Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Printable Version +- Rogue-Nation3 (https://rogue-nation3.com) +-- Forum: Controversy and Debate (https://rogue-nation3.com/forum-19.html) +--- Forum: A Rogue's Opinion Piece... (https://rogue-nation3.com/forum-108.html) +--- Thread: Strangely-Worded News Articles. (/thread-4754.html) Pages:
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Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 08-24-2019 I've been noticing this for some time and felt that maybe it's just my contempt of the current lazy Journalism. But there's been articles that seem to mock the reader or maybe even humour them with the use of a certain wording exploit. I'm kicking myself that I never collected the others that put me onto this, but the articles are out there and I will search for them. They seemed to increased lately where (and I'm just making these two-up)... a guy crashes his crop-spraying plane somewhere and the pilot is called Pete Fallen or a dog goes missing and its owner's surname is 'Fleeing'! I know it sounds silly, but the tales are there. I saw this one via a Tim Pool video and was surprised again that nobody has picked up on the strange facets of this particular story. I hope other RN members can add to this thread with other accounts where names, locations and similar anomalies indicate that the story holds an 'odd' slant to it. Here's the outline of the incident : Sydney, Australia. A drug-fuelled transgender male attacked customers at a local store with an axe. The prison sentence was recently increased due to the victims demanding so. (See here for the full article. The Guardian) Fine, another crazy does something terrible. But look at the names of those involved. "...Amati, who had recently transitioned to a woman, attacked Ben Rimmer and Sharon Hacker inside a 7-Eleven at Enmore in January 2017 and then chased down nearby pedestrian Shane Redwood...' 'Hacker, Redwood' and 'Rimmer' (Merriam-Webster's definition: 'an implement for cutting, trimming, or ornamenting the rim of something')... isn't this strange? In a different setting, wouldn't this story be found as suspicious? The nearest I could get to Evie Amati was 'Amati' referred to a family of Italian violin makers, active in Cremona in the 16th and 17th centuries. But going out on a limb, the criminal's full name (without one of the 'e's) is an anagram of 'amative', a word meaning impassioned, fervent or romantic. Maybe it's just me picking up on something that really isn't there, but I'm sure that among the many threads on our Rogue Nation site, there are similar accounts where names and locations oddly coincide with the meaning of the story. Forgive me for my silliness, but I'll post them if more appear. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - guohua - 08-24-2019 (08-24-2019, 10:26 AM)BIAD Wrote: I've been noticing this for some time and felt that maybe it's just my contempt of the current lazy Journalism. I think you are Right! RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Mystic Wanderer - 08-24-2019 You aren't silly. Someone else pointed out odd names like this in a video, but I listen to so many of them it would be hard for me to remember which one. Yes, I have come across weird names too, but after a slight eyebrow raised, it vanished from my conspiracy mindset as I further went down into the rabbit hole of the article. Good topic to dig into. I'll bring any names I come across in the future to this thread, for sure. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 08-24-2019 (08-24-2019, 08:08 PM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote: You aren't silly. Someone else pointed out odd names like this in a video, but I listen to so many of them it would be hard for me to remember which one. Thank you... it's like the Jeffrey Epstein and the Robert Epstein stuff coming together. Dr. Robert Epstein has been accusing Google of its bias for years, but only lately as it really surfaced. But in regards of the odd surname in articles, I do believe there's something to it. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - gordi - 08-24-2019 I was watching a David Attenborough documentary YESTERDAY about Bio-Luminescence in DEEP SEA CREATURES... The Chief Scientist on the Deep Seas Research Boat they used was called.... (Prof.) Haddock! I shit you not. G RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 08-24-2019 (08-24-2019, 09:14 PM)gordi Wrote: I was watching a David Attenborough documentary YESTERDAY about Bio-Luminescence in DEEP SEA CREATURES... Exactly!!! RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 09-12-2019 Ninurta flagged up another one of these anomalies in a Yahoo post provided by Mystic Wanderer in the 'Shout Box'. '...Five people were taken to Tallahassee Memorial HealthCare for treatment. Interim Police Chief Steve Outlaw said at a news conference "you can't help but wonder" whether the anniversary of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks was a factor in the attack, but police found no evidence of any connections...' LINK: ............................................ Weirdly after posting the above offering, I went to peruse the latest news for today Thursday 10th Sept 2019 and noticed this headline on the BBC website on UK news. 'Rape convictions at lowest level since records began.' Wondering why this article portrayed in the manner the headline suggests, I clicked onto a ink in the article titled 'Why are rape prosecutions falling?' and discovered another one of these strange names. It's from April of this year. '...Police and prosecutors are asking complainants in rape cases to agree to hand their phones over or face the prospect of prosecutions being dropped - something victims' commissioner Baroness Helen Newlove has said is "unlikely to do anything to help reverse the fall in prosecutions for rape and sexual violence"...' Strange! RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 09-29-2019 After President Trump's Twitter account was deemed a public place for access, the smug media and gang of four ticked it off as a win. However, its now been decided that U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez cannot block anyone in her account. But the Judge's name is the important factor for this thread! Quote:Ocasio-Cortez Set to Testify in Lawsuit Challenging Blocking of Twitter Follower.Law.com Somewhere out there in the cosmos, somebody sitting on Thanos' throne must be giggling right now. