A Netflix Series Featuring A Native...
Film, Media & TV0 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Grunty. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.They're very good Grunty, this was a news Item in an American paper, so technichally speaking, it can go on here.
E-MAIL CONFUSION.
From the United States, comes the following story, which reinforces the need to get E-Mail addresses correct.
After being nearly snowbound for two weeks, during the winter, a Seattle man, bound for Miami Beach, where he was to meet his wife the next day, at the conclusion of her business trip to Minneapolis. They were looking forward to some warm, pleasant weather, and enjoying a break from the children. Unfortunately, there was a mix up at the departure gate, and the man was informed he would have to travel on a later flight. On arrival, he found Miami Beach was having a heat wave, and the weather was as uncomfortably hot, as Seattles was cold. The receptionist gave him a message that his wife would arrive later in the day. He could hardly wait to get to the pool, so he hurriedly sent his wife an E-mail, but because of his haste, made an error in the address. As a result, his message arrived at the home of an elderly widow, whose preacher husband had been buried the day before. The grieving widow opened her E-mail, took one look at the monitor, let out an anguished scream, and promptly had a heart attack. When her family found her the next day, the following message was still on the screen. 'Dearest Wife, departed yesterday, as you know, just now checked in, some confusion at the gate. Appeal denied. Recieved confirmation of your arrival. Your loving husband. PS, things are not as we thought. You will be surprised at how hot it is down here'.
in today's news - and it's genuine:
Nashville police and residents were searching on Monday for clues to the Christmas Day theft of a cinnamon bun that found unlikely fame for its resemblance to the late Mother Teresa’s face.
The bun has been a draw for curious tourists since it was preserved and put on display in a glass case at the shop where it was discovered by a customer in 1996.
"What I can’t figure out is why anyone would steal it," said the shop’s owner, Bob Bernstein. "They can’t sell it on eBay, it’s not fit to eat, there was no ransom note and the police put its value at only $25 on their report." Bernstein said the thief broke into the coffee house at 6 a.m. on Sunday, and had smashed the glass case containing the bun, ignoring cash lying nearby.
Before her death in 1997, Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother Teresa wrote to Bernstein asking that her name not be used commercially. The pastry became known simply as the "Nun Bun".