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Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide
Feb 01

Crash Blossoms

Ben Zimmer’s “On Language” column in this week’s New York Times Magazine was about crash blossoms – headlines that have been pared down so far they unintentionally allow for alternative meanings.

The term was coined when an American editor based in Sapporo, Japan, spotted the headline “Violinist Linked to JAL Crash Blossoms” and wondered, “What’s a crash blossom?”

Classics of the genre include:

  1. “Giant Waves Down Queen Mary’s Funnel”
  2. “MacArthur Flies Back to Front”
  3. “Eighth Army Push Bottles Up Germans”
  4. “Squad Helps Dog Bite Victim”
  5. “Red Tape Holds Up New Bridge”
  6. “McDonald’s Fries the Holy Grail for Potato Farmers”
  7. “British Left Waffles On Falklands”
  8. “Gator Attacks Puzzle Experts”

When it comes to editing, I’m a slash and burn girl – but as these headlines make clear, it’s possible to slash too much. In the case of the McDonald’s headline, for example, the three letter word “are” in between “Fries” and “the” would make all the difference in the world.

In an editing manual University of Oregon journalism professor John Russial wrote, “As the word count drops, the likelihood of ambiguity increases.” In this age of extreme brevity, where brief, pithy blog posts compete for our attention with text messages and 140 character tweets, are we trading brevity for clarity?

 

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