I don’t think age has anything to do with it. I’m 38 and know plenty of people older than me who say U-R-L.
I never heard Earl until “Weird Earl”. And it took me a bit to figure out who Earl was.
And GIF is supposed to be pronounced JIFF according to t he guy who created the format.
But I always called it GIF, have always heard it called GIF, and probably will never switch to JIFF out laziness and habit.
And “Linux” should be pronounced “linnix” if you ask Torvalds, apparently. But I’ve never asked him, so I can’t corroborate that. I always called it “linnix” anyway.
I was on the “keep it” bandwagon but after reading the thread, I’m in the No/No Opinion camp. While I knew what Weird Earl’s was, I have never clicked on a link since I arrived (technically) in 2000. There’s plenty of other places to find weird “Earls” so a twitter feed is fine with me.
Are you for real? I’ve said twice now that “U-R-L” is more common. You’re trying to pick a fight with me by using my own argument. OF COURSE I agree with you.
Huh. I am mid-50s and have never heard URL pronounced Earl. This thread is the first indication for me that Weird Earl was supposed to be Weird URLs. I thought there was some real or fictional Earl out there somewhere way back when.
In Britain I have never in my life heard it ponderously pronounced U-R-L like slow-witted parents plodding out the letters of words their kids prolly already know, and will assuredly look up if they don’t. It seems rather cumbersome.
The admins made a good pun.
I used to read it regularly back in the day, back in the days of dial-up modems. Hey, it was worth the wait. Nowadays there is no shortage of links to weird sites, and my desire is to waste less time on the internet. I haven’t looked at it but once or twice in the last 5 years, so I would not notice if it disappeared.
Straight Dope is the first blog I read every morning. Cecil is the best explainer since Isaac Asimov. I love Weird Earl because since I retired nobody ever sends me any funny stuff.