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- The Mojave Phone Booth
- 10/31/99
- ______________________________________________
- Written By Kyle D
- www.pr3fix.com
-
- A payphone number list... almost all phreak sites have one. But there is
- one payphone that sets itself apart from the others, the Mojave Phone.
- Supposedly the most desolate booth in the world this booth sits in the
- middle of the desert and is labeled the "loneliest phone". This phone
- has struck such an interest, people from around the world have called it
- just to see if anyone would pick up. Some of those who do answer are
- previous callers who, for some unknown reason that makes sense only to
- them, also feel compelled to visit the booth. "For us," wrote
- screenwriter Chuck Atkins of his recent trek to the booth, "it was about
- driving into nowhere for no good reason, meeting fellow netizens who
- shared our sense of childish glee at the coolness of a phone booth in
- the middle of nowhere."
-
-
- The craze began two years ago after a high-desert wanderer noticed a
- telephone icon on a Mojave road map. Curious, he drove out from Los
- Angeles to investigate and wrote a letter to a counterculture magazine
- describing his exploits and including the phone number. After spotting
- the letter, computer entrepreneur Godfrey Daniels became so captivated
- by the idea he created the first of several Web sites dedicated solely
- to the battered booth. Since then word of the phone has been beamed to
- computers virtually everywhere. Its has evolved into a worldwide
- listening post. Fans have taken the neglected old booth under their
- wing. Outside, they've posted a sign that reads "Mojave Phone Both - you
- could shoot it, but why would you want to?" Next to that is another card
- reading: "If you call it, they will come."
-
- Rick Karr, a 51-year-old spiritual wanderer, has no Web site, but says
- he was instructed by the Holy Spirit to travel to the desert and answer
- the phone. The Texas native recently spent 32 days camping out at the
- booth, fielding more then 500 calls from people like Bubba in Phoenix ,
- Ariz., and Ian in Newfoundland and repeated contacts from a caller who
- identified himself as "Sgt. Zeno from the Pentagon." "This phone," he
- said with a weary sigh, "never stops ringing."
-
- While she would not provide the statistics, a Pacific Bell spokeswoman
- said the phone experienced "very low outgoing usage." Still, the booth
- is sometimes used by locals to conduct business or check messages.
- University of California, Los Angeles sociologist Warren TenHouten
- stated "Some people just have nothing to do, so they pursue shreds of
- information that have no value. It amuses me, but there's something
- pitiful about it too. I mean, what's the most interesting thing that
- could happen by being so mischievous as to call a public pay phone?"
-
- Web sites that feature the Mojave phone booth:
-
- www.cardhouse.com/g/moj/mojave.ht
- www.illuminatrix.com/mojave
- www.deadpan.net/mpb/why.htm
- majick.skunkworks.cx/articles/mdpb-1.html
- www.wrdsnpix.com/990525.htm
-
- Mojave phone booth number: (760) 733-9969
-
-