
24 August 2008
Scam Hunting - the bitter-sweetness of it all

20 August 2008
death, destruction and scam
No, it's not an ad for chili sauce you absolute dumbass.. why would you expect a straight-forward ad from this collection of fake ads anyway?
31 July 2008
Any Way You Bend It, It Still Stinks
Wow, plastic surgery has come a long way since the days when the only way to prevent aging was to kill yourself at 25. These days, a little old book can walk into a surgeon's rooms and come out as one of the illustrations in its pages. Or perhaps these days you can go into a consultation and have your girlfriend permanently attached to you by the genitals? Sounds like like a good idea, until you realise the implications with regard to getting into taxis and the seats at the movies.
The only position this crap is getting into is the bottom of my scam folder.
Sheer Poetry
Hello my pretties. It has been many moons since The Oracle consulted his own cutting insight and vast resources of knowledge in the pursuit of justice in this fallen world. Fear not, The Oracle has not been recalled to assume his place amongst the gods. I was just working quite hard for a while.
It is thus fitting that I return to the Crusade with this magnificent article. When I first glanced at the thumbnail, I thought that a large bird had crapped on a layout pad. "Hmmm," I thought, "Interesting use of media." But alas, I was disappointed. And not for the first time.
Those of you who have bothered to read any of our other posts would have already established the scammish nature of this work just by observing the bottom right corner. I would say that this ad is for stain remover, but it's not really an ad, is it?
One thing that it has done is inspire me to write a poem - a haiku, in fact. Please humour me as I pen my thoughts.
In my throat a lump
Do my emotions fail me?
No it is vomit
29 July 2008
The fine line between "art" and advertising
Kids, note how so many of our examples are so closely related to art. The reason for that is because "advertising" that doesn't really advertise anything is indeed art, it's just pretty... sometimes. The difference between scam and art arises in that art inspires you in some way, makes you think about things differently and challenges those around us to see life in a whole new light. Scam just makes you laugh, and sometimes queasy.
An execution for the "China Organization Against Domestic Violence", entitled "Shadow".11 July 2008
chain up these cheats!
What a noble cause, to encourage everyone to support the education for young girls in India. Unfortunately, the Scammers have yet again sullied this worthwhile cause for personal gains.
Get Me Some Eyeplugs
Hmmm... An ad for sleeping pills. Quick, witty - you might even say intelligent. Except a glance at the logo indicates that the product is earplugs... are earplugs?... is earplugs? Actually, who gives a crap. If you're reading this blog, you've got enough insight to know what I'm talking about.
The bottom line is that earplug people don't make legit ads. "How can you say that?!" I hear all the goddamn hippies gasping in unison. Well, my badly-coiffed, vegetarian friends, when last did you see an earplug ad? Even if - for some bizarre reason - some company selling foam rubber pellets did decide to spend on a nice glossy DPS, where would they publish it? I can assure you that earplugs are used far more by hairy men with chainsaws and the guys who run around aircraft carriers carrying bombs all day than they are by mildly attractive female crack addicts (as above the scamvertisment would have us believe). Think about that for a second.
Then think about this: "More creatives are killed each year as a direct result of publishing scam than are crushed by Mac monitors."
There's a lesson to be learnt here. And it's got nothing to do with computers.
10 July 2008
Passing judgement on scam
I have a problem with feet. I'm not ashamed to admit that.

07 July 2008
Domestic Violence Is Bad. Unless Directed At This Creative Team

For those of you who were experiencing cold sweats and uncontrolled vomiting because your addiction to Scam Hunters has not been satisfied over the past two weeks, I say this: "Shit happens". People don't pay me to write this. They pay me to do my other job. And you people can't fire me either.
The Prophet and I spent some time on the slopes of Mt Fuji undergoing a refresher course in the art of the Ninja. Basically, we snuck around in the shadows inflicting mortal wounds on unsuspecting passersby. So don't ever fuck with us. Ever.
Now to the business at hand.
Keeping to the Asian theme of this post, I have chosen a Chinese piece to slaughter. I bet the creative team who dreamt up this scamtastic piece of nonsense are rubbing their hands together with glee, thinking that they have tricked the world into believing their wicked lies. As a trained ninja, I instinctively know that this is the time to strike.
One question: Do people in China save envelopes for use later? Perhaps their bleached rectangular forms hold a special significance for people with a Confucian worldview? I only ask this because the success of this scampiece is dependent on reversing a million years of human evolution that commands us to tear the top edge of an envelope. Those damn hippie types might occasionally tear the short side when someone else is watching them, but they only do that because they think it makes them appear different and thus interesting. Idiots.
The makers of this tripe expect it to, "Hopefully shock people". I'll tell you what will shock people: finding the entire creative team face-down in the canteen with six ninja stars in their backs.
Cutting down Scammers
I think i threw up in my mouth a little when i saw this piece of crap.

