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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
This comic is a reference to the six-word short story ''{{w|For sale: baby shoes, never worn}}'', which has been commonly attributed to famous author {{w|Ernest Hemingway}} (the disputed authorship of the story is referenced several times in the comic).
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This comic is a reference to the six-word short story ''{{w|For sale: baby shoes, never worn}}'', which has been commonly attributed to famous author {{w|Ernest Hemingway}}; however, [[Randall|Randall Munroe]] explicitly states that this might not be the case at all. Whether Hemingway once wrote this story and called it his best work is a matter of urban legend.
  
 
The comic plays on the fact that the original story takes the form of a short advertisement that might have been seen in a newspaper, and makes up alternate versions that use various modern 'standards' that did not exist in Hemingway's time. In keeping with the original, each example remains six words long. The title text obeys this rule, too. Many of the drafts poke fun at the tragedy that the original story suggests. With the original ("For Sale: Baby shoes, never worn"), readers could infer that the baby who would have worn the shoes must have died. Randall tries to make the reader infer other, more absurd things instead.
 
The comic plays on the fact that the original story takes the form of a short advertisement that might have been seen in a newspaper, and makes up alternate versions that use various modern 'standards' that did not exist in Hemingway's time. In keeping with the original, each example remains six words long. The title text obeys this rule, too. Many of the drafts poke fun at the tragedy that the original story suggests. With the original ("For Sale: Baby shoes, never worn"), readers could infer that the baby who would have worn the shoes must have died. Randall tries to make the reader infer other, more absurd things instead.
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|-
 
|-
 
| This weird trick covers baby feet!
 
| This weird trick covers baby feet!
| This is modeled after common 'click bait' wording designed to get users to visit web pages, typically using words such as "this weird trick" or "secrets they don't want you to know" to artificially increase its apparent appeal. xkcd has previously parodied click bait in [[1283: Headlines]], [[1307: Buzzfeed Christmas]] and [[1426: Reduce Your Payments]].
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| This is modeled after common 'click bait' wording designed to get users to visit web pages, typically using words such as "this weird trick" or "secrets they don't want you to know" to artificially increase its apparent appeal. xkcd has previously parodied click bait in [[1283: Headlines]] and [[1426: Reduce Your Payments]].
 
|-
 
|-
 
| For Sale: Baby shoes, just hatched
 
| For Sale: Baby shoes, just hatched
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|-
 
|-
 
| Complete this survey for free shoes
 
| Complete this survey for free shoes
| This is another reference to common internet marketing campaigns, where users are incentivized to take surveys in exchange for small compensation such as free samples or coupons. Possibly a [[Phishing License|phishing scam]].
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| This is another reference to common internet marketing campaigns, where users are incentivized to take surveys in exchange for small compensation such as free samples or coupons.
 
|-
 
|-
 
| ''Shoes'', by Ernest Hemingway {{Citation needed}}
 
| ''Shoes'', by Ernest Hemingway {{Citation needed}}
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|-
 
|-
 
| <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;blink&gt;&lt;marquee&gt;</span>Baby shoes!<span style="color: #727272;">&lt;/marquee&gt;&lt;/blink&gt;</span>
 
| <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;blink&gt;&lt;marquee&gt;</span>Baby shoes!<span style="color: #727272;">&lt;/marquee&gt;&lt;/blink&gt;</span>
| This is reminiscent of the style of HTML widely used in the 1990s.  Both the <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;blink&gt;</span> and <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;marquee&gt;</span> tags make the text content ("Baby shoes!") appear more prominent and attention-grabbing. The blink tag makes a blinking effect in Netscape, whereas the marquee tag makes a scroll effect in Internet Explorer. On a normal web page, these tags only affect how the text content is displayed on screen and aren't directly shown to visitors. However they are shown here to make the six words count, albeit in a lighter shade of gray to reinforce the fact that they're not part of the text content. An interesting note: When this comic was first posted to xkcd.com, the '/' in the <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;/blink&gt;</span> tag was missing. This was fixed between the 19th and 20th of June, 2015, showing that the omission was, indeed, unintentional.
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| This is reminiscent of the style of HTML widely used in the 1990s.  Both the <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;blink&gt;</span> and <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;marquee&gt;</span> tags make the text content ("Baby shoes!") appear more prominent and attention-grabbing. On a normal web page, these tags only affect how the text content is displayed on screen and aren't directly shown to visitors. However they are shown here to make the six words count, albeit in a lighter shade of gray to reinforce the fact that they're not part of the text content. An interesting note: When this comic was first posted to xkcd.com, the '/' in the <span style="color: #727272;">&lt;/blink&gt;</span> tag was missing. This was fixed between the 19th and 20th of June, 2015, showing that the omission was, indeed, unintentional.
 
 
Blink has since been deprecated as of HTML 4.0, and, should this be implemented in an HTML page today, it would appear like this: [[File:babyshoesblinkmarquee.gif|frameless]]
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| For Sale: Baby-sized saddle, bobcat
 
| For Sale: Baby-sized saddle, bobcat
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| This is written like a news headline where Hemingway supposedly wrote about shoes in order to perpetrate a scam. {{w|Craigslist}} is a website where users can advertise and seek goods and services.
 
| This is written like a news headline where Hemingway supposedly wrote about shoes in order to perpetrate a scam. {{w|Craigslist}} is a website where users can advertise and seek goods and services.
 
|}
 
|}
The title text continues the reference to [[A-Minus-Minus|325: A-Minus-Minus]], but inverts the situation.  Rather than unexpectedly receiving a bobcat by package, this time the package contains a regular item instead of the expected bobcat. In keeping with the theme of the comic, the review is written in only six words.
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The title text continues the reference to [[A-Minus-Minus|325: A-Minus-Minus]], but inverts the situation.  Rather than unexpectedly receiving a bobcat by package, this time the package contains a regular item instead of the expected bobcat.
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
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[[Category:Comics with color]]
 
[[Category:Comics with color]]
 
[[Category:Bobcats]]
 
[[Category:Bobcats]]
[[Category:Comics with cursed items]] <!-- Baby shoes, reportedly -->
 

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