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284 points nomilk | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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waltbosz ◴[] No.45766658[source]
In the early days of the Internet, there was this website with a list of payphone numbers from all over the United States. In my state, there were only three entries, and my home phone number was one of them. It was listed as being outside a publicly traded chain restaurant.

On occasion, radio stations would do bits where they would call a random payphone from the website. My house was called 3 times for the same bit by different radio stations. Within a month apart, I spoke to two different stations from New Zealand. MoreFM was one of them, but I don't remember the other. I do remember that that were very disappointed when I told them I had just spoken to MoreFM a month prior. Also MoreFM was the only station that didn't end the bit when I explained it was not a pay phone

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nomilk ◴[] No.45766833[source]
> website with a list of payphone numbers ... my home phone number was one of them

Did you find out how this came to be, or just random typo?

Curious what the purpose of calling a pay phone is? (wasn't possible in my country)

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dan_linder ◴[] No.45767038[source]
> Curious what the purpose of calling a pay phone is? (wasn't possible in my country)

Mostly for the humor value for an on-air radio show. I’m sure were pre-arranged just to make sure they got something usable, but I can see the occasion where a random person walking by and hearing the pay phone RINGING would cause them to pause. As a teenager I would have picked it up in a heartbeat (even not having heard the radio shows).

As for other “purposes” I’ve seen some crime/drama shows where the bad guy tells someone to go to the corner pay phone and answer it when it rings at a specific time. Horrible idea now as the phone systems would easily record the number that called it, but up until the early 2000’s it would be one option. Today I would guess dropping a burner phone in an envelope for the “victim” would be a more likely movie trope…

(Source: I’m from the US and remember a few radio stations doing this in the 1980’s and 1990’s.)

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1. oniony ◴[] No.45769947{3}[source]
In the 1990s I picked up a payphone outside East Croydon station (UK) and it turned out to be "Amy from Penge".

I wish there was more to this story but we just chatted for a little bit and hung up.