Not unless I can derive some humour from them. My favourite ever was one that appeared to offer equipment to allow you to perform stomach surgery. On yourself. At home.
Absolutely. It said "Have a tummy-tuck at home". Knowing the pernicious nature of advertising, it was most likely some breakfast cereal that offered to give the appearance of a tummy-tuck, but that's not what the ad was implying. It was implying abdominoplasty you carry out on yourself.
Do people actually click on ridiculous on-screen ads?
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Not unless I can derive some humour from them. My favourite ever was one that appeared to offer equipment to allow you to perform stomach surgery. On yourself. At home.
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NeuroNeptunian
11 years ago
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Are you serious?
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dappled
11 years ago
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Absolutely. It said "Have a tummy-tuck at home". Knowing the pernicious nature of advertising, it was most likely some breakfast cereal that offered to give the appearance of a tummy-tuck, but that's not what the ad was implying. It was implying abdominoplasty you carry out on yourself.
Just when you think you've seen it all, eh?
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NeuroNeptunian
11 years ago
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Well damn. Maybe it was from the same lady that got busted selling suicide kits online.