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[challenge entry] Always placed in the worst places!

From the Photoshop the Police challenge. See all 443 entries (closed)

(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:40, archived)
# hahaha
they've done one better here - they've put a speed camera up on a road that's more or less permanently gridlocked anyway.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:43, archived)
# tell me about it
theres a stretch of road up here with big signs about not doing more than 50, that you acn be sat next to for 10 minutes at a time. Piss taking bastards!
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:46, archived)
# I guess if you're
riding one of those granny-scooter things on the pavement you might be able to reach a dangerous speed...
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:47, archived)
# i think my
legs just fell off.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:44, archived)
# Hahahahaha!
TJ - get your ears around Resonance FM right now, and hear a 4th rate right wing American DJ make an abolsute arse of himself, while very very sad people indeed ring up and do something similar. It is so incredibly inept and humiliating, it's strangely compelling. And terrible music.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:46, archived)
# Whats he saying?
.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:50, archived)
# Dumb deliberate comedy
misunderstandings about English life, berating those of us who like football, dangerously dodgy stuff about homosexuals, crap about how the US is saving the world, and how good Dolly Parton is.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:55, archived)
# I think it's a parody
at least it was last week.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:51, archived)
# I'm not so sure..
If it was a parody, it'd at least be funny or interesting. And the dodgy right wing stuff would be less... real.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:57, archived)
# it's an experimental drama programme
and it is indeed bloody awful. Neither funny nor insightful.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 14:59, archived)
# This sounds interesting ..
Now playing on Resonance FM 104.4:

From Beefheart to The White Stripes, Balling the Jack explores the way The Blues has interacted with art-rock, electronica and punk over the last 40 years. The show also takes time to shine some light on the darker corners of the idiom's earlier history. Competitions and special guests enliven this eclectic, Clapton-free celebration of the Thirteen Bar Blues.
(, Fri 12 Sep 2003, 15:13, archived)