A shocking new meme has spread from the Internet to a
roadside sign in Ruskin, Florida.
In July 2014, a
road construction sign that was supposed to alert drivers to closed lanes was
hacked to instead project the phrase, "F**k her right in the p***y."
Acme Barricades, the company that owns the sign, told the TV station that vandals somehow got into the
computer on the sign. It has since
changed the passwords.
The
"FHRITP" phrase seen on the sign, obscene as it is, has become the
Internet meme of the moment. Cincinnati filmmaker John Cain started the
dubious craze in January when he uploaded a video of a fake news blooper
where he pretended to be a reporter saying those words on air to the
dismay of a shocked female anchorwoman, according to NewsNet5.com. Since
then, he's uploaded two other fake videos where another man appears to
interrupt a newscast to say the same very offensive six words.
Cain's videos were revealed to be a hoax by Mediaite, but the FHRITP meme has caught on.
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Source)
Hacked
signs in South Carolina. If you want to try it, you can see
the steps at
Jalopnik.
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This sign is not only hacked, but it's also mean!
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Clearly.
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In March 2009 in the center of Manhattan, some unknown pranksters
accessed and reprogrammed a network of electronic signs. Instead of the
usual messages to
motorists the signs showed the phrase “New York is dying."
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An illuminated roadside
construction sign allegedly posted in 2012 in Provo, Utah displayed the words "God Hates Gays."
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This sign in Northern California was supposed to tell people that a road in the city of Loomis would be closed for pipeline construction, but it instead warned of gorillas.
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An anonymous hacker in Austin, Texas.
Photo by Alessondra Springman/MIT
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Hacked electronic road sign that was being used by
construction workers in Lubbock, Texas.
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Seen in downtown Houston.
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