An airline uses an Internet poll to come up with a new name. |
Aer Lingus, Ireland’s flag carrier airline, considering their name to be hackneyed, dated, as stale as week-old Speckendick,* sought a novel moniker, a name with panache, a title which would roll from the tongue like a ball bearing off a glass dome. They thought the name, Aer Lingus to be lifeless, sans light (“they” being suited men seated in windowless rooms, idling an hour over momentous decisions.) And so it was, they determined, that an Internet poll would do; the most popular name was what they would go with: the new name would rest on the whims of the the world, via that net linking all, everywhere. The results left many suits speechless, stammering, jaws stressed like taut hawsers. Names pored in like levees breeched, yet one stood out like an elephant in the snow--number one in the poll--it was not even close. The suits then knew of dichotomy, and of contrast, of difference, and of conflict. They were not sly at all, but hunkered down in humble poses ready to gnaw a supper of crow. They knew that Cunning Lingus would not do; no, it was not apropos. 40 Lines Writer’s Cramp Winner 5-7-16 ______ *Speckendick is a rye pancake made between two iron plates, filled with lard or bacon, dried sausage and a little syrup. |