Akademik

muffin-choker
(MUH.fin-choh.kur)
n.
A bizarre, sensational, or unbelievable news story.
Example Citation:
Basically — by adopting this amendment — we'll be doing what Australia, Britain, Belgium, Canada, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden have been doing — and that is that recognizing that female genital mutilation is one thing that is coming into their country solely by immigration.
That if you look at the world population — more than 100,000,000 women in more than 30 countries have been subjected to this — and as we all know, this is very painful ritual that has nothing to do with religion or health — and it usually is done to very young girls.
Most people would consider it a serious form of child abuse.
It is the cutting of a woman's genitalia — it's kind of a muffin-choker — so I really won't go into more detail — but I think most people have had and heard enough about this.
— Pat Schroeder, "HEARING OF THE HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE, MARK-UP OF IMMIGRATION LEGISLATION," Federal News Service, November 17, 1995
Earliest Citation:
It's the end of the year, time to clear the computer of bizarre stories, or muffin-chokers, as they're called in the newsroom.
— Jack Thomas, "When newspapers are stranger than fiction," The Boston Globe, December 28, 1989
Notes:
This phrase comes from the reaction one would supposedly have after reading about such a story in the morning newspaper.
Related Words:
beat sweetener
bummer beat
charticle
coffee-spitter
Danny Boy
gotcha journalism
Hey Mabel effect
horse-race journalism
marmalade-dropper
notebook dump
reefer
thumbsucker
tick-tock
Categories:
Food and Drink
Media and Journalism

New words. 2013.