Talk:William Freund
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I don't know anything about this story personally, but why is it listed as a Northern Ireland related stub? Anybody know? Kd5mdk 07:54, 1 January 2006 (UTC)
- It really isn't. Someone replaced the word 'crime' with 'Northern Ireland' in {{crime-stub}}. I've fixed the template now, so it should be accurate. Thanks for bringing this up. — Jeff | (talk) | 08:19, 1 January 2006 (UTC)
The list of links seems excessive, none are listed as sources, could someone with an informed view trim them back replacing them with content? StopItTidyUp 22:05, 1 September 2006 (UTC)
What source could be provided for 'he offered people to pay', I know people that have proof in IRC-logs but those are certainly not going to be published. (Comment deliberately unsigned). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.89.168.155 (talk • contribs)
I was a witness and a poster in the short thread which was closed and likely archived on something awful. I want to contribute an entry about the thread he made there being the source of a popular internet word usage. William Freund mispelled the word Pumpkins there in the original post of the thread, and people made fun of it. His spelling was "puckins", and it seems to have taken hold in the internet lexicon of pupular words/catchphrases.
I am not sure the proper way to make an entry. I only decided it should be done after finding several recent uses of it in a google search around the internet. I have even heard people recently use it while talking. I know some people hear something like that and curiousity about the source, or what it means. I am going to give it a shot. If you think its wrong, chop it up, chop it out, or rewrite it, no hard feelings on my part. B4Ctom1 22:28, 12 October 2006 (UTC)
- I am going to give it a shot. I know this is in bad taste but I found this to be amusingly and ironic. Hbdragon88 05:23, 29 January 2007 (UTC)