Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register. Please log in or create an account.
Culture: Website: Entertainment
In The News Today   (+3, -1)  [vote for, against]
a fun idea in the vein of the Halfbakery

For this idea, a web bot is needed that will scan the headlines of (online) major world newspapers daily, and present them to users.

A number of appointed moderators or even just average Joe users choose ‘suspect’ headlines. The users then write new stories for the existing headlines. At the end of each story, other users can suggest modifications, comment on, or just congratulate the author of the story. Additionally, pictures from newspapers can be chosen and new captions suggested, like Clive James sometimes does when he covers the news.

I imagine the result would be something not unlike the Halfbakery, with a mixture of humour, rants, and the occasional skirmish over politics/religion. It would be a fun idea, copyright issues aside.
-- sdm, Sep 29 2001

AFR Tenuously Linked Caption Comp http://www.chaser.c...u/PhotoCompetition/
The closest thing to this idea I have seen. [sdm, Sep 29 2001]

...and elsewhere in the news today. http://www.halfbake...ive_20web_20fiction
Think bigger, sdm. Think bigger! [DrBob, Sep 29 2001]

Not news... http://www.spinnwebe.com/iadl/
But it's amusing anyway. For something really frightening, check out the next link. [StarChaser, Sep 29 2001]

Eek. http://www.spinnwebe.com/iadl/581.shtml
Originally described as 'No amount of Brain Brillo will save you.' You Are Warned. [StarChaser, Sep 29 2001]

Although not exactly along these lines, this idea reminded me of the end segment of (ABC Australia's) "Backberner", where serious newspaper reports are shot down with piss-taking comments.
-- mrkillboy, Sep 29 2001


Oh everybody does it. I always enjoyed the Clive James new year special with its regular 'news' updates. I've just never seen it done in an unregulated way over the Internet.
-- sdm, Sep 29 2001


In a way, [UB], but the submissions by users don't necessarily have to have anything to do with current affairs or the titles of the newspaper ads. It's basically just creative journalism using existing titles as stimulus instead of real stories.

I got the idea for this when I was reading a story about the Anglican Church. It was entitled “Primate’s Wife Demands Apology from Church”. I was disappointed to read the actual story because the title promised so much.

[DrBob], that's a little too big.
-- sdm, Sep 30 2001



random, halfbakery