First, no, I did not watch NBC's new show "Are You There Chelsea," but someone I follow on
FaceBook did watch it and she posted this screen capture, & in her defense, her caption was: "This
stupid ass show got interesting."
It has been almost a year since SBI's last installment of You Write the Caption, and that one
came after a two-year hiatus for one of the site's original and most popular series. We plan on
changing that after feedback from readers who told us we should bring the series back.
For those of you unfamiliar, You Write the Caption is when we post a funny photo and allow our
readers to take their cracks at writing a caption to go with the photo.
The excitement is building for the 2012 CONCACAF Women's Olympic Qualifying Tournament and the
Canadian Soccer Association has been busy promoting the eight-team competition. The CSA is
featuring two U.S. players with strong northwest ties -- Seattle resident Hope Solo and former
Portland Pilot star Megan Rapinoe -- as part of an advertising campaign titled "Made for This.
The puffy jacket. The slightly askew Yankees cap. The denim nappy. We hope this guy was dressed at
gunpoint. Image via Bafe's facebook page.
If you're going to post images of yourself on popular social networking sites, it's best you
don't accompany each picture with the caption 'Look Of The Day'.
Image via Twitter.
Cheesiest joke we could come up with to accompany this picture?
"He can hold us hostage anytime."
Not terribly imaginative, but it gets straight to our point.
How about our Kickette Army soldier boys and girls take a stab at cheeky caption writing?
David Beckham looked extremely honoured when he met boxing legend Muhammad Ali during
last weekend's 70th birthday celebrations at the Power of Love Gala in Las Vegas along with a whole
host of celebrities.
Beckham posted a pic of the unforgettable moment on his Facebook page.
The lead-up to Monday's top of the table showdown between Man City and Man United was inflated
by a number of erroneous and ridiculous claims of the match being a "title decider," comparable
to the Super Bowl and that the 650-million person global reach of the match's broadcast was
actually the estimated viewership.