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The Satirical Political Report

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December 15th, 2009

New Breed of Psychics Trade Their Tarot Cards for Twitter

Exchanging their ouija boards and tarot cards for blackberries and iPhones, a whole new generation of psychics have left behind their Old-World ways, in order to ply their trade with the 21st Century tools of the internet and social networking sites.

Roxane Grenier, a resident of La Jolla, California who has seen the same fortune teller for the past 19 years, stated “it’s about time that psychics who claim to see the future are finally joining the present.” Ms. Grenier recounted how Madame X, now known as Madame OS X,  recently abandoned palm readings for a Palm Pre, to help her contact her deceased fourth husband. Indeed, Wired Magazine reports that hundreds of “I See Dead People” apps have already been developed for such hand-held devices.

As one clairvoyant put it, “why screw around with messy tea-leaf readings or seances, which are as slow as dial-up internet connections, when one can make instant contact with the dearly departed through such services as Google’s Dead Souls.” And as for “predicting the future,” she hastened to add, “the crystal ball is like a murky tank of fish water compared to Yahoo Futuristic News.”

Twitter has also proven invaluable in communicating with ghostly spirits, who are notorious for their cryptic and somewhat mysterious messages — the very hallmark of the Twitter user. In fact, many psychics believe that the availability of ‘tweeting’ has dramatically decreased incidents of pictures falling off walls, or doors suddenly blowing open from wind gusts, since the dead no longer need to rely on such childish antics to draw attention to themselves.

New-age mediums have also used such new mediums as Facebook, which is useful not only to locate deceased loved ones, but to learn who they’re hanging out with. Perhaps the most pleasant surprise surrounding Facebook ghosts is that they’re typically the only ones not sticking out their tongues.

However, one of the drawbacks of these spiritual internet connections is that voluminous messages are received from deceased Nigerian cocoa merchants who were purportedly poisoned by their business associates, requesting the account number for your high-yield savings account, so that $27 million can be safely transmitted to their surviving children.

Nevertheless, it doesn’t take a psychic to see that the marriage of labor-saving technology and the paranormal will soon become the norm. As one fortune teller who goes under the screen name of Gypsy2.0 confided, “one thing will never change: ‘time is money’.”

December 7th, 2009

Twitter Surpassed by New Social Networking Site: ‘Yada’

Twitter, the phenomenon that has taken the world by storm the past few years, has now been dramatically eclipsed by ‘Yada,’ an even more succinct social networking and micro-blogging site.

The meteoric rise of Yada represents ‘tweet revenge’  for its diminutive founder, Curt B. Terseman, who was banned by Twitter for repeatedly yada yada-ing his tweets. In keeping with his hallmark brevity, Terseman settled on the name “Yada” after rejecting the initial names of  ”Yada, Yada, Yada,” or even “Yada, Yada,” so that users could “‘yada” their “yada, yada, yadas.”

Many social networking experts believe that Yada poses an existential threat to the Twitter franchise, since the increasingly diminished attention span of Americans appeared to be out-of-synch with Twitter’s rather verbose platform of 140 characters. As one analyst put it, “Yada appears to be much better suited to the current vogue of ‘saying less with less’.”

Indeed, support for this theory is also evident from newly recast DVD versions of Seinfeld, in which the entire ‘Yada Yada’ episode  is cut from 22 minutes to just 2 minutes, consisting entirely of “yadas.”

A spokesman for Twitter responded to this negative press by tweeting a statement of exactly 140 characters, in which he signaled his future plans to “fully address the growing Yada threat, as soon as I finish rearranging my sock drawer and changing the cat litter.”

Yada’s Mr. Terseman, who reportedly prefers “Leon” from Curb Your Enthusiam to any Seinfeld character, himself replied on Yada, vowing that he “would not rest until I’ve completely yada’d up Twitter’s yada-yada-ing ass.”

But perhaps the Yada explosion was best summed up by author Malcolm Gladwell, who stated that “this may well be the ‘tipping point’ for micro-blogging: ‘blink,’ and you might just miss the message from people who are hardly ‘outliers,’ but instead simply have nothing to say.”