Mayo 18, 2018

Of all places to search for food, why would you go to the desert?

Here's a headline I misread: "Empty stomachs drive Venezuela soldiers to desert in droves" (Yahoo).

This is what Language Log refers to as a "crash blossom." Here's a good NYT column explaining the term:
In their quest for concision, writers of newspaper headlines are... inveterate sweepers away of little words, and the dust they kick up can lead to some amusing ambiguities. Legendary headlines from years past (some of which verge on the mythical) include “Giant Waves Down Queen Mary’s Funnel,” “MacArthur Flies Back to Front” and “Eighth Army Push Bottles Up Germans.” The Columbia Journalism Review even published two anthologies of ambiguous headlinese in the 1980s, with the classic titles “Squad Helps Dog Bite Victim” and “Red Tape Holds Up New Bridge.”

For years, there was no good name for these double-take headlines. Last August, however, one emerged in the Testy Copy Editors online discussion forum. Mike O’Connell, an American editor based in Sapporo, Japan, spotted the headline “Violinist Linked to JAL Crash Blossoms” and wondered, “What’s a crash blossom?”... Another participant in the forum, Dan Bloom, suggested that “crash blossoms” could be used as a label for such infelicitous headlines that encourage alternate readings, and news of the neologism quickly spread....

One of my favorite crash blossoms is this gem from the Associated Press, first noted by the Yale linguistics professor Stephen R. Anderson last September: “McDonald’s Fries the Holy Grail for Potato Farmers.” If you take “fries” as a verb instead of a noun, you’re left wondering why a fast-food chain is cooking up sacred vessels. Or consider this headline, spotted earlier this month by Rick Rubenstein on the Total Telecom Web site: “Google Fans Phone Expectations by Scheduling Android Event.” Here, if you read “fans” as a plural noun, then you might think “phone” is a verb, and you’ve been led down a path where Google devotees are calling in their hopes.

Nouns that can be misconstrued as verbs and vice versa are, in fact, the hallmarks of the crash blossom. Take this headline, often attributed to The Guardian: “British Left Waffles on Falklands.”....

44 (na) komento:

Darrell ayon kay ...

British Left Sucks Period
The Guardian proves the headline.

Bay Area Guy ayon kay ...

The late comedian Sam Kinison touched on this issue of hunger in the desert a couple of decades ago. Still applies today.

Darkisland ayon kay ...

Would you have read the article without the crash blossom headline?

Sounds like it did its job

John Henry

Jaq ayon kay ...

Althouse decries shorts trend...

Best I could do.

rehajm ayon kay ...

They thought the sign said dessert.

Jaq ayon kay ...

BTW, I think “crash blossoms” is fucking brilliant.

Gilbert Pinfold ayon kay ...

My grandfather collected these. Some of his favorites were "Five Balls Keep Lyndon Hopping" (about LBJ's 1965 inauguration), and "Navel Hero Killed in Blast", which was more a mis-spelling than a crash blossom

gilbar ayon kay ...

this gives me the opportunity to quote the BEST headline EVER (even though it has no relevance to this topic )

Hix Nix Stix Pix

Jaq ayon kay ...

More Mush from the WImp was the best headline ever.

rhhardin ayon kay ...

Feds Sue Hooker to Clean Love Canal

on the Hooker Chemical spill.

h ayon kay ...

rehajm: Ha.

Ralph L ayon kay ...

The WaPo used to put puns or CB's in headlines in the Style section.

The Columbia Journalism Review had a penultimate back page full of them from all over every month. I hadn't known they'd made books of them. How many were submitted by the writers, that is, intentional?

tcrosse ayon kay ...

President and Senate Butt Heads

sean ayon kay ...

Theodore Bernstein (NYT chief copy editor, once upon a time) called them "two-faced heads." My favorite is: "Investigators Explore Virgin Far North."

Caldwell P. Titcomb IV ayon kay ...

Often these headlines could use a "-" to connect some words.

On Drudge right now (an anti-Trump fake-news rambling BS):
"PULITZER winner ditches journalism to work at hot dog joint..."

How I read it:
"PULITZER winner ditches journalism to work at hot dog-joint..."

C. Thomas Kunz ayon kay ...

My favorite dealt with the construction of a controversial building in Harvard Square when Pusey was the President of Harvard. The headline:

Pusey Fights Erection in Harvard Square

Raphael OrdoƱez ayon kay ...

Road sign seen on highway in front of state penitentiary: "Hitchhikers may be escaping inmates."

Ralph L ayon kay ...

The second editor I worked for on our college paper put up the motto "The South's Foremost College Weekly."

He was forced out (and left school soon after) when the annual lampoon issue went awry. The early SJWs were upset that there was no disclaimer.

Writing headlines on a deadline is tough if you're inexperienced or punchy. I did most of ours for a year. Now the computers can squeeze them in the space, up to a point, but back then you could only control the point size, and that only in steps.

