Google Punks Web With Victorian Ghost Hoax on Street View

If you look around carefully, you can find Paddington Bear waving on London's Portobello Road, Sherlock Holmes loosed in Oxford, and the famous Beefeater doing a little shopping at a London department store. Perhaps the Google folks got the inspiration for such shenanigans from Ben Kinsley and Robin Hewlett, two Pittsburgh-based artists who staged a series of outlandish scenes for the passing StreetView team back in May, 2008.
We're glad that Google has a sense of humor, since StreetView has been highly criticized as an invasion of privacy. Maybe the company is hoping that a few good-natured pranks will prove its 'non-evilness' to the service's paranoid detractors.
Death of Print
Elle Girl
In April 2006, Elle Girl's print edition was closed down, but the Web site lives on at ellegirl.com.
CosmoGirl
Though it will be folded into Seventeen magazine, the teen version of Cosmopolitan will publish its last print issue in December 2008. It will live on at CosmoGirl.com.
Christian Science Monitor
Founded in 1908 by Mary Baker Eddy, this venerable paper will move all its daily content to the Web starting in 2009, though it will still publish a weekly print version.
Radar Magazine
Was it too snarky for its own good? We'll never know, but this modern-day successor to '80s-era Spy magazine shut down in October. AMI, owner of the National Enquirer, bought RadarOnline.com, however, which will focus on celebrity gossip a la TMZ.com.
US News and World Report
Once a serious competitor to Time and Newsweek, US News and World Report is now best known for its College guides, which it will continue to publish. The weekly newsmagazine, however, will be turned into a monthly, and all daily operations are moving to the Web at usnews.com.
Gallery: 10 More Google Street Views
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
B said 1:33PM on 3-27-2009
I'm surprised that they didn't toss the Tardis in there. Would've been much more amusing if The Doctor was in this shot lol. Or Torchwood.
Reply
Ulio de Fulio said 7:13PM on 3-28-2009
It's not a Victorian torso, you idiots, It's Dr. Who etering Torchwood.
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Vinnie said 9:21PM on 3-30-2009
They guy with the locked "briefcase" - it's actually a lock box for companies using offsite data. Such as LTO, tapes and such from their server backups.
Reply
marshall said 4:02PM on 8-05-2009
Google RULES
Reply