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 12-14-2020 I think this falls under the thread heading! It's sometimes difficult to understand the creation of a story and why it seems that most of them are outlandish. We tend to perceive the written word in the terms of being true -to some point, and have a thought-process behind them that also lends to the credibility of the story. The general public will tend to read an article and form a conclusion from the headline alone, that self-made deduction may alter slightly as they continue through the piece and it's found that by the first paragraph, if the storyline differs wildly from their initial belief, they move onto another piece of news. Hence, the headline needs to be eye-catching. Take this one below. A lady struggles with severe asthma and when particular aromas trigger certain allergies, her breathing can be supposedly severely effected enough that hospital care may be needed. But this isn't really an interesting story in the larger scheme of things and so it needs something to give it a connection with the time of year, the way we conduct ourselves around the Christmas period, offering a sense of empathy to someone dealing with a weakness and a peripheral connection to the latest disease that is effecting the world. The lady has had a fruitful life and enjoyed athletic hobbies ranging from charity-running marathons, becoming a Scottish diving champion -which involved overseas travel, and other pastimes that indicates a life that her asthma had little effect on. But to make the story unusual or attention-grabbing enough, it needs that certain twist that will make it worthy of being in a newspaper or on a website dedicated to entertaining and acquiring customers. So the headline must draw the reader straight in by using all the connections mentioned above. Quote:Woman allergic to Christmas almost killed by trip to garden centre(More in the link..) I found this article on the 'MyLondon' website that I go to in order to look at how many stabbings took place in the English capital. The composition of the tale intrigued me, especially the information accompanying the photographs, (Collect/PA Real Life). Pamediagroup Quote:Who we are So this is about entertainment, this is about offering you a product that will please, anger or sadden an audience. It isn't about delivering accurate important information that may impact the lives of who reads the articles, it's about customer-service. Now... where is my reality? I left it around here somewhere... (Wanders off away from the internet!) RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - F2d5thCav - 12-14-2020 Beginning to believe some stories are printed as signals to certain interest groups. ("When a story about X appears on this website or page Z of a certain publication . . .") Because some of the stories are just too absurd or banal to justify printing. Cheers RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 12-14-2020 (12-14-2020, 04:10 PM)F2d5thCav Wrote: Beginning to believe some stories are printed as signals to certain interest groups. ("When a story about X appears on this website or page Z of a certain publication . . .") Because some of the stories are just too absurd or banal to justify printing. I totally agree with this and one can only wonder who those 'interest groups' actually are! RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Ninurta - 12-14-2020 (12-14-2020, 11:00 AM)BIAD Wrote:Quote:... So does Anne also have some condition that prevents her from simply keeping herself at home and allowing Society to continue on at it's normal pace? Some condition that requires society to grind to a halt because she individually simply cannot avoid her own front door? Inquiring minds want to know... but alas, the article is silent on that salient bit of data. . RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 12-14-2020 (12-14-2020, 05:15 PM)Ninurta Wrote: So does Anne also have some condition that prevents her from simply keeping herself at home and allowing Society I strongly believe the middle-aged female gave us a subtle clue to why she brought her distress to a marketing company and why it really needed telling. '...Engineer Anne, who lives alone, says that the measures not only lower the risk of her exposure to Covid-19, but also to the festive fragrances which could kill her...' It's about discovering any allergic-reaction to the Mistletoe... mistletoe and -dare I say, a strong muscle-oiled male to witness any possible sensitivity. Even when it comes to a single woman with the gasps spending Christmas alone, one may use an anchor as a tool to get one's boat floated! RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Ninurta - 12-14-2020 (12-14-2020, 05:52 PM)BIAD Wrote:(12-14-2020, 05:15 PM)Ninurta Wrote: So does Anne also have some condition that prevents her from simply keeping herself at home and allowing Society Unscented muscle oil, of course... And I strongly recommend she doesn't eat any more mistletoe - it's VERY bad for the health... but allows us to find out just who the good kissers are, if properly employed! That reminds me - I really need to find my bronze knife so I can go out and gather some more mistletoe from the oaks... the oak don't really NEED it, now do they? And now that the leaves are down, it's easier to spot! . RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 12-14-2020 (12-14-2020, 08:37 PM)Ninurta Wrote: ...That reminds me - I really need to find my bronze knife so I can go out and gather some And that's the excuse you're going with...? A sharp knife and disappearing into the leaf-less woods on a supposed mission... that's the one you're going with? Tomorrow's headline on Ninurta mountain: Another Countryside Rambler Disappears, Law Enforcement Baffled. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 02-12-2021 I've missed a few since this thread was first started, but my Missus spotted this one. Quote:India: Rescuers try to reach workers trapped in tunnel as relatives push for answers over deadly glacier collapseSky News: Neville Lazarus?! RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Mystic Wanderer - 02-12-2021 (02-12-2021, 01:42 PM)BIAD Wrote: I've missed a few since this thread was first started, but my Missus spotted this one. I saw this story online. They aren't expecting anymore survivors. What a tragedy. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Ninurta - 02-12-2021 (02-12-2021, 05:40 PM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote:(02-12-2021, 01:42 PM)BIAD Wrote: I've missed a few since this thread was first started, but my Missus spotted this one. I believe that what @"BIAD" is pointing out is that they are trying to rescue folks from a near-certain death out of a hole, sort of like the raising of Lazarus... being reported by... Lazarus. . RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - Mystic Wanderer - 02-12-2021 (02-12-2021, 07:02 PM)Ninurta Wrote:(02-12-2021, 05:40 PM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote:(02-12-2021, 01:42 PM)BIAD Wrote: I've missed a few since this thread was first started, but my Missus spotted this one. Yes, Daddy, I know what his point was. My point was that it is a tragic story. I'll stop speaking off topic. RE: Strangely-Worded News Articles. - BIAD - 02-12-2021 (02-12-2021, 08:32 PM)Mystic Wanderer Wrote: ...I'll stop speaking off topic. You mean...? (Now I'm confused!) |