23 June 2008
Almost Believable. PSYCH!
Photoshop is not reality, people. Just because you can drag something around on a Mac, "change the levels", "add layers" and "deep etch" them (whatever that means) doesn't make it real. If Photoshop was reality, I'd be paying child maintenance to Angelina Jolie right now, so believe me, I know. Sometimes, Photoshop can make things look real. Apparently not this time.
Are there no real clients in India that agencies there have to resort to scambient, scamailers, scam print and scamperiential all the time? It's one thing to hack up a bit of scam from way back in your throat if it's a brilliant concept that a real client would never buy, but to spend thirty (make that fifteen) seconds of your life cobbling together something like this is inexcusable. The best bit is the "Response" thing in the bottom right. That's real comedy!
I would love to say that this is at least a good ad for Photoshop, if nothing else. But I can't. "Innovative, factual and hard-hitting!" More like "Scam, scam and scam!".
Directly into the Scam bin

The inspired copy in this direct sca-mailer reads “It's the journey of a lifetime. Let it begin in top gear.” What pushes this piece of cutting edge thinking wasn’t this line alone, however. Lucky recipients also received a scaled model of a typical wedding car – apparently a “very important part of the celebrations”.
Given that direct mailers are probably THE most measurable marketing tool for those of us in the communications industry – yet these creatives have chosen to not show any of the results for this break-through piece of work. It does indeed make one wonder as to the legitimacy of this trash. Throw in to this mix non-existent strategic reasoning and cultural practices unknown to 90% of the world and it's blatantly obvious that these scammers are trying just a little bit too hard.
Wow… this one was just too easy.
18 June 2008
Murky waters...
Here's something you won't hear from us Scam Hunters very often, but here are some ads that ACTUALLY might deliver on some true strategic objectives...


That is, provided that the original strategist was high on dope (or whatever it is they smoke in Bangladesh, where this scampaign originated). Are there, in fact, ANY brands in Bangladesh? Who knows, but interesting to see scammers hard at work anyway.
There's also the issue of the banal execution and the blatant rip-off of other, more famous brand's tagline which all point to signs of scam.
Let me tell you something Dear Bangladeshi Scammers.. the best way to get refreshed is to hunt down some scam. Luckily for you, you won't have to head too far to see some of that crap.
10 June 2008
Not Scam
It may be shit, but at least it's real. And informative. Which is more than most can say. Hell, I didn't know the dinosaurs died because of safety belts. There I was believing all that meteorite nonsense. I am truly amazed...
A Shining Example of Nothing
One good way to cut through the clutter (God, I love advertising) at award shows is to do an ad for a product that doesn't often advertise. Coincidentally (or not), it's also a good way to spot scam. I have been alive for longer than I can remember, and I can say in all good conscience that my eyes have not had the pleasure of beholding an ad for shoe polish in the press, or anywhere else outside the Scamiverse.
What, pray tell, might have inspired Kiwi to suddenly spend money on a "legit" ad all of a sudden (not even a campaign)? Perhaps it was the stunning imagery and beautiful artistry of this piece of work (I mean that in the derogatory sense. Obviously)? Perhaps it was the brilliance of the cutting-edge thinking? Perhaps it was the unhealthy glow on the subject's jowls? Perhaps not.
There's a stink on my shoe, and it's not from my shoe polish. I think I just stepped on a steaming pile of Scam.
09 June 2008
A Slice of Scam. With Extra Cheese
Is there a shortage of pimply sixteen-year-olds who need money to fund their underage drinking binges that I don't know about? Since when do pizza joints spend more than 5 cents on a dogeared photocopy taped to the store window to advertise for delivery guys? Honestly, it wouldn't surprise me if these scamimals are pitching this drivel as a building wrap on the Empire State. You know the (actually "my") saying, "The bigger the lie, the easier it is to believe"? It's what I told George Bush when he popped round to clean my pool while he was wondering how to pull off Operation: Scam the World. He mixes a mean Mojito, by the way.
The contrived visual is the least of my concerns. I would believe this ad if it said: "Sod off, we've got more than enough drivers. So don't even ask." In it's current format, however, I'm not convinced. And when I'm not convinced, it means one thing. The Italians say, "il Scamino", I believe.
Pissing contest
Scamnesty International
Oh, poor, poor NGOs. Oh, how your good works are violated on the altar of so-called "creativity". This powerful piece of communication is sure to get the Olympics taken from Beijing - the People's Republic must be shaking in its boots.
Not quite sure where an ad like this might appear (besides the Scam folder on my desktop), and I would wager the first sixteen inches of my John Thomas that the creatives behind this scam weren't sure either. Not that it matters. After all, it's easy to forget the suffering of millions after a couple of Martinis at a Cannes after-party.
Here's an equation you might want to write down and learn off by heart:
Tragedy+Anniversary+AI = Scam
The Grail! It Is Found!

