Medium-sized potato tops Christmas toy charts

THIS year’s must-have toy for children whose parents are sick of their whining is an unremarkable King Edward potato. 

The potato, which parents are hoping will tempt their children away from bullying other children on social media, is being marketed as ‘Spudalizor Fun Object’ and is expected to be the hit of the year.

A spokesman for the British Toy Foundation said: “Potato? Only if you’ve forgotten the joy and wild imagination of childhood.

“To a seven-year-old with sufficiently low expectations, this is the asteroid home of an invisible alien race, or a cool, misshapen ball that doesn’t really bounce and soon starts to smell.

“Grandparents approve of it because it reminds them of the miserable Christmases of their youth, parents love it because it didn’t cost them £300 so who cares if they play with it for one day then get bored, and kids love six-seven so don’t deserve any better.”

The announcement has already seen supermarket’s fresh produce section besieged by parents determined to get their child the latest toy, four-mile queues, fighting and potatoes being sold for upwards of £600 on eBay.

Jack Browne, aged nine, said: “I can’t wait to get mine. I’m going to hollow it out and use it as a bong.”

Sign up now to get
The Daily Mash
free Headlines email – every weekday
privacy

Awkwardly tapping the wrong bit of the contactless card reader to stay, say banks

BANKS have confirmed that repeatedly tapping the wrong bit of the contactless card reader before angrily entering your PIN will not change.

The lifting of the £100 limit on contactless payments will not affect the embarrassing occasions when you tap the wrong area of the card reader so many times it renders what is supposed to be a speedy process pointless.

Barclays CEO Martin Bishop said: “There’s only so much we can do to improve the contactless payment experience. Being a clumsy twat is on you to fix.

“Sure, we could come up with a solution, but where’s the fun in that? Cashiers love to watch you squirm after each failed attempt, the panic rising on your face as you wonder if you’ve reached your overdraft limit. We don’t want to rob them of that joy.

“Besides, spending money isn’t supposed to be an effortless, exhilarating experience. Any accountant will tell you that each pound leaving your clammy grasp should feel like a humiliating defeat. Blindly throwing it around is how 2008 happened.

“Look, either suck it up or we’ll bring back cheques. Do you want that? Didn’t think so.”

Contactless card user Nikki Hollis said: “You’re telling me there are people out there who are liquid to the tune of £100 or more? Who are they? Lottery winners?”