Genius of the Press XVII

Anjeneral mwen rankontre atik entomoloji terib regilyèman ase ke mwen sove yon reta pou seri nan lavni. Sa a pa te ka a nan kèk semèn ki sot pase yo, Mwen pa te vini atravè etalaj la nòmal nan crud medya terib. Petèt mwen jis jwenn fade epi sispann gade ak anpil atansyon – but this week I even came across a moth related correction from the Maui News. They fixed their error, but must have deleted the original article

And for this week I found this article with the image below. Should be pretty easy to spot the weirdness (yo do at least manage to point out that the moth is pa the LBAM (light brown apple moth)).

 

5 comments to Genius of the Press XVII

  • That is /not/ what a death’s head hawkmoth pronotum looks like! I think it’s a clipping from the Silence of the Lambs movie poster.

    ~Kai

  • Movie posters aside, death’s heads aren’t found on this side of the world. Oswa, are they? I bet Jerry rues the day he reported his little LBAM find from his backyard. I know a couple organic farmer friends in Santa Cruz county who still curse his name, when they should be cursing Kawamura. For a couple months in 2008 we had airplanes spraying all night long, even though we’re supposedly within the boundaries of a national marine sanctuary. I love the title of the article.

    • Yup, it is the poster! And if you actually look close enough theskullis a famous Dali photograph of nude women (yes some artistic nuditynsfw?) ((depends on your work)).

      The deaths head hawkmoth is not found in the US, it’s pretty restricted to southern Europe and Northern Africa.

      I don’t think Jerry regrets reporting that moth, the damage that it is capable of could cost farmers tens of millions. A lot of people cause a ruckus over nothing about the sprayingbut if we let it go unchecked the ecological damage from the pest could be far worse.