Yeah, if you’ve been following events in Manassas, Va.,
you’ll know that it is one strange place.
You may recall that Manassas was the setting of the bizarre
1993, uh, affair of John and Lorena Bobbitt. In which, following an alleged
rape of Lorena by John, she fetched a kitchen knife and cut off her sleeping
husband’s penis. Then she drove out into Prince William County, tossed the
member out of the moving car and then called 911. There was a huge manhood hunt
(oh, come on—like I wasn’t going to take the opportunity?), the penis was
recovered and surgically reattached.
Eventually Lorena was tried for malicious wounding, and
you would not believe the attention that the trial got from the international
press. The city of Manassas must have increased its population by 40% during
the trial, and every hotel room between the courthouse and Fairfax County was
probably occupied.
The jokes alone kept fax machines whirring for weeks. And
this was in the days before Twitter.
Look—1) I am not making this up; 2) if you want details go
Google for yourself; 3) this is just context for what I’m actually posting
about.
Because, twenty years on from the Bobbitt trial, the
Manassas police and prosecutors are up to their asses in male genitalia. Again.
This time the technology has moved on and the case involves
an attempt to prosecute a 17-year-old boy for sexting his 15-year-old
girlfriend a video of his willy. The truncated version is that the cops and DA
wanted to, ah, chemically induce an erection in the kid for evidentiary
purposes. And that’s all I’m going to say about that, primarily because I just
don’t get it.
But when I was reading the Washington
Post’s story on this, trying
unsuccessfully to make sense of it, here’s what struck me: right in the middle
of the text was this astonishingly inappropriate (or possibly massively
appropriate; I dunno) ad. (I notice that the story no longer has in-text advertisements;
in fact at time of writing the page has no ads at all. That will probably change.)
I mean—what the hell kind of algorithm do they have for
ad serving on their site?
Actually, I suspect it’s the same algo that the LA Times used to display multiple ads
for coffins, funeral flowers and bereavement services within its story
on the death of Farrah Fawcett.
You’d have thought that these publications would have
refined their context-based ad systems in the five years since that incident. But
if so, you’d be wrong.
No comments:
Post a Comment