The Buckets by Greg Cravens for July 17, 2015
Transcript:
Royals secret shame. 10 secrets to improve your love life. Actors secret affair. Secret food that stops aging. Musicians secret addiction. And what possible way could anything printed in these be secret? Maybe they don't trust their readers to know the word alleged?
bjy1293 Premium Member over 9 years ago
HA!
Liverlips McCracken Premium Member over 9 years ago
Or maybe they just make $&!~ up.
Retired Dude over 9 years ago
Pulp magazines used to run ads for “spurious spanish fly” trusting that anyone dimwitted enough to think Spanish fly was an aphrodisiac wouldn’t know what spurious meant anyway.
gregcartoon Premium Member over 9 years ago
I could do that job so well and so happily… until I found out that someone believed what I wrote. That’d worry me.
Mad Sci over 9 years ago
The ones that really make me wonder are the secrets “taken to the grave” by a recently deceased celebrity. If they had, then there is no way a tabloid reporter could be writing about it.
Comic Minister Premium Member over 9 years ago
I agree with you Sarah.
Al Nala over 9 years ago
My favorite headline was “Skull of Goliath Found!”. Had a picture of a skull with a stone in the forehead.
ChessPirate over 9 years ago
If I remember it correctly, many years ago, there was one “Elvis’ Alien Baby!”
Number Three over 9 years ago
“Secret Food That Stops Aging”
I’m only 20 but that part got my attention!
xxx
reynard61 over 9 years ago
The reason that the tabloids like the word “secret”, at least in this particular context, is that it lets their readership believe that they’re in on something that the general public doesn’t know. The term “alleged” would only mean that whatever’s on the page is mere speculation and/or rumor, thus confirming the worthlessness of the so-called “information” contained therein.
rgcviper over 9 years ago
Well, seriously … in a publication titled “Weak World News”, whaddya expect?