Cari cugini…
In un pomeriggio di un sabato qualsiasi in un negozio gigante della catena Decathlon un tipo si avvicina ad una delle casse e consegna alla commessa una maglia della Juventus che ha appena deciso di comprare.
La commessa passa la maglia sull’apposita piastra demagnetizzante per l’antitaccheggio, digita l’importo e lo comunica al soggetto che paga e riceve resto e scontrino.
Imbustata la maglia, il tale s’incammina verso l’uscita ma la barriera antitaccheggio suona mettendosi a lampeggiare. Interviene la commessa dicendo cortesemente al cliente, imbarazzatissimo, di passare all’interno della barriera solo la busta con gli acquisti.
Questi esegue e la barriera suona ancora.
Interviene l’addetto alla sicurezza che si fa consegnare la busta dal tipo,guarda la merce presente nella busta, estrae la maglia della Juve e prontamente suggerisce:
“Provi a togliere lo scudetto!”Â
Last.fm – The Social Music Revolution
Last.fm – The Social Music Revolution
Join the social music revolution at Last.fm. It’s fun, it’s free, it’s all about the music.
You get your own online music profile that you can fill up with the music you like. This information is used to create a personal radio station and to find users who are similar to you. Last.fm can even play you new artists and songs you might like. It’s addictive, it’s growing, it’s free, it’s music
: Definitely Interesting not?
This mad (but great!) austrians
There’s a lot of crazyness in Vienna, art installations, Hundertwasser buildings, but the Republic of The Kugelmugel… I’ve discovered it just today
Kugelmugel is a micronation located in Vienna, Austria.
In 1984, the artist Edwin Lipburger built a ball-shaped house with a barbed-wire fence around it on a small plot in the Vienna Prater and declared its independence as the Republic of Kugelmugel (the name referring to the shape). The only address within the proclaimed Republic is “2, Antifaschismusplatz” (2, Anti-Fascism Square, 2 refers to the 2nd district Leopoldstadt), and the founder is one of the 389 citizens. He refused to pay taxes to the Austrian government and began to print his own stamps, for which he received a prison sentence in court. Only a pardon by the Austrian President saved him from going to jail.
As Kugelmugel came to be quite well-known in the public, it also became a tourist attraction of Vienna.
Facciamoci sentire
ma la parte con la quale ci siamo schierati.”(G.K.Chesterton)