This is it. If you're addicted to Scam, you had better not look at this, because you will OD and die in a pool of vomit on your office floor.
The only surer sign of Scam than a fictional or microscopic logo is an ad that doesn't have a logo at all. This beauty - this Perfect Scam - defies the impossible by being an ad. For nothing. It would seem that, while they dominate world markets, our friends from the Land of the Dragon are also trying to dominate advertising sites at all costs (including this one, it would seem). As a wise Scammer (me) once said of advertising and Chinese imports in general, "Quantity has a quality all of its own."
If you don't know what the hell this ad is about, take a number and get in line. Killing animals is profitable, we all know that. And if we didn't, we do now. In fact, I'm reaching for my 12-gauge and an M-16 carbine to go git me some beer money right now... On second thought, I'll take my Yen-shaped catapult instead.
The creators of this scam saw fit to include the explanation: "Yama is the Lord of Death". I admit, I didn't know that. What I do know is that I am the Lord of Scam and the souls of these creatives are mine!
06 June 2008
Fight the right fight, against Scam
Kill guns.. what would we want to do that for? It'd far too inhumane to line the Scammers who sucked this shoddy piece of work out of the bottom of the Scam barrel and shoot them with a crossbow wouldn't it?
The completely mind-numbingly banal concept aside (Kill guns with what? another gun?), I thought I'd give these clever-asses out of the Middle East a chance and try and look up the organisation called RIFL. Ever heard of it? Nope. And neither has Google, it'd seem. The only search results (totalling 2 pages) returned were linked to this heinous piece of scam.
Really wanting to disprove myself on my initial fears, i typed in the url featured at the bottom of the "ad". The good news is that there IS indeed a website with RIFL's logo.. but ZERO contact details. I couldn't even donate money if I wanted to.... A real and legitimate organisation? I think not.
There you have it.. these scammers dreamt up a shitty concept, then tried to pass it off as the real deal by either craftily inventing a "client" or by finding such an obscure one that they wouldn't even need to show them the work. Scamtastic!
Now someone drag them out and shoot them like the scum they are...
This would leave a bad taste in anyone's mouth

02 June 2008
The Numbers Never Lie

Right... When people make real ads, there is a process. That process generally (although not always) starts with a client asking for an ad or campaign to achieve a specific objective. When people make scam, there is also a process. That process generally starts with either one of the creative team sticking their fingers down their throat. What comes out quite regularly looks like what we have here.
Cryptic to the point of obscurity, questionable content and unachieved outcome. We have yet another unholy trinity of scam. 90-60-90-Bullshit.
Universal language of Scam
Being all-knowledgeable is a wonderful thing. It allows one to be condescending towards just about everyone else. It also allows one to spot Scam like there's no tomorrow.
The above exhibit piece of scambient work out of China for Head and Shoulders was allegedly placed on a golf driving range, more specifically on the mats where golfers hit their golf balls off.
One blatant inconsistency (apart from The Oracle's previous tip on Scam Hunting in the ambient duster) for this to be a real campaign is in the strapline itself. The printed "drive dandruff away" strapline probably wouldn't be understood by 80% of the Chinese population in its English form. What's more, had the line been translated into the official language of Mandarin Chinese, it would make as much sense as french-kissing one's sister.
30 May 2008
Write this piece of Scam off

