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Edited on Tue Jan-25-11 06:38 PM by MorningGlow
Mr. MG got a letter today. It was in a small envelope (letter, not legal, size), addressed to him by name, first-class postage, with no return address. Inside was a folded up piece of newspaper (one whole page) and a stickie note that said, "(Mr. MG), Check this out!" and was just signed "-J". He unfolded it to find a full-page story/ad about a car dealership in the town up the road. On the back was the financial page (mutual funds, IIRC).
He looked at it and looked at it, checked the stickie note, wondered if it was from his friend Joe, and if so, why Joe would send it.
Then we realized it was a fake. A very, VERY complex fake. Handwritten envelope, handwritten post-it (not just auto-produced printing that looks like handwriting). The "story" about the car dealership was an ad on a fake newspaper page. This page was allegedly ripped out of the newspaper's D section, which was labeled "automotive", but our paper's real D section is sports at the front and business at the back. Plus there was no identifying newspaper name on either side of the page (and used the wrong font).
So now I'm trying to figure out if it's genius or creepy--that they went to such labor- and cost-intensive lengths to draw a person in. Also makes me wonder how many people are going to fall for it. The former advertising employee in me respects it for its genius, while the consumer in me finds it downright creepy and hopes that the car dealership has just blown an obscene amount of money that they will not get back from suckers who choose to purchase cars because of this pitch.
What say you, Lounge? Genius? Or creepy? :shrug:
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