The other weekend, I spent some time in a little town east of San Diego known as "Imperial". First off, and this isn't even my main point, I don't like it when towns give themselves important-sounding names in order to feel ok. You're still a town, you're still very small, and you need to watch your attitude. However, my girlfriend was raised there, so if she ever finds this blog, I would like to officially change my stance on the issue, starting at the time that she finds it. That's the sort of integrity I have, and I will spread spurious and damaging rumors about anyone who disagrees.
Now that the proper warnings have been issued, I will share a few observations from my road trip. After much soul-searching and extended use of my deep concentration techniques, I've decided that too many highway road signs use unclear or misleading punctuation, or should I say, punctuation so bad, the sign makers should go back to first grade...hold on, wait for it...to be taught by the first-graders. That was a good one. My point is, I understand the need to be concise, but for my money, the correct balance has not been struck between brevity and clarity.
Let's start off with a seemingly simple two-word warning sign:
I'm relatively confident this means "the presence of slow trucks is something you should be aware of", but I'm far from 100%. What if it means "slow DOWN, trucks?". Well, I don't drive a truck. So now I've wasted my time reading that, when I could've been forming the beginning of an unrelated, yet potentially revolutionary idea. Which means I now must form a different revolutionary idea later on. Let's be honest, how many of those do I have? Probably only 20, and I don't want to waste any.
Here's one that might be cute if you understood hieroglyphics.
As it stands though, I don't. So I'm not sure if this sign means that a slalom course for cars is coming up soon, or what. If there is a slalom course, where is it, and how do I register for competition? I'm a very capable driver, I need to know the details and requirements surrounding the registration process. I will almost certainly win if I am allowed to register.
This one is just plain insensitive:
Does this mean there are mentally slow kids in the area? Or did they make all the children in the neighborhood run timed 40-yard-dashes? I have no idea what's happening here, but it would appear that the self-esteem era is officially over. Maybe their next sign idea will be "fat children", or "children having acne nearby".
I think this next sign is one of those hippie liberal recycle warnings:
Calm down, hippies, I know I should recycle! Relax and smoke a doobie or something. I'll recycle later. Right now I'm driving, and I think there's a circular intersection somewhere nearby, I don't need to be distracted by your recycling sign. When you get all pushy like this, it makes me want to buy an SUV and park it at the gas station with the engine running. That's just how human nature works.
This one's easy:
Bon Jovi, 1986. The album contained competent contemporary pop/metal, from its Eddie Van Halen-inspired guitar solos to Jon Bon Jovi's enthusiastic, husky wail. If you were alive in 1986, you were listening to this. Don't lie to me.
In my next example, the Department of Transportation takes the slow kids to task once more, this time by posting median test scores for the area.
How do you score a 9% in good conscience, anyway? You have to try to score that low. Study up youngsters, or be publicly humiliated.
Here's the deal. I'm not saying I even read most road signs. This last trip was the first time I ever read one. But for people that do, it's probably a big waste of time. Long story short, these signs do nothing more than cause the sides of our nation's highways to be yellow. That's pretty much it. If I was in charge, I can guarantee you that the emphasis would be on relevant, to-the-point signage. Here's an example of a sign I would like to see:
I would definitely understand that sign, and I don't even have any practice at that. For you veteran sign-readers out there, it would be even easier to understand. Before this post, I briefly considered changing careers and becoming a sign-maker, because I know so much about it. But they're really annoying to make in Photoshop, so now the American public is stuck with signs that promote 80's rock albums and recycling. Depressing, but reality's like that sometimes.
13 Comments:
It was a long wait (for the next post), but I have to admit, it was worth it. You've got some very important insights here. So true about the SLOW Children thing. I mean, like that's gonna help?
there are some signs in southern colorado, northern new mexico (possibly elsewhere, too, but not to my knowledge, and if i don't know about it, it doesn't exist) that read:
"GUSTY WINDS MAY EXIST"
which without fail sends me into existentialist crisis. they MAY exist? but do they? how will they know? do i exist? should i wear a sign saying that it's possible that i do? do you exist? you can't even SEE wind, you can only see the stuff that wind moves, so will we ever really know? and even if you can feel it, do feelings count? are feelings even real? they're certainly not quantitative, so we can't calibrate them or anything.
i hate those signs.
