Spam, glorious spam

ArielAriel Shipmate
"Hello, I must say you're beautiful* which made me I stumbled at your profile, couple with the fact your posts are interesting to view so I had to write on your timeline but I mean no disrespect I try adding you up it didn't went through so if you don't mind I would appreciate you sending me a friend request and let keep in touch thank you"

i really admire a man who doesn't bother with punctuation or grammar he knows how to live just gets on with it and his command of english has impressed me hugely innit

if it aint went through wen he tried adding me up on Facebook (my account is private) I wonder if I should give him another chance. He might be wealthy. I've often been told that there's something wrong with my bank account and credit cards - not to mention my computer - so that could come in handy.

* Glad to see he also appreciates medieval paintings.

Any interesting spam, scam or whatevers recently? Anyone inherited a few fortunes, or are you under threat of arrest from various agencies? Share your excitement with the world.
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Comments

  • A woman from Singapore texted me on Monday and wanted to connect. She had apparently heard that British men were kind, gentle and good company. I’m not sure why she was telling me this but I was tempted to reply and say ‘Don’t do it!’ before she made a terrible mistake and hooked up with one ;)
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    Many good looking American service men seem to find me irresistible. 😆🤣😂

    😺 🐟
  • I am constantly attracting young, beautiful women who want hot sex with me. They are (at least) 35 years late at Crewe. They have entirely the wrong selling point. An offer to discuss the middle ages or cook me a steak dinner might have some hope.
  • Huh. All I get are spam emails telling me my McAfee sub has expired, and that MY PC IS UNDER ATTACK!!!!!!!

    I think if anyone told me I was liable to be arrested for some gross misdemeanour, I'd be quite proud, and would invite them to come and take me off to Rwanda (or wherever) straightaway...
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    You know I swear if I had an avatar of Spongebob Squarepants these guys would still say how beautiful I am.

    What they don't know (and I didn't until recently) is that I have a double life. I regularly get emails in Russian addressing me as Sergei Vladimirovich and telling me there is something wrong with my credit card or bank account, and that I need to buy gold bullion at a bargain price.
  • There was a programme on UK's Channel 5 last night, about Supermarkets in the 1970s.

    Spam (with a capital S) featured prominently, with an explanation of how it was made and a demonstration of how to cook Spam fritters. (Angel Delight, Boil-in-the-bag rice and Crispy Pancakes were also highlighted).

    At least those won't try to steal your bank details!
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    I've had another text from Linda (28, single and looking for polite gentleman). Apparently being deleted and reported as junk mail hasn't put her off in the least.

    My SiL tends to be the target of medical men from the mid-west. And indeed the photo one shared was indeed of a doctor - to wit, Michael Moseley (who, she is pretty confident, is not practising orthopaedics in Ohio).

  • I get loads of Russian garbage. Unfortunately, this led one email provider to close my account. There's something here I don't get, "suspicious activity on your account". But it's not me doing it.
  • Boogie wrote: »
    Many good looking American service men seem to find me irresistible. 😆🤣😂

    😺 🐟

    Awwww, now I'm jealous. I thought I was the only one they admired!
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    Hot young gay Christian men want to meet me.

    I assume they are rather chilly with no shirts on, and are hoping this non-hot, middle-aged, straight Christian woman might knit them a cosy jumper.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    Also, I'm an admin on a site which records memorials to women. Obviously the women who have memorials are dead, often long dead, but this doesn't stop men from contacting us, under the impression we are a dating site.

    Why would any man see a black and white photo of a woman in an old-fashioned nursing outfit, alongside a photo of a WWI war memorial with her name on it with a biography that ends with something like "contracted typhus and died in Serbia in 1917" and think "ooohhhh, potential sexual partner"?
  • A very desperate man?
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    I've said it before: if they want a date - 'The auld Kirkyard. Midnight. Bring flowers.'
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    Why would any man see a black and white photo of a woman in an old-fashioned nursing outfit, alongside a photo of a WWI war memorial with her name on it with a biography that ends with something like "contracted typhus and died in Serbia in 1917" and think "ooohhhh, potential sexual partner"?

    It's the old-fashioned nursing outfit. Gets them every time.

  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    I keep getting message requests on Instagram from people I don't know, so I just block them. But apparently the other day 'Billy Joel' wanted to send me a message. Er, that would be the Billy Joel with a totally different username and less than 500 followers? Block!

