Hello folks!
It's time to play "Hijack This Thread" game...
Here is how it is played:
I will start off with a topic, then I need two other people to continue on with the topic. The next person will "Hijack" the thread.
The cycle then starts again with two others contributing and then it gets "Hijack" again. And every so often, the "Hijack" can brought back to a previous topic.
Now, lets keep hijacking to just this thread, I do not want this to spread to other threads and I do not want to me chastised by SPCT (Society for the Protection of Chats and Threads)
Have fun, play safe kids, be kind to others and always be cool
So here it goes:
There has been much talk lately about how one will create a thread about a particular topic and then for some unexpected reason someone will post an unrelated message to the main topic but certainly relates to something else mentioned or directed towards one of the posters. Commonly refered to "hijacking".
It's human nature and happens everyday in our regular conversations. The funny thing is that eventually the conversation will return to the orginal topic at hand all will be concluded or could be "hijacked" again.
It's interesting to watch the progression of such activites and how this form of conversation through text mimics oral conversation.
It's time to play "Hijack This Thread" game...
Here is how it is played:
I will start off with a topic, then I need two other people to continue on with the topic. The next person will "Hijack" the thread.
The cycle then starts again with two others contributing and then it gets "Hijack" again. And every so often, the "Hijack" can brought back to a previous topic.
Now, lets keep hijacking to just this thread, I do not want this to spread to other threads and I do not want to me chastised by SPCT (Society for the Protection of Chats and Threads)
Have fun, play safe kids, be kind to others and always be cool
So here it goes:
There has been much talk lately about how one will create a thread about a particular topic and then for some unexpected reason someone will post an unrelated message to the main topic but certainly relates to something else mentioned or directed towards one of the posters. Commonly refered to "hijacking".
It's human nature and happens everyday in our regular conversations. The funny thing is that eventually the conversation will return to the orginal topic at hand all will be concluded or could be "hijacked" again.
It's interesting to watch the progression of such activites and how this form of conversation through text mimics oral conversation.