I know it hurts your fragile eyes to have to see Scam like this, but what I'm about to tell you will make you laugh SO hard that it'll kinda be worth the pain..
This piece of very weak metaphor and art direction was overseen by 3 Creative Directors, 3 Copywriters and a lone Art Director. Can you imagine? What the hell did each of them contribute? One letter per person??
This kinda Scam just goes to show that sometimes 7 heads isn't better than one.
Stick To Making Real Ads
Shameless. That's how I would describe this little bucket of fun. Perhaps the surest sign of a citizen of Scamia is a wholly inappropriate, over-thought, over-sophisticated execution to sell an entirely functional product. Do these scammers really think that I'm going to chose their tape over the next one because you can make pretty (make that pretty damn ugly) pictures with it, provided you're creative and jobless, with a year or two to waste?
There is no reason to go super-clever when you're selling masking tape, unless it illustrates how good the tape is. Personally, I'd go for the one that says "Sticks Like Shit To A Blanket", and I think most of you would too.
This isn't clever. It isn't art. It isn't good. Which means it can only be one other thing. And by now, I think we all know what that is...
The Devil is in the Detail. And the Kid.
Here we have a great example of a moment of inspiration that someone really should have kept to themselves.
What do you do with photos of your kid's birthday party that are all messed up by those pesky red eyes? Why make them into a campaign of course. The next course of action is to find a product that you can force your "idea" onto.... Hmmm... Tough one... But wait a second - there's cake in the photos already, which means less Photoshop, which means longer lunches. Genius!
But how do you create a link between cake and children who look like they've been playing too long with a ouiji board? Hmmm... It's got to be something with the red eyes... I've got it! I once saw a rabbit with red eyes, rabbits eat carrots, you get carrot cake (who cares if kids don't like it and the picture's got chocolate cake in it) and voila! I'm just going to make a little Lion-sized space on my desk here, and then we can hit that crack pipe and go on lunch. Sweet.
The power of three - and Scam
Veni, vidi, vici. Verb, subject, object. All the colours in the world are made up of 3 primary colours, red, yellow and blue. Each atom is made up of proton, neutron and electron. Even ABSA Capital, Barclays and you! Blah, blah, blah...
You get the point... the opportunities are endless when 3 elements come together.
Scam is no different. Have you ever wondered why so many print scampaigns come in three executions? Consider the 3 executions of the cute little kiddies with old people's hair as an example. Below is one of three print execution of the 2008 Corporate Roll (no idea what the hell that is, no doubt in my mind it's Scam).
Why, you might well be asking. Well I'll share the dirty little secret with you, my fellow Scam Haters. Many awards shows require at least 3 separate executions for the scampaign to be considered a legit campign.
As you know, Scammers would rather take the easiest route to success (hence the Scamming).
It's pretty evident that they'd rather Scam their way with fake advertising all the way to an Awards Show then work hard on proper Client briefs, with the Client's best interest at heart, which is obviously too much work... and seeing that the Awards only require 3 executions, the simplest route is to execute the same clever idea 3 times over.
There you have it, another Scam Hunting rule...
29 May 2008
Hairy Scam
