See? Right there under the story about the unrelenting human disaster unfolding in Nepal. |
Pictured: Steve Easton and the thing he sneezed out and then felt compelled to share with the world. |
"It was a very strange sensation so I retrieved it to examine it..."
-Steve Easton, 51, talking to the BBC
about what just came out of his nose
Ok, a foreign object comes rocketing out of your nose, so you examine it. I get that. That's a perfectly reasonable thing to do. But why did he then inform the press? What made him think that anything he found in his handkerchief would be newsworthy?
What? Don't look at me like that. It's the plural of Doctor Who. Like mothers in law. |
I mean, at best this is an inspirational story about a nine-year old in the 70's who used to cram his toys up his nose yet managed to become a functioning adult. If there's anything remarkable here, it's that he didn't suffer some kind of brain damage. Like, you'd think he'd be reluctant to admit to that this hunk of dried out rubber was in his head through ten Doctors Who without his knowledge, but no, he called the BBC. Which brings up an even more unsettling question:
Why does the BBC care about this guys nose-find? If he sneezed out say, a horde of Viking gold or Richard III's bones, that would be news. But for some reason a rubber suction cup was good enough for the people who covered the Blitz to send a crew? Was it a slow day?
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