On a hike recently I saw a sign that said:
DANGER
HIGH MOUNTAIN
LION ACTIVITY
Talk about confusing. What is the danger? The height of the mountain? I know it's tall already, I'm feeling the burn, for gosh sakes.
In Minnesota, they have signs that say
DEAF CHILD
I'm so confused by this. There's a deaf child nearby? Do I need to know this? What should I do with this information?
And why don't they just get cochlear implants for crying out loud?
I think when you come into a new town, some really useful signs would be like
LOOSE WOMEN
or
GOOD
DROP-IN
HOCKEY
PS. my word verification was yfquck, which is kind of a signage issue all by itself
Great post Erik. Well worth the wait as Roxy noted.
Erin, “HIGH MOUNTAIN LION ACTIVITY” sound like you are approaching a drugged up mountain lion to me.
The "GUSTY WINDS MAY EXIST" sign cracked me up too. Very deep & philosophical.A few miles down the road there might be another one that reads “If this sign falls down from gusty winds and if there is no one around to see it fall would this sign exist?”
well, i think i had given up on you EVER posting again! :) tho, as a couple of folks mentioned, this post was worth the wait.
i work in a city and the head of street maintenance had sent me some photos of signs that may be doctored but are funny nonetheless (don't know how to post them here; i'll email them to you -- BIG assumption you'll be interested!)
Funny stuff.
Here in Colorado we have lots of those avalanche signs and every time I pass one I think, "that sign does me no good because of course by the time I know there is an avalanche my car will already be crushed by the 10 ton boulder careening down the mountain".
Erik,
You have a 0.004% chance of being killed by your cousin if you don't tell her what she needs to know on the fam web site. :)
Actually, the same holds true for the lovely anya ransuns aka roxy!
love ya!! ;)
ETR III you crack me up. Thanks for a great laugh after a long day. When are you coming back this way? It'd be nice to see you. Take care.
thanks anya. as you can remember, we were both slow children at one time, and then one of us(me) caught up, and started going to mainstream classes. just kidding, you're smart!
heatherfeather-that cracks me up. they should make a sign that says
"WARNING: EXISTENTIAL SIGNS HEAD." because the current system is very
stressful, i agree.
erin-i've been on that hike--that sign means there are sexually active mountain lions in the area. and believe me, that's what was happening. lots of it.
lisa, i agree. my nephews are deaf, so i wish there was a sign that just said "deaf kids rule." doesn't seem like a lot to ask.
bryan-your idea is an average one, i'll grant you that. but it makes no sense in the long run. think about it, then they would have to come up with different signs for everyone's hobbies across the whole united states of america. except the woman one. i imagine that would work for several different state highways.
blogball-i want you and heatherfeather to be careful when traveling in the same vehicle, unless a third individual is doing the driving. you might heatedly discuss philosophy until you run into a sign, which is most assuredly there. :) i like your ideas though.
si, my favorite of was: "WARNING: NO MORE WARNING SIGNS". ha.
dan, i hear you. maybe the signs should just say, "odds are, you should be dead by now." then the next sign could say, "you still here? wow."
bfoxy, don't kill me. i "signed" up for the dates! heh. wow, that was like one of my mom's jokes, but not as good. just kidding, mom. no one can pun like you, i surrender to your greatness.
gina, what's happenin?! I'm not coming back to chico, unless it's in a casket. just kidding, that was morbid. i'll visit soon!
randomly, on february 19th i took that very same path (and if imperial is anything like el centro and the other parts of imperial county i saw, then, oh man, i hope the weekend was an awesome one to justify being out there) through a snowstorm and couldn't properly enjoy those signs... stupid snowstorms...
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