tell us about it too
or look for a very funny one
that s your entry *fee
-
-
Poster
BT Rep: +1
I would like one. No Joke sorry!
-
-
I'd like to apply for one:
Me and my friend have sent two XBOX 360 for modification, then I told him that something horrible went wrong with my friends's xbox, it was damaged. Unfortunately it was nothing to do, and we had already paid for the service. My friend freaked completely out
Last edited by Roooney; 04-01-2009 at 11:24 AM.
-
-
Poster
BT Rep: +1
We humans like a good joke, and we're not above making our nearest and dearest the butts of it, especially when the powers that be have set aside a day purely for that purpose. The first of April releases something within us that at other times during the year we attempt to keep reined in. Yet whatever social constraints we normally submit ourselves to, it is the amateur joker in us that comes to the surface every first of April, leaving us contemplating secreting ketchup in the shower head on that day or filling the sugar bowl with salt.
Arguably the best media-generated April Fool's joke dates from a Richard Dimbleby "news report" aired on 1 April 1957 on BBC's Panorama. It opened with a line about Spring coming early that year, prompting an early spaghetti harvest in Switzerland. Against a video backdrop of happy peasant women harvesting spaghetti from trees, whimsical claims about the foodstuff's cultivation were made in a straightfaced manner, including the assertion that the foodstuff's oddly uniform length was the result of years of dedicated cultivation and the heartening announcement that the ravenous spaghetti weevil which had wreaked havoc with harvests of years past had been conquered.
More than 250 viewers jammed the BBC switchboard after the hoax aired, most of them calling in with serious inquiries about the piece — where could they go to watch the harvesting operation? Could they buy spaghetti plants themselves? (For those anxious to try their hand at homegrown pasta, Panorama producer Michael Peacock offered this helpful hint: "Many British enthusiasts have had admirable results from planting a small tin of
spaghetti in tomato
sauce.")
can I have the invite now.
Thanks.
-
-
Nice giveaway Can I get one plz?
-
-
Poster
BT Rep: +8
-
-
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
Bookmarks