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I am not (I assume and desperately hope) the only person seeing these ads about how someone lost 83092348097234 pounds (or 7 million freight trains' worth) of stomach fat following one simple rule that you must obey. At first it seemed like a regular Internet ad: bland and boring, like Kansas in the summer or winter or fall or spring. I mean, I've been a 'Net junkie for like twelve years, starting in those faraway halcyon days when there were actually more humans on Earth than there were webpages and any chump could register www.milk.com without getting ruined by toughs from Big Milk, probably hailing from Ontario as such blackguards tend to do. Yes, that's right, Canada, I'm on to you. So anyway, I've surfed the 'Net for many a year, and I've seen a lot of ads. And this one about freight trains or whatever the hell I was talking about seemed really boring, though it does prey on the crucial fact, known by all sound ad agencies, that Americans are hideously obese. That is, we are, as a nation, so obese that we pretty much deflect the moon out of orbit and will, on December 12, 2012, cause it to crash down somewhere east of Moscow, leading to general rejoicing except among people actually on the Earth; International Space Station residents, you luck out. Until you starve to death. Suckers. And given this obesity, people want to lose it without having to do anything like "eat less" or "exercise more" or "try not eating the whole damn bag at once for crying out loud". So despite its uninspiring form, its ubiquity plus its massive target demographic (ho ho, capital punnery!) mean that lots of people click on it. Naturally, it never reveals the "one simple rule" that people must obey, and presumably that holds even after people pay whatever gougery is requisitioned from our corpulent and hypothetical consumer. But I'm thinking, what if the rule is, like, "support Tom Smith as dictator of Earth"? Tom Smith could totally conquer the Earth. And that's starting to worry me a little. Because Tom Smith is a dick. |
| Halcyon March 11, 2009 05:28 PM PDT I heard my name. Don't call me unless you need me. For such services as world domination and "quick and painless fat removal" (Mallet and a butchers cleaver) | ||
| promised March 5, 2009 01:09 PM PST Damn. Now that you're on to us all in Ontario, I guess I might as well warn the others you're coming. | ||
| Sinja March 4, 2009 04:08 PM PST Thanks. Believe it or not, it was a candid. I'm very theatrical. | ||
| Saladin March 3, 2009 08:18 AM PST And the pose is looking good, Tom. | ||
| Tom Smith March 2, 2009 10:44 PM PST I'm Tom Smith and I approve this message. | ||
| Saladin March 1, 2009 11:44 AM PST Somebody tried the Barrow Wight thing, but the NAACP objected to having black people portrayed as undead monsters bent upon consuming all life. | ||
| acturi March 1, 2009 09:16 AM PST It turns out that you can buy almost the same product in any asian grocery store. Usually labeled "Diet Tea." Apparently it's accepted traditional use is less along the lines of "I will lose all my weight!" and more along the lines of "Crap, I need to lose 5 more pounds to fit into this dress next week. I know, I'll crap it out!" What's funny is that most of those products list the crapping like crazy as a "side effect" as opposed to the primary effect. On an unrelated note: why have I not seen a D&D game in which a Barrow Wight showed up going "Ohhhh, yeeeeah" and generally being a black love undead. | ||
| Ang February 28, 2009 05:58 AM PST Does this comment make me look fat? | ||
| Emily February 28, 2009 12:04 AM PST The one rule you have to follow is as follows: Give us your money for a product that's probably just a laxative, poop until you're too dehydrated and weak to eat, lose 100% of your weight by dying. | ||
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