Beaners is a specialist children's haircutting joint. That's one hundred percent true. They also have a total of 15, yes you read correctly folks, that's 15 branches throughout the WHOLE of Canada. Whilst we're not knocking this establishment by any means, we do question the alleged advertising campaign for the niche hair designers.
Have a look below, if you can get past the super-crap photoshopping..
Here, the Scammers have again followed a formula to what they no doubt thought would be their ticket to Scam-rockstardom, which makes it SO easy for us seasoned Scam Hunters.
Simple portrait shots with a somewhat clever headline - done.
A retro look and feel to the executions - done.
But the ultimate stroke of genius for these wet-behind-their-ears Scammers- and a dead giveaway that this is Scamvertising in its most comfortable and natural habitat - is the aging of kids.
The rationale goes as follows:
"kids are NOT old"
"if we apply photoshop magic, we can MAKE them LOOK old"
"wow.. that'd mean that they'd look like kids, but DIFFERENT"
"GENIUS! Lets quickly do it up and then go for lunch!"
While it's so true that kids shouldn't have adult hair, Scammers everywhere shouldn't have children's intellect either.
Consider yourselves Scam Hunted.
Exploitation Has Never Been This Hot
I hate to be the one to trash another do-gooder's attempt to snatch a few advertising awards, but again, I find myself compelled to seek some real justice in this flawed world of ours.
Here we have another unashamed exploitation of the logo of an unwitting NGO, this time Amnesty International. For once, scammers have decided to forgo the traditional George Bush and Fascist Amerika tripe in favour of a rather novel look at slavery and human trafficking. Gone are the shackles, starvation, exploitation and humiliation (yo), replaced instead by some of the nicest legs in the scamiverse.
A quick glance at these beautifully toned, four-foot beauties would suggest that "Stop Slavery" is the latest fragrance on the shelf of a cosmetics outlet near you. And that fine gold chain looks about as threatening as a pair of fluffy pink handcuffs wielded by three ladies in slighty-too-small lingerie. Not quite the stuff that the real AI would choose to help them in their struggle against global injustice, methinks...
Wham! Bam! Thank you scam!
Post-mortem on some good Scam
Every once in a while, a piece of Scam comes along that manages to convince a lot of people out there that it's legit, due to the seemingly sheer mass of the campaign and the associations with a credible brand by the Scammer.
Even Cherryflava and the folks at Creative Intelligence (a site which has remarkably little examples of Scamvertising) were duped by the Swedish student Scammer who claimed that he had created the largest drawing in the world with the use of GPS technology and couriers DHL.
Had they consulted us prior to posting, we would've pointed them in the right direction though. By simply glancing at the map/canvas on which the portrait was created, us expert Scam Hunters noticed the amazing and perfectly smooth lines and curves. This would have been impossible to create in real life using human transportation as there are rules and regulations guiding flight patterns of aircrafts.
There was also the question of points on the map in the middle of no-where... probably accessible only by a fishing trawler. I'm sure there can't be too many of those in DHL's fleet?
The question of fees for the project also arose in the Scam Hunters Bureau Head Quarters. Was this Swedish Scam-scum seriously rich was DHL really kind, and bored...?
There were already too many questions by this stage, leaving us no option but to stamp this piece of trash with a big "SCAM", in red.
This one crashed and burnt
You've gotta be kidding me... Barbeques Galore? More like Scam Galore. Have a look at this beaut hailing from Down Under.