    Mind you, I suppose he could be getting in touch to thank me for recognising that 'Baby Grand' is an underappreciated gem of a song. But he'll have to find some other way if so.
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Boogie wrote: »
    Many good looking American service men seem to find me irresistible. 😆🤣😂

    😺 🐟

    Awwww, now I'm jealous. I thought I was the only one they admired!

    You too? No harm to our American chums, but I'm not likely to respond to a friend request from a bloke with the Stars and Stripes in his profile picture. They're nearly always widowed too; is there an algorithm thingy that looks for other widows?

    Sorry Chuck/Hank/whoever, you're never going to replace David, so you might as well get over it.
  • I used to get emails that said "Teenage girls want to have sex with you!"

    No. No, they really don't.
  • Odd, I have been getting messages from Mormon missionaries. I once got a friend request from a young looking woman I thought might have been a friend of one of my kids. So I responded to her. Turns out she was a Mormon sister who happened to have a name of one of my kid's friends. I found this out when a Mormon "elder" contacted me, saying he was a friend of the woman I had responded to. I have blocked them both, now.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    My husband's e-mail was put on our church website briefly for some reason. He had a flurry of spam as a result from "Christians" with various sad stories and assorted financial needs. Our favourite was the one that began "I am a devout Christian and attend the synagogue every day."
  • EigonEigon Shipmate
    I've had a couple now from people pretending to be someone local who wants to friend me on Facebook. Then they start chatting about some US scheme that will (allegedly) give me free money. I said to the most recent one that I'd pop round to discuss it in person, since she was only a few minutes walk away, which led to a slightly panicked response before I blocked her (I don't even live in the US!).
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    My husband's e-mail was put on our church website briefly for some reason. He had a flurry of spam as a result from "Christians" with various sad stories and assorted financial needs. Our favourite was the one that began "I am a devout Christian and attend the synagogue every day."

    "Plus the mosque, temple, gurdwara and ashram. Gotta spread your bets."

  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    edited August 2023
    Maybe the devout Christian is standing outside the synagogue every day handing out leaflets saying "Come and join us", presumably at a church nearby they never actually have the time to go to.
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    Piglet wrote: »
    Boogie wrote: »
    Many good looking American service men seem to find me irresistible. 😆🤣😂

    😺 🐟

    Awwww, now I'm jealous. I thought I was the only one they admired!

    You too? No harm to our American chums, but I'm not likely to respond to a friend request from a bloke with the Stars and Stripes in his profile picture. They're nearly always widowed too; is there an algorithm thingy that looks for other widows?

    Sorry Chuck/Hank/whoever, you're never going to replace David, so you might as well get over it.

    These are not their real photos. The real person could be any age, nationality or gender.

    They are catfishing.
  • North East QuineNorth East Quine Purgatory Host
    This isn't spam, this is an actual e-mail I received this afternoon. It was from my bank, thanking me for using their cash machine.

    It continued:
    We’re dedicated to making our customer experience the best it can be. We would appreciate your feedback on your recent experience with us which will only take a couple of minutes.

    A couple of minutes to give feedback? That's approx 1 min longer than my "recent experience" lasted!

    Then it said:
    Based on your recent experience of using the Cash Machine, how likely are you to recommend the XXX Bank to a friend or family member?

    What sort of conversations do they think I have with my friends and family?

    "Had a good day?"
    "YES! I used the cash machine at XXX Bank and it was simply thrilling! If you're looking for a fun activity in central Aberdeen, I recommend you use the XXX Bank cash machine too!"

    "Any suggestions for a day out in central Aberdeen?"
    "Well, there's Union Terrace Gardens, the Art Gallery, Provost Skene's House, oh, and there's the Cash Machine at XXX Bank!"

    North East Quine, nonplussed

  • Gee DGee D Shipmate
    I've often answered "X, my other friends and I, have many other topics to talk about, all much more interesting than banking with your client".
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    I answered "1" to one of those "on a scale of 1-5 how likely would you be to recommend this branch to family and friends" and actually got a personal response from the manager asking why. I explained that I was visiting the area, had no friends or family there and it was highly unlikely that they'd be visiting any time in the future and want to use the branch, so no, it wasn't going to be likely that I'd recommend it.

    Still...

