Drunk dialing

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Drunk dialing is a pop-culture term denoting an instance in which an intoxicated individual places phone calls that he or she would not likely place if sober. The term often refers to a lonely individual calling former love interests. Drunk dialing is a parody of drunk driving, and is intended to imply similar undesired consequences.

I have this disease late at night sometimes, involving alcohol and the telephone. I get drunk, and I drive my wife away with breath like mustard gas and roses. And then, speaking gravely and elegantly into the telephone, I ask the telephone operators to connect me with this friend or that one, from whom I have not heard in years.

Drunken Texting or SMS'ing is a related phenomenon, and potentially yet more embarrassing for the sender as, once the message is sent, it cannot be retrieved; the message will most likely be mispelled (due to being drunk), and it might be reviewed and shared among many.

[edit] Drunk dialing in the media

The New York Post,[2] the New York Times,[3] and the Washington Post,[4] have all reported on drunk dialing. Cell phone manufacturers and carriers are helping callers prevent drunk dialing. Virgin Mobile has launched an option to help its users stop drunk dialing by initiating multi-hour bans on calling specific numbers[5] and the LG Group introduced the LP4100 mobile phone, which includes a breathalyzer.[6] Although the breathalyzer function was incorporated to help the user assess fitness to drive, rather than fitness to phone, the owner can program the LP4100 to restrict calls to specific telephone numbers on certain days or after a certain hour, a feature that might help limit drunk dialing by eliminating calls when the user is more likely to be intoxicated. Some reports indicate that this phone, or a planned future version for U.S. release, would activate the call-blocking function in tandem with the blood alcohol content results from the breathalyzer.[7][8]

Pat O'Brien entered a drug rehabilitation center on March 20, 2006, as recordings surfaced throughout the media of his persistent intoxicated and sexually explicit drunken dialing voicemail messages to an undisclosed female.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Vonnegut, Kurt (December 1991). Slaughterhouse-Five. Dell Publishing, pp. 4. ISBN 0-440-18029-5. 
  2. ^ Mary Huhn, "Call it TUI - Texting Under the Influence: High-tech hangovers haunt gadget geeks," New York Post, page 41, April 21, 2005
  3. ^ Carol E. Lee, The New Social Etiquette: Friends Don't Let Friends Dial Drunk (opinion column), The New York Times, January 30, 2005
  4. ^ Joel Garreau, Cell Biology: Like the Bee, This Evolving Species Buzzes and Swarms, Washington Post, Page C01, July 31, 2002
  5. ^ Peter Rojas, Virgin Mobile wants to help stop you from drunk dialing, Engadget.com, November 30, 2004
  6. ^ Brian Haverty, If you drink, don't dial, CNet Australia
  7. ^ Keith Garvin, New Cell Can Tell If You're Drunk: Already a Hit in Korea, LG Releases Cell Phone with Built-in Breathalyzer, ABC News, June 27, 2006
  8. ^ David Brand, Firm aims to save drunk dialers from themselves, The Daily Free Press, Boston University, October 12, 2006