So on Friday the New York Times posted an article (which I believe was in the print version Saturday) talking about how Metro North trains leave Grand Central one minute late. There is an extra minute built into the schedule, so if a train is supposed to leave Grand Central at 5:59 on the public schedule, the conductor schedule actually reads 6:00. It may have actually been a helpful thing, but now that everyone knows? Probably not so much.
The article is getting posted on various different websites, but in the process they’ve lost the picture that was posted with the original article. In fact I do believe this is my favorite part of the article, this little running man.
That, and some of the comments…
Basically, you are destroying a helpful deception in order to make points for yourself as a journalist. SHAME ON YOU!
Now that the word is out, my husband and countless others will be missing more trains. Thanks alot, you just ruined my family’s dinner!
Do you have any idea what you have done!!! Shame on you. Just to score a few “journalistic” points.
This is like those placebo buttons at pedestrian crosswalks and in elevators that give us the illusion of control. Fun to know.
And my personal favorite:
Woo Hoo. What a scoop!! The train people were trying to do their customers a favor and the Times decides to blow their cover.
Next you’ll announce to all six year olds that there’s no Santa Claus.
Why is this on the front page of the New YorkTimes? I thought it was “All the News That’s Fit to Print,” not “All the News That Fits We’ll Print.”
I guess now you can at least take your time walking to your train in Grand Central (note that this extra minute only applies to trains leaving Grand Central)… I mean the last place you want to trip and fall (and hit your head and die) is on a dirty train platform, running to catch your train that was going to be there an extra minute anyways.