Race me in a lobster suit : absurd internet ads and the real conversations that followed / Kelly Mahon ; illustrations by Graham Annable.
Publisher: Philadelphia, PA : Quirk Books, [2019]Description: 206 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volume001: BDZ0037021184ISBN: 9781683691044Subject(s): Help-wanted advertising -- Humor | Temporary employment -- Humor. -- United States | Help-wanted advertising | Temporary employment | Humour | Humour | Advertising | Parodies & spoofs: non-fiction | Internet & digital media: arts & performance | Language: history & general works | United StatesGenre/Form: Humor.DDC classification: 659.19331124 LOC classification: HF6125.5 | .M34 2019Summary: Knit me into a cocoon help me eat a burrito pretend to be a chair at my dinner party wrestle a komodo dragon race me in a lobster suit. Author Kelly Mahon posts absurd gig ads online, and shares the conversations she had with the brave souls who wanted the job. We're living in a gig economy. But would you respond to an online ad seeking someone to search for escaped ants? Or take an offer for a free tattoo by someone who "needs the practice?" How about a mattress for sale "tainted by geriatric love" or a workout plan that involves throwing Virginia hams? And if you hit reply, and the poster is sketchy about the details or offers to pay you with a gift card for clams, how long would you keep the conversation going? When NYC copywriter Kelly Mahon started posting weird, fake gig ads as a creative outlet, she found that there was someone interested in every bizarre offer she came up with. And the subsequent awkward email threads were equally hilarious and bizarre. Race Me In A Lobster Suit collects Mahon's funniest fabrications, plus the hysterical email conversations that followed as she ratcheted up the crazy. While some respondants become suspicious, others seem willing to play along with the joke. And don't worry, everyone involved agreed to share their emails in the book, so there are no hard feelings. In a world where it seems like everyone's suspicious of everyone else, it's nice to know that there are still people who will at least consider helping a stranger reenact a recurring spider nightmare, or explain the principles of pig Latin to a baffled mother of three.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 659.1 MAH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 114510 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
This collection of prank Craigslist ads and the real email exchanges that followed is "hilarious, good fun" and the perfect gift for fans of offbeat humor ( Huffington Post )
When New York City copywriter Kelly Mahon started posting fake gig ads online as a creative outlet, she was surprised to find that there was someone interested in every bizarre job offer she dreamed up. Race Me in a Lobster Suit collects Mahon's funniest posts, along with the improvised email exchanges with would-be cocoon knitters and lobster racers. Some correspondents became suspicious, while others seemed willing to play along. The result is good-natured comedy gold and a kind of collaborative entertainment that could only exist in the internet gig economy. Irreverent illustrations by cartoonist Graham Annable (creator of the Harvey Award nominated Grickle comics) ensure that this small book offers outsize laughs.
A quick, hilarious read, Race Me in a Lobster Suit is perfect for anyone who needs a bit of absurdity to brighten their day.
Knit me into a cocoon help me eat a burrito pretend to be a chair at my dinner party wrestle a komodo dragon race me in a lobster suit. Author Kelly Mahon posts absurd gig ads online, and shares the conversations she had with the brave souls who wanted the job. We're living in a gig economy. But would you respond to an online ad seeking someone to search for escaped ants? Or take an offer for a free tattoo by someone who "needs the practice?" How about a mattress for sale "tainted by geriatric love" or a workout plan that involves throwing Virginia hams? And if you hit reply, and the poster is sketchy about the details or offers to pay you with a gift card for clams, how long would you keep the conversation going? When NYC copywriter Kelly Mahon started posting weird, fake gig ads as a creative outlet, she found that there was someone interested in every bizarre offer she came up with. And the subsequent awkward email threads were equally hilarious and bizarre. Race Me In A Lobster Suit collects Mahon's funniest fabrications, plus the hysterical email conversations that followed as she ratcheted up the crazy. While some respondants become suspicious, others seem willing to play along with the joke. And don't worry, everyone involved agreed to share their emails in the book, so there are no hard feelings. In a world where it seems like everyone's suspicious of everyone else, it's nice to know that there are still people who will at least consider helping a stranger reenact a recurring spider nightmare, or explain the principles of pig Latin to a baffled mother of three.
Excerpt provided by Syndetics
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Booklist Review
In today's gig economy, there is but one place to find the best of the truly absurd: the online classified ads. Debut author Mahon turns her advertising background into hilarity as she posts ludicrous premises asking for help online, then toys with the respondents. Will readers believe there are people willing to knit Mahon into a cocoon for the winter, or people willing to let her practice her tattooing on them while sitting in the back of her uncle's auto-body shop? Anyone who's been on the internet won't be surprised, but the conversations that follow are all hilarious in their own way. Each unsuspecting mark has a different boiling point, and what makes one double down while another bails will keep you reading in disbelief. Mahon's work in ad writing helps her keep premises short and witty, and her ability to respond with earnest and outrageous candor turns the exchanges into repartee that wouldn't be out of place on a sitcom or behind a stand-up mic. This is bite-size comedy you'll devour.--Erin Downey Howerton Copyright 2010 BooklistThere are no comments on this title.