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Diner stunned after opening fortune cookie from neighborhood bar: 'Should be a crime against humanity'

"This is terrible."

In a Reddit post, a user shared a horrifying ad fortune they'd gotten in a fortune cookie.

Photo Credit: iStock

In "Fifteen Million Merits," the second episode of the near-future sci-fi anthology Black Mirror, the episode's protagonist, Bing, is eventually driven to madness by his inability to avoid ads.

That episode debuted in 2011, and while we're not quite "there yet," a post on Reddit's r/TIHI — "thanks, I hate it" — was close enough to be deeply uncomfortable.

Everyone who has eaten their share of Chinese takeout has likely encountered a bad fortune. In this instance, the original poster received an "ad fortune."

Reddit

It bears emphasizing that the original poster's "fortune cookie" didn't come from a restaurant, but the incident was still eerily similar to Bing's on-screen torment, down to the raunchy nature of the advertisement.

"Got this fortune cookie at a bar last night and instead of a normal fortune it had a full-on ad inside for a freaking adult website," they wrote. "I get marketing is getting creative but this feels insane lol."

Relentless advertising isn't a problem exclusive to the digital age — it was a major plot point in the classic 1983 holiday film A Christmas Story, which was set in 1939 — but digitization has enabled companies to browbeat consumers into spending with cutting-edge strategies.

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At the beach, floating billboards haunt the surf, and people can't even use the restroom in certain establishments without being forced to view ads.

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Reddit users were as horrified as the original poster.

"Thanks, I hate this very much," one commented.

"Thanks, this is terrible," a user concurred.

"Ads in fortune cookies should be a crime against humanity," a third proposed.

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