a sign on a counter
Source: Fake Points Travel Blogger @TravelFake.

What Is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 297: Reader Edition

Can you guess the name of the fast food restaurant in which this photograph was taken?

For this edition of this popular game, can you guess what you believe is wrong — or, at least, seemingly quite bizarre — with this photograph part 297?

What Is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 297: Reader Edition

While at a fast food restaurant in southwestern Florida, Fake Points Travel Blogger — who is a reader of The Gate With Brian Cohen — took a photograph and sent it to my attention with the message “spotted this in SWFL for you:”.

a sign on a counter
Source: Fake Points Travel Blogger @TravelFake.

By the way, if you are not familiar with Fake Points Travel Blogger, look at this official X channel, where blogs whose topics are related to travel — including The Gate With Brian Cohen — are relentlessly mocked. Some of the entries are hilarious, in my opinion.

Please submit your answers in the Comments section below — and I enjoy reading creative answers.

Thank you in advance. As always, I cannot wait to read your answer and feedback.

Answer to What is Wrong With This Photograph? Part 296

I was recently stuck in a traffic jam that was not moving at all on Interstate 75 in Bartow County in Georgia. Fortunately, I was near an exit; so I was able to avoid being delayed by at least another hour. I later attempted to research exactly what happened — and one of the Internet web sites which resulted from a search was Yahoo! News

a screenshot of a news
Source: Yahoo! News.

…and one would think that whoever wrote BARTWO COUNTY, Ga. would have simply looked at the graphic above to know the proper spelling of Bartow County — and yes, the name of the county is spelled correctly later in the text.

Favorite answer by derek: “Bart Wo is a Chinese name, unlikely to be the name of the county (see the first line of the news report, not the TV photo). Curiously, there is an Instagram user with the presumably real name of Bart Wo and user name of @bld450. Also a Flickr user.

“Also maybe there was an attempt to divert traffic off the interstate but I see a lot of cars still on it.”

Favorite comment by rmah: “i don’t think a present tense verb is often found in a parked car. but maybe dyes are?”

Access to Past Articles in the What is Wrong With This Photograph? Series

You can refer to this definitive list of past articles of the What is Wrong With This Photograph? series of articles, which also includes articles which reveal the answers. That list will be continuously updated as additional articles are written and posted here at The Gate With Brian Cohen to ensure that future articles in this series are not encumbered with a long list of links — especially when viewing and reading them from a portable electronic device.

Your constructive input as a reader of The Gate With Brian Cohen is always appreciated.

Final Boarding Call

You are encouraged to submit photographs of your own for this feature at The Gate With Brian Cohen. When you do, please let me know:

  • If you want to have photography credit attributed to you
  • What is the photograph
  • When and where the photograph was taken
  • If submitting a screen shot, please give the source — as well as a link to the source

If your photograph or screen shot is selected, it will be featured in a future article here at The Gate With Brian Cohen.

In the meantime, the answer — or answers — to this article will be included in the next article of answers to the most recent five articles in the series of What is Wrong With This Photograph? articles.

Source: Fake Points Travel Blogger @TravelFake.

  1. This person obviously does not know how to speel. The correct speeling of the dealer’s name is “Kia of Sarasota” in Florida, but not knowing how to spell “Sarasota”, the cashier wrote to ask customers to see “Kia o s”.

    Alternatively, one may use the kiosk. Maybe the cashier has to leave early to order to find the airline kiosk (maybe Delta Airlines kiosk) at the airport, searching in vain for the kiaos sign?

  2. Well…if this picture had been taken at a South Korean car dealership’s service center for onboard diagnostics, it might make some sense — advising customers to use the Kia OS (operating system). In any event, customers would be well advised to use the kiaos (ahem, “kiosk”) at this fast food restaurant because I wouldn’t trust the workers to be able to write down an order correctly. Appalling!

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