It's a well known fact to anyone who's ever seen a dog that these critters would eat just about anything... even faeces. So a visual showing a pack of dogs from your neighbourhood begging for your food on the grill isn't really based on such a piercing insight is it?
I thought scam was supposed to have a huge dose of cleverness to it, but clearly not to the Aussies. They may beat us at everything, but our Scam is streets ahead of theirs! If only one could be awarded national colours for Ad-Scamming, we wouldn't have such an inferiority complex against the ex-convicts, would we?
But I digress... a "brand ad", in print form, for a brand that needs way more than a single print execution to make an impact screams SCAM.
Another piece of Scam to piss on
Some dude over at Trendhunter noted that several ad agencies "have recently been actively tapping into the unusual medium of public bathrooms to catch people off-guard and leave strong impressions of their brands".
Here's yet another example, allegedly of a brand leaving such a "strong impression"...


So many questions, all of which can be answered in one sentence:
1 - Who was the poor bastard who had to stick these decals in the urinals?
2- Which retarded brand manager would want his brand of golden deliciousness equated to piss?
3 - Why do we only see an exmple of one single urinal being branded in this "awesome" ambient (read: scambient) execution?
4 - Do you know guys don't look down when they pee in the urinal? Eyes straight ahead my dear Brazilian Scammers..
Clearly another piece of piss-poor Scam.
It's Like Banging Your Head On A Concrete Wall
It says "outdoor" in the creative rationale (read justification for wasting time on pointless drivel), but they only wrote that because they know it's tougher for us to make a cool word like "scambient" with "outdoor".
If this isn't a perfect example of a creative wank, I don't know what is. Please explain to me how putting an massive decal on the wall of a basement (high-five to Photoshop for that one) illustrates "speed and potency". Easy parking, maybe. But to my mind, there's nothing slower or less potent than a 3 foot thick piece of concrete. "Hard to overtake"?! It's hard to overtake a friggin' 18-wheeler truck in a rain storm, it's hard to overtake an old lady driving a 1963 Datsun on her way home from an all-nighter. It's sure as shit hard to overtake a decal pasted on a concrete wall, especially when you're trying to park and overtaking is the last thing on your mind... Maybe second last, right after that dream you had about Hillary Clinton gyrating sensually in nothing but her underwear.
It's also hard to believe this stuff is legitimate advertising.
Wild Bears Are Saving The World
It would appear that the best way to support a good cause is to promote it with a crap ad. In this case, I mean that quite literally.
Perhaps a Masters Degree (cum laude) from the University of Life has made me cynical, but in this case, i think that I am entirely justified in labeling this "thing" scam of the worst possible kind. A quick glance at the above illustration leads me to believe that dropping the kids off in the woods instead of the pool is a great way to help the environment. The body copy may challenge this perception. But who the hell cares?
Remember now, that this ad comes from China - a country with a population in excess of 1 321 851 888 people. If each one of those people were to take this ad to heart and do their bit to save the planet, they would be buried under twelve feet of excrement in five days (go ahead, do the math - I dare you).
Simply put, Greenpeace haven't come within 12 000 miles of this concept. As my esteemed colleague said to me earlier, those damned hippies need to put down the reefer for a moment and take some responsibility for their logo. Scam like this just rubbishes the message in their real ads... if there is even such a thing as a real Greenpeace ad.
Looking at this Scam gives me a headache
Asprin = Headache tablets = Medical supplies.
I know I'm stealing some of The Oracle's thunder here but you'll note that there's clearly no medical disclaimers anywhere in sight of this wonderful Scam campaign. Do they not require any medical disclaimers in the land of pyramids, because they sure are pre-requisites in the rest of the world, or was this just another creative team executing an overdone idea in hopes of a couple of medals?
Either way a piss-poor effort, but a wonderful example of first-class passengers on the Scam Train.
28 May 2008
What's In A Name?
Hey! All you scam artists out there! Please understand that using non-existent brands in the execution of your tripe may alert The Authorities (us) to your wicked undertakings.
In this beauty out of Espana, the enterprising art director has rather cleverly cobbled together a fake logo in Photoshop, leaving his evil copywriter sidekick to come up with an even faker name. "Bloom" insecticide? Since when is a highly toxic killing device called "Bloom"? This isn't air freshener, my Continental friends.
Hmmm... Reminds me of that other insecticide spray, what's it called again...? Spoon. Croon. Moon.... Oh, I remember now: "Doom". In fact, from a distance, if you were blind, you might even think that "Bloom" was "Doom".
But that's what we're here for, isn't it? Doom. Bloom. Ka-Boom! Now get this out of my face.
Pointing at the Scammers
Adolf Hitler: Scam Weekly's Favourite Cover Girl


It appears that The Prophet beat me to this one, but I guess that's part of what being a prophet is all about.
As he mentioned, one of the key indicators of scam is the use of the scum of the earth in ads that try too hard to be shocking. Here we have a novel use of Adolf Hitler, making his debut in a wine ad (his mustachioed visage being mainly reserved for smoking ads and George Bush comparisons).
"Mmm, honey. You should have a sip of this fruity red. It says here on the bottle that Adolf Hitler used to enjoy a glass or two of this varietal after a long day of orchestrating the extermination of millions of vulnerable minorities across Easter Europe. Wow-wee! You sure do learn something new every day. Cheers!"
Other ads in this campaign include an image of Little Boy vaporizing downtown Hiroshima. You can always tell great wine by its great taste. Put this tasteless nonsense on the Scam Tram.
Yet another Golden Rule for Scam-spotting
What's That Weird Smell?

So first the Italians develop a new "candid camera" television show that would appear to showcase (allegedly) unwitting couples doing the horizontal mambo. If that's not sordid and degrading enough, they proceed to scam-vertise said "reality" show in this most horrific manner.
Kids, if you're hunting scam, the first place to look is in the ambient section of you local dumpster. Public toilets (especially urinals), escalators, articulated buses and any type of sliding door are the preferred habitat of scambient pieces.
Great idea guys. If paying a television station to voyeuristically ogle strangers exploring each others tender bits didn't make you feel like a bit of a siffo, having this lovely lady dispensing gel soap on you in a public toilet is bound to do the trick. So it's a double whammy: crap and scam.










