Humorous Highway Signs Aim To Steer Drivers Safely Down The Old Town Road (npr.org) 43
Drive down any U.S. interstate and there's a good chance you will see a pun or a funny reference on the next electronic message board you spot. From a report: Such messages have become ubiquitous across the country lately. But besides getting a snicker, what's behind these roadside bits, and are they making drivers behave any differently? They are known as Dynamic Message Signs, and they usually remind drivers about speed limits or traffic delays. Though the technology has been around for decades, in recent years states across the country have been taking a different tack with their messaging in a bid for more eyeballs.
A recent message that was flashing out across Illinois expressways is a perfect example of this. It read, "Got The Munchies? Get Food Delivered. Don't Drive High!" Since Illinois legalized marijuana this year, transportation officials have been trying to get people to avoid driving stoned, so why not appeal to a stoner's love for snacking? Elmo Bruggink, an Illinois tourist from the Netherlands, weighed in on the message. His home country is a place that has long been dealing with drivers who smoke weed, but Bruggink said officials haven't tried humor yet.
A recent message that was flashing out across Illinois expressways is a perfect example of this. It read, "Got The Munchies? Get Food Delivered. Don't Drive High!" Since Illinois legalized marijuana this year, transportation officials have been trying to get people to avoid driving stoned, so why not appeal to a stoner's love for snacking? Elmo Bruggink, an Illinois tourist from the Netherlands, weighed in on the message. His home country is a place that has long been dealing with drivers who smoke weed, but Bruggink said officials haven't tried humor yet.
Re:the definition of fake news (Score:4, Informative)
It's real, perhaps news, and at least the sign technology is vague nerd-related.
Humorous signs do work better, at least in many studies. When I was at Amazon they did a sizable study about what kind of signage actually works to get people to make coffee when it runs out, not walk through the alarmed doors, and so on. Humorous signs worked markedly better and (in 2013 anyway), meme-themed humorous signs, or at least nerd cultural references, worked best in testing.
Even a fake camera hooked up to the coffee pot threatening to bust the guy who took the last cup but didn't make more didn't work as well as a picture of Darth Vader saying "I find your lack of coffee disturbing".
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Even a fake camera hooked up to the coffee pot threatening to bust the guy who took the last cup but didn't make more didn't work as well as a picture of Darth Vader saying "I find your lack of coffee disturbing".
Just what Darth Vader needs -- more caffeine. :-)
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Humorous signs do work better, at least in many studies.
A long -- long -- time ago I saw a "no parking" sign at Rehoboth Beach that said, "Don't even think of parking here."
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Most people don't think, they just do it.
Re: the definition of fake news (Score:2)
NYC uses those, too.
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Re:the definition of fake news (Score:5, Insightful)
Not fake, just old news
And it's only for ad views
The billboard they had to invent
So your money could be spent
Burma Shave
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I've gotten sick of wackaging in the last few years. It's just irritating now.
Have you tried lube?
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Huge Waste of Money (Score:3)
Re:Huge Waste of Money (Score:5, Insightful)
I used to commute 45 minutes to/from work along a major interstate. There are a handful of these signs along the route and they were useless, never really displaying much of anything except, "Buckle up! It's the law!" and similar.
Until the semi-tractor trailer crashed and the entire trailer went up in flames and shut down the interstate in both directions for several hours. Then the sign displayed, "Crash at MM[number]. All lanes blocked. Use alternate route." There's really only one alternate route because of a mountain and if you miss the exit directly after the sign, there's no turning back (legally). The sign gave me the opportunity to exit and take the alternate route and I was able to watch the hours-long cleanup from my living room instead of my car.
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They are used a lot for silver alerts [wikipedia.org] in my town.
Re:Huge Waste of Money (Score:4, Informative)
Where I live they have helped multiple times by notifying of traffic problems down the road. The traffic patterns are pretty simple, so a wreck a dozen miles on a different interstate can back up traffic during rush hours and it helps to sort out a different route early. It works well for medium sized cities best, I think. For a place like LA, I suspect Waze would be better.
The jokey signs just put me in a better mood, which ain't nothing.
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That's usually the purpose - to tell you of things. But the real need
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Here they're used to announce scheduled maintenance and to give you estimated drive times when there's traffic.
Re: Huge Waste of Money (Score:2)
âoeDrive now, catch Pokémon laterâ served as a reminder that it was a community day and that Iâ(TM)d better damn well catch those Larvitars *right now*.
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You need to re-think your life. [drugabuse.gov]
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I have absolutely no problem with you using marijuana, whether it's medicinally or recreationally. But when you claim it improves your ability to drive a car, sorry but color me skeptical.
I do sincerely wish you the best.
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When I was a kid, we didn't need them. (Score:2)
Instead, we drove cars without airbags or crumple zones and if a driver wasn't paying attention to the road, they could drift into a tree and cut their life short. Darwin took the bad drivers out of the gene pool and kept the streets safe for everyone else.
But now we have airbags and they've removed those roadside trees and straightened and widened the roads so people can drive faster with very little risk of injury to themselves even as they text each other and watch Netflix on their mobile phones. It's sa
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I seriously doubt that being a bad driver is genetically encoded and even assuming it is, humans don't evolve that fast. It would take several thousands of years to evolve better drivers this way.
Where's Mr. Smith? (Score:1)
They missed
The turn
Car was whizz'n
Fault was her'n
Funeral his'n
Burma-Shave
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Kehd! (Score:2)
Boston's been doing this for years:
https://www.bostonglobe.com/op... [bostonglobe.com]
Most useful are the projected number of hours (well, minutes, but close enough) to get to downtown from outside of the city. Too bad Waze beat them to the punch.
Mirror on the bathroom wall (Score:2)
Burma-Shave
Dutch humor... (Score:2)
It sounds like the set up for a put down, but it turns out they haven't tried it yet.
Saw one in Missouri (Score:2)
variety is good (Score:2)
Anyone remember Steve Martin's "LA Story"? (Score:2)
Please, watch this movie. DMS signs play a major role. You can thank me later!