avatarJennifer Dunne

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Abstract

h</a></figcaption></figure><p id="7444">When I checked my phone for messages this morning, I saw a call from the coolest phone number ever: (323) 232–3232. That’s a Los Angeles number, for those unfamiliar with the area code.</p><p id="4fcb">I immediately checked my voice mail messages to see who this cool number belonged to. Sadly, it belonged to a spammer, reminding me they could help get rid of my student debt.</p>

Options

<p id="dfb2">Since I graduated in the last century (my, doesn’t <i>that</i> make me sound old), I haven’t had any student debt for a long time. This was pure spam.</p><p id="4035">Even worse, they left a call-back number. To an 855 toll-free number. All numbers are free to a cell phone. I guess there’s no reason to call.</p><p id="f6f0">I would have called the 323 number. Just because it was cool.</p></article></body>

The Coolest Phone Number Ever

If only it wasn’t a spammer

Photo: Wesley Hilario on Unsplash

When I checked my phone for messages this morning, I saw a call from the coolest phone number ever: (323) 232–3232. That’s a Los Angeles number, for those unfamiliar with the area code.

I immediately checked my voice mail messages to see who this cool number belonged to. Sadly, it belonged to a spammer, reminding me they could help get rid of my student debt.

Since I graduated in the last century (my, doesn’t that make me sound old), I haven’t had any student debt for a long time. This was pure spam.

Even worse, they left a call-back number. To an 855 toll-free number. All numbers are free to a cell phone. I guess there’s no reason to call.

I would have called the 323 number. Just because it was cool.

Creativity
Spam
Phone
Numbers
Patterns
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