 The Wisconsin Tourism Federation realized in 2009 that geek-speak had made its acronym WTF pretty laughable.
The Wisconsin Tourism Federation realized in 2009 that geek-speak had made its acronym WTF pretty laughable.
In 2010, New York City's Metropolitan Transit Authority announced 
that it would be rearranging some of its subway signs because they 
resembled a slightly naughty bit of internet slang. The signage for the 
F, M, and L lines read "FML,"
 which savvy web users know as self-deprecating shorthand for "F*** My 
Life." The double meaning of its signs caught the transit authority off
 guard, but they worked quickly to switch around the letters. New York's
 subways are hardly the first victims of acronym problems, though.
According to Ethan Trex in Mental Floss, here are 10 other 
organizations, places, and businesses that have realized a bit too late 
that their initials meant a little more than they had intended.
1. WTF
In
 2009, the Wisconsin Tourism Federation's biggest problem wasn't finding
 a way to attract more people to the metropolitan Kenosha area; it was 
the realization that its initials mirrored the slang abbreviation for 
"What the F---?" The WTF from America's Dairyland has been around since
 1979, so it likely predates the vulgar WTF. In the end, though, you 
can't fight an internet meme. The organization changed its name to the 
Tourism Federation of Wisconsin.
The WTF's only consolation must 
be that it's not alone. In 2008, the North Carolina DMV allowed drivers 
whose license plates contained "WTF" to swap out their tags free of 
charge. The DMV also had to change its website; the sample plate 
pictured on the site was "WTF-5505."
2. DOA
In a move that 
must have been unsettling for thousands of Iowa's seniors, the state 
changed the name of its Department of Elder Affairs to the Department on
 Aging, or DOA, in 2009. Something's telling us that the change hasn't 
helped Iowa's elderly sleep any easier. The organization now goes by 
IDA, for Iowa Department on Aging.
3. AIDS
When Joan Woehrmann
 started her ambulance company in Whittier, Calif., in 1955, she hit on a
 pretty brilliant acronym: AIDS. The letters stood for "attitude, 
integrity, dependability, and service," which are all great qualities 
for an ambulance line. The name was also easy to remember in times of 
crisis.
She didn't foresee the name eventually signifying one of 
the greatest medical catastrophes of the century, though. By 1985, The 
Los Angeles Times reported that Woehrmann's drivers were being taunted 
and that the public mistakenly started to think that the line only 
transported AIDS patients.
Finally, she had enough and changed 
the line's name to "AME," even giving up the ambulances' customized 
line of "AIDS 1" and "AIDS 2" license plates.
4. SUX
While 
FAA identifiers for airports aren't technically acronyms, the 
three-letter codes can give rise to their own headaches. Just ask the 
Sioux City Gateway Airport, which the FAA saddled with the unfortunate 
designator "SUX." Airport authorities petitioned for a new code, and 
the FAA — "this is not a joke" — offered them "GAY" as a nod to the 
"Gateway" part of the airport's name.
Sioux City decided that 
switching to GAY probably wouldn't save them much sophomoric taunting, 
so officials decided to make the best of the SUX situation. Now the 
airport markets playful t-shirts emblazoned with slogans like "Fly 
SUX."
SUX might not even be the worst airport code. According to
 a 2008 Los Angeles Times story, Fresno's is FAT, and Perm, Russia's is 
PEE. The big winner has to be Fukuoka, Japan, though. We'll let you 
guess how that one gets abbreviated.
5. SLUT
In 2007, Seattle 
opened a new streetcar line connecting the South Lake Union neighborhood
 to the city's downtown. While the project was officially called the 
South Lake Union Streetcar, local residents began ribbing it as the 
South Lake Union Trolley, or SLUT. Although the city and the line's 
developers did what they could to dispel the notion that the line had a 
bawdy name, residents still refer to it as the SLUT; in 2007 the Seattle
 Post-Intelligencer even reported that a coffeehouse was selling 
t-shirts that read, "Ride the SLUT." Cringe.
6. CCRAP
In 
2000, delegates of Canada's United Alternative convention needed a name 
for their newly formed political party. They came up with Canadian 
Conservative Reform Alliance Party, which in addition to taking roughly 
six minutes to pronounce was abbreviated CCRAP. Organizers quickly 
realized the blunder and changed the party's name to the Canadian Reform
 Conservative Alliance.
7. WPPSS
In 1998, the Washington 
Public Power Supply System chose to change its name to Energy Northwest 
to discourage people from pronouncing its unfortunate acronym as 
"Whoops!" The old name left the utility open to quite a bit of taunting
 in 1983, when the WPPSS defaulted on $2.25 billion worth of bonds. 
Whoops indeed.
8. POOF
In 1990, the Philharmonic Orchestra of 
Florida decided it had heard just about enough kidding about its 
acronym, POOF, which resembled an old offensive term for a homosexual 
man. The musicians changed their name to the Florida Philharmonic 
Orchestra.
9. THE C-WORD
In 2002, Microsoft had to do a little
 rearranging on the fly. It quickly and quietly changed its ribald 
"Critical Update Notification Tool" to the more family friendly 
"Critical Updated Notification Utility."
10. NIC
What's wrong
 with NIC? In English, nothing. In Arabic, a whole heck of a lot. When 
the Coalition Provisional Authority began planning new Iraqi armed 
forces in 2003, they originally called them the New Iraqi Corps. They 
hit a big snag, though. As ABC News reported, in Arabic "nic" is "a 
colorful synonym for fornication." The coalition quickly changed the 
name to the New Iraqi Army.
Go to the NetLingo List of Internet Acronyms & Text Message Jargon!
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