Ralph L ayon kay ...

What upset them most was a below-the-neck photo of a woman grabbing a man by the zipper with the caption "Dr. Grant inaugurates Davidson's first sex for grades scandal."

Darrell ayon kay ...

I got away with "New Coach, New Stroke" when our high school swim team got a new coach. Until the paper was printed, of course.

tcrosse ayon kay ...

For a very short time Pfeiffer Beer was advertised as "The Beer with the Silent P".

SeanF ayon kay ...

I thought the best headline ever was generally agreed to be "Headless Body in Topless Bar," but I'm partial to the more recent "Skywalkers in Korea Cross Han Solo".

Caldwell P. Titcomb IV ayon kay ...

"Statistics show that teen pregnancy drops off signifcantly after age 25"

Fritz ayon kay ...

"Of all places to search for food, why would you go to the desert?"

Because it's better than starving in socialism?

Michael K ayon kay ...

The all time TV prank was the China Airlines crash landin at SFO. TV report was told pilot''s name way Wey To Lo. First officer was Ho Lee Fuk.

Jim Gust ayon kay ...

At my alma mater, MIT, our sports teams were "Tech." Whenever we defeated Bates College, the inevitable headline was:

"Tech Masters Bates."

Ingachuck'stoothlessARM ayon kay ...

Life is short.
Eat desert first!

Lucien ayon kay ...

Outside of a dog a book is man’s best friend. Inside of a dog it’s too dark to read. — Groucho

mockturtle ayon kay ...

Enjoyed some laughs over these. Thanks for the amusing post. Where can I find collections of these gems?

mockturtle ayon kay ...

"Tech Masters Bates."

I seem to remember one of Dickens' novels had a Master Bates.

khematite ayon kay ...

In 1960, reading a NY Times headline about that year's Summer Olympics, my father was taken aback to see "Boston Broad Jumps Record Distance." Thinking it very bad taste on the part of the Times to describe a woman in that way, he was relieved to discover that it involved a jumper named Ralph Boston.

mockturtle ayon kay ...

In 1960, reading a NY Times headline about that year's Summer Olympics, my father was taken aback to see "Boston Broad Jumps Record Distance." Thinking it very bad taste on the part of the Times to describe a woman in that way, he was relieved to discover that it involved a jumper named Ralph Boston.

That's why we have hyphens.

Ralph L ayon kay ...

Mock, the monthly page in the CJR was called The Lower Case, but I'm not finding anything with that on Amazon.

Roughcoat ayon kay ...

Re gilbar @7:13, "Hix Nix Stix Pix"

Not quite. It was actually "Stix Nix Hix Pix"

Translation: "Rural America (stix) rejects (nix) movies (pix) about rural Americans (hix)."

PM ayon kay ...

from "Yankee Doodle Dandy"

MadTownGuy ayon kay ...

Fictional, yet brilliant, from Fractured Fairy Tales - "Doze Doll Due Wiz Biz." It was about a Walt Disney look-alike knight who decided to let Sleeping Beauty stay asleep and set up an amusement park attraction with her as the centerpiece.

MadTownGuy ayon kay ...

Grrr autocorrect..."Doze Doll Duz Wiz Biz."

Roughcoat ayon kay ...

"Yankee Doodle Dandy" also got it wrong.

Link to a photo of the front page of Variety with the actual headline:

https://www.google.com/search?q=Stix+nix+hix+pix&newwindow=1&tbm=isch&tbo=u&source=univ&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjg8_XT04_bAhUD5YMKHcQCCuwQsAQIQA&biw=1366&bih=580#imgrc=SUGT9YBOi0_QtM:

tcrosse ayon kay ...

IN 1934 there was a custody battle over Gloria Vanderbilt and her considerable fortune. The judge announced that he would make his ruling after the weekend whether Gloria would go with her Mother or her Aunt. One of the newspaper headlines read "Sic Transit Gloria Monday".

C. Thomas Kunz ayon kay ...

One of my favorites:

Holy Family Romps Over Vineyard


Holy Family was a Catholic high school that defeated the Martha's Vineyard Squad.

The image of Mary, Joseph and Jesus having a ball on the island is a fun one.

Unknown ayon kay ...

Can't believe nobody else said it:

BECAUSE IT'S A FOOD DESERT

gilbar ayon kay ...

thank you roughcoat; i was doing it from memory (and, if you think about it; mine translates the same)

lonetown ayon kay ...

Powerline just issued a crash blossom - FBI BLOWS SOURCE: WHY?

Bruce Gee ayon kay ...

When I was a kid, Mad Magazine did a regular column specializing in made up headlines that would naturally confuse the literal minde. I think it was titled something like, “How children understand sports headlines”. I remember TWINS SWEEP GIANT DOUBLEHEADER as a particular example, complete with illustration of just how a child would picture such a thing.

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