https://www.adn.com/business-economy/2019/03/27/another-prank-retail-sign-has-popped-up-in-anchorage-this-time-for-tesla/
Another prank retail sign has popped up in Anchorage, this time for Tesla
2019-03-27  Annie Zak

[image  
https://www.adn.com/resizer/5kfuze_aV14DeKsRqoGNAdx0H4I=/1200x0/arc-anglerfish-arc2-prod-adn.s3.amazonaws.com/public/VN6M7D3YI5FYHLFRM2UXIWJCFE.JPG
A Tesla sign on Gambell Street near East Ninth Avenue in front of a former
auto dealership in Anchorage March 26, 2019. A person reached via the email
address on the sign confirmed it’s a prank. (Annie Zak / ADN)
]

If you’ve driven down Gambell Street in Anchorage this week, past Ninth
Avenue, you might have seen it: a white sign that reads “TESLA COMING SOON”
in the parking lot of a vacant building.

But if you’re a fan of the electric car company, don’t get too excited. It’s
a prank.

That’s according to someone responding to emails Tuesday from the address
listed on the sign. What’s more, the same group of people who put the Tesla
sign there is also responsible for other spoof signs that have shown up
around Anchorage in recent years, the person said.

In 2017, a Whole Foods sign popped up on a fence near downtown Anchorage,
proclaiming a location was on its way. It wasn’t. When a Starbucks on
Minnesota Drive near West Northern Lights Boulevard was under construction
in 2017, a fake sign on the fence there indicated that an In-N-Out Burger
was coming. Fans of the chain’s animal-style fries were left disappointed.

Others have included a Lego store banner on a vacant lot downtown, and a
Trader Joe’s banner on the Northern Lights Hotel before it was demolished.

The person who said their group put the signs up, corresponding via the
email address  teslamotors @alaska.net , wouldn’t divulge their name. They
referred to themselves only as “WFC," and said they’re not a Tesla
representative.

They said they put the Tesla sign up late Thursday night, along with two
other people.

“Usually we put them up Friday nights, operating under the assumption that
the sourpuss that cuts them down is off on weekends,” the person wrote.

(Behind the fake Whole Foods sign that caused a stir in Anchorage [
https://www.adn.com/opinions/2017/06/24/behind-the-fake-whole-foods-sign-that-caused-a-stir-in-anchorage/
])

The banners get at Alaskans’ desire for national brands that don’t yet have
a presence in the Last Frontier, which is often a later stop for big-name
retailers as they expand around the country.

So, why put the signs up?

“We do it for a couple reasons,” the person wrote. “1. We find it hilarious.
2. It draws attention to more unsightly or otherwise neglected parts of the
city."

Tesla did not respond to an email with questions about the sign by the time
this story published. In February, the company announced it would close many
of its stores and shift to online sales. Then, earlier this month, Tesla
said in a statement it would “keep significantly more stores open than
previously announced.”

The sign is at 720 E. Ninth Ave, a former car dealership space that is
currently empty. The property has been up for lease for about six to eight
months, said Rick Morrison, who owns the building.

"I would assume it’s a prank,” he said Tuesday. Other than his son-in-law
calling him a few days ago and asking about the sign, he doesn’t know
anything about it or who put it there.

“Nobody’s talked to us” about the sign, Morrison said.

The property is listed with Jack White Commercial real estate. Nancy
Johnson, an assistant there, said her office also didn’t know who put the
sign up.

There are plans for another sign, the person who wouldn’t give their name
said via email. That one will be downtown, they said, but they wouldn’t say
which business it’s for.

The person has had “the occasional accusation of vandalism," they said,
adding that the group is careful never to deface any property. The person
also has decided “not to respond to any email inquiries directed at Tesla,”
they said.

“I have a canned 3-4 paragraph response I had planned on sending out,” the
person said, adding that they sent it out once.

The signs cost about $130 each with expedited shipping, the person said,
adding that they’ve made so many signs now that they get a discount.

“The company I get them from has started offering larger sizes and I have
been considering it ... those run about $390,” the person said.
[© adn.com]
...
https://www.google.com/search?q=sign+prank+fake


+
https://www.carscoops.com/2019/03/tesla-slamming-into-concrete-median-is-part-autopilot-part-drivers-fault/
Tesla Slamming Into Concrete Median Is Part Autopilot, Part Driver’s Fault
March 27, 2019 ... an unexpected change in the road threw off this Model S’
system. As the ...
https://images.carscoops.com/2019/03/2825091d-ezgif.com-optimize-9.gif




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