... yes, yes - all over this land.
I'd spam about cialis, and I'd have a nasty doorway re-direct page (www.surfbirds.com/blog/hummingbird/) from a blog host (that's slightly delayed so GG won't catch me).
I'd spam about casinos, using links from actor websites, that are buried... inside really weird code
<!-- Start FastOnlineUsers.com -->
<br>Currently <a href="https://www.fastonlineusers.com"><script src=https://fastonlineusers.com/online.php?d=www.joshuajackson.org></script> onl</a><a href="https://www.glowingcasino.com">ine</a><!-- End FastOnlineUsers.com -->
I'd spam about bankruptcy with low quality spam links & link trading services on one of the worst ever domain names - personal-bankruptcy-chapters-7-13-filing-laws.com (5 hyphens?!).
I'd use subdomains at Findlaw (read:paid links) to spam for all sorts of legal searches.
I'd spam about love between Canadians and pharmacies... all-ll over this land.
.... If I was a spammer.
(hope you enjoyed that little tune - I'm here all week)
Podcast! Podcast!
You should throw in a line about false authorities; I'm thinking: "I'd use uncle Stanford.edu's nepotistic authority to run sites up for any phrase of my choosing"
What bugs me is just today on Matt's blog there was a mention to why Stanford.edu is seen as relevant, but nary a mention of why the Stanford student pages are so relevant for such juicy spam phrases...bah.
Don't forget to tip the waitstaff, folks.
This would be better as a Podcast so we could hear that tune in your head. :)
I have a beautiful voice made just for hymnals like this. :D :D