During my time at Old Mutual, I worked with a colleague named David. He was a friendly guy with a great sense of humor—sometimes bordering on the risqué—and he was incredibly laid back. Absolutely nothing flustered him. Except for one time, under an extraordinary set of circumstances.
David was trawling through the internet at work when he came across a highly questionable picture. It was titled "The Russian Spice Girls" and featured a graphic of four extremely large women in a state of near undress. For some reason, this completely caught his funny bone. Knowing a friend who shared his specific sense of humor, he promptly sent the image over using the office fax machine, thinking nothing more of it.
About three hours later, a directive came down from on high telling David to report immediately to the General Management office on the fifth floor. In our office, you generally only went to the fifth floor to get promoted or fired.
David walked up and was promptly hauled over the coals. It turned out he had entered a single digit incorrectly on the fax machine. Instead of going to his friend, the transmission had landed directly in the office of South Africa's premier, most militant activist feminist and anti-pornographer.
She had absolutely seen red. Spotting David's name printed in the tiny automated header at the top of the page, she immediately bypassed regular channels and called the Chairman's Office of Old Mutual to lodge a vociferous, furious complaint.
The sheer statistical improbability of that specific wrong number was mind-boggling. David managed to keep his job, but he was severely and memorably chastised. The rest of us walked away with an important lesson: it is best not to fax anything risqué from the office, but if you absolutely must, you had better check the number fastidiously.
























































































































































