    "Any plans for next Saturday?"
    "Yep, checking out the cash machines in [city]. Someone on the Cashpoint Spotters Forum says they only rate 2/5 at best, so it should make for an interesting visit."
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    edited August 2023
    It's like the YouGov surveys, where they have sets of questions such as 'Have you discussed XXXX with family or friends in the last month?' Hell, yes, never an evening passes without a spirited exchange on the relative merits of washing powders (or whatever).
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    I feel your pain. Every time I buy something online (far too frequently!), I seem to get an email a few days later asking about my "experience".

    It was like every other online shopping experience* - I placed my order, put in my details and left the site.

    * OK, occasionally it was a pain in the arse, but that was usually if the website concerned used Evri, who are a bit rubbish, unless you're able to wait in your house for several days until they deign to deliver your parcel.
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    I once made the mistake of purchasing something at an in-store franchise and giving them my email address. When I got home I found a survey form with something like 36 questions on it ranging from "how was your checkout experience" to " were you satisfied with your till receipt" and "did you think the distance from the front door to the terminal was reasonable" (or something similar). Never again.
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    I think I’ve posted this before, but it’s relevant here. It’s a 3 minute listen on BBC iPlayer for those who can access it
  • Have you noticed when you look up an item for sale, you will get ads for that item on almost every private website for a least a month?
  • PigletPiglet All Saints Host, Circus Host
    Absolutely. And if you buy something that you're unlikely to need more than one of, the ads still keep coming.

    You feel like screaming, I've bought the bloody thing, now go away!!!*

    * or words to that effect ...
  • Piglet wrote: »
    Absolutely. And if you buy something that you're unlikely to need more than one of, the ads still keep coming.

    You feel like screaming, I've bought the bloody thing, now go away!!!*

    * or words to that effect ...

    Oh yes, indeedy!
  • HarryCHHarryCH Shipmate
    Am I the only person who interpreted the title of the thread as a reference to a canned meat product?
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    No, I did too.
  • So did I - and there is (or was until recently) an advert on YouTube for that very same canned meat product, showing it being served up sizzling, and looking very tasty...
    :yum:
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    Don't fall for it. I was curious enough to try it once, and remember it as being pink, rubbery and salty. Wouldn't bother again.
  • DardaDarda Shipmate
    Spam fritters - a school dinner staple in the 70s
  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    I loved spam fritters
  • Gramps49 wrote: »
    Have you noticed when you look up an item for sale, you will get ads for that item on almost every private website for a least a month?

    I still remember that the last time I bought a new car, I was plagued with e-mails offering to sell me a new car for about 8 months. How many did they think I needed?
  • Spam, the canned meat, is the official food of Hawaii. I assume it was because it was part of the rations that was given to servicemen in the Pacific during WWII.

    Growing up, we often had Spam Sandwiches.

    My wife, though, grew up in New Jersey. She has never had Spam.

    Curiously, only the Hornel executives know how it became known as Spam. Some think it comes from Shoulder Pork And Ham.
  • Mm, fried spam for breakfast while camping. A staple here.
  • SparrowSparrow Shipmate
    Money was a bit tight when I was growing up, and my mother fed me on Spam, baked beans and mashed potato. I survived.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Darda wrote: »
    Spam fritters - a school dinner staple in the 70s

    I still suffer flashbacks. Vile things. Taste of pink.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Sparrow wrote: »
    Money was a bit tight when I was growing up, and my mother fed me on Spam, baked beans and mashed potato. I survived.

    I wouldn't have. Mashed potatoes make me gag.
  • *sigh*

    Yet another spam email this morning, informing me that *Your McAafee Account Has Been Suspennded*...

    If you can't get the speeling right, I'm hardly likely to beleeve you - and, in enny case, I kno when it expires.
  • Hate Spam, love it in fritters. Don't ask why, I can only guess it's the deep fried in batter and the saltiness that do it.

    In other news today I had an ad in my Gmail account - not an email but an ad - from a site called Shag(dot)co(dot)uk. I guess at least they are upfront about it..
  • Hate Spam, love it in fritters. Don't ask why, I can only guess it's the deep fried in batter and the saltiness that do it.

    In other news today I had an ad in my Gmail account - not an email but an ad - from a site called Shag(dot)co(dot)uk. I guess at least they are upfront about it..

    Anything fried in salty batter is tasty, no?

    The ad in your Gmail account is clearly for strong Tobacco, as used by Sherlock Holmes...
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Or ornithology.

    The common cormorant or shag
    Lays its eggs inside a paper bag...
  • ArielAriel Shipmate
    Anything fried in salty batter is tasty, no?

    Ever had a deep-fried Mars Bar?

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