31 Funny Telephone Pole Posters That Prove the Sidewalk Has the Best Writers in the Business

Apr 12, 2026 09:00 AM EDT
Telephone post with funny signs including a dinosaur-free workplace and a missing half of poster.
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There is a person, and this person exists in every city, who looks at a telephone pole and sees not a utility infrastructure element but a publishing platform. They have access to a printer, or a pen, or in some cases an evident amount of time and an unwillingness to waste it. They walk to the pole. They attach their work. They walk away. They do not wait for the reaction because the reaction is not the point. The creation of the thing is the point. The pedestrian encountering it twenty minutes later, stopping mid-stride, reading it twice, and then standing still for a moment longer than necessary, is a bonus. These 31 posters are the work of those people, and they deserve significantly more recognition than they are receiving.

Workplace safety sign proudly declaring dinosaur-free status for over 25 million days since last incident
Telephone pole missing person flyer searching for ninja with warning that spotting him means death
Hilarious telephone pole flyer advertising Joe the People Follower service with ten foot guarantee
Absurd movie night flyer promising all eight Fast and Furious films playing simultaneously at full volume
Fake Obvious Plant Jeff Burger restaurant flyer promising owner personally kisses every burger served
Protest sign campaigning for Rick Astley for Prime Minister listing his never gonna give you up promises
Fake Pizza Hotline telephone pole flyer offering pizza ordering simulation with no actual pizza delivered
Bizarre telephone pole flyer advertising cash paid for couches that people have died on
Self-referential missing poster with half torn away reporting itself as the missing item with reward offered
Fake park notice warning about old man banned for launching oranges at teenagers from backpack device

Funny telephone pole posters

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Funny street posters have earned their documentation status as a genre because they represent humor produced for an audience of strangers, with no algorithmic support, no engagement metrics, no comment section, and no guarantee of any response whatsoever beyond the possibility that someone will stop and look. That is a remarkably pure creative context. The Rick Astley for Prime Minister campaign is a poster that understood its audience, its medium, and its timing, and delivered a political platform that is, word for word, more coherent and less evasive than most genuine campaign materials. The candidate will never give you up. The candidate will never let you down. The candidate will not run around, desert you, make you cry, say goodbye, tell a lie, or hurt you. Whether this is a stronger platform than what is currently on offer is left as an exercise for the reader.

Absurdist humor posters earn their category status when they commit completely to an internal logic that no external standard can measure. Joe the People Follower, with a ten-foot distance guarantee and services rendered in writing, is a real business proposition delivered in the format of a legitimate service flyer. The promise is specific. The distance is documented. The testimonials, if any exist, would be collected at exactly ten feet. This is a coherent offering. The Fake Pizza Hotline delivers the full pizza ordering experience, including the conversation, the hold music, and the wait, and then delivers nothing, which is either a profound comment on the nature of consumer expectation or a very specific prank, and possibly both simultaneously.

The self-referential missing poster is the gallery’s most structurally elegant entry, because it has identified a loop and entered it willingly. The poster reports itself as missing. The missing portion is the torn lower half of the same poster. The reward is offered for its own return. This is a closed system with no external solution, a puzzle that rewards contemplation and resists resolution, and it is stapled to a telephone pole in a public area where most people walk past thinking about something else entirely. The people who stop and look at it are having a different Tuesday than the people who do not.

The dinosaur-free workplace safety sign is operating in the tradition of the procedural document taken to its logical extreme. Safety documentation tracks incidents. The sign has been tracking dinosaur incidents for over twenty-five million days and reports zero. The format is standard. The subject matter is not. The poster has identified the gap between the format’s implicit promise and the audience’s actual concerns, and filled that gap with a reassurance that no one required and everyone is glad to have received.

Jeff Burger’s personal kiss promise is the most straightforward entry in the gallery, and its directness is precisely what makes it remarkable. There is no subtext. There is a service. The service includes a kiss on every burger, delivered personally, by Jeff. This is communicated plainly. Whether this improves the product is a question for the consumer. Whether it is a reason to try the product is clearly the intent of the marketing, and on the evidence of this gallery, the marketing has worked.

The orange-launching old man park notice is the only entry that raises a genuine question about whether it is real, and that question is what makes it excellent. The specificity, the backpack device, the targeting of teenagers, the formal notice format, exists precisely at the threshold where documentation becomes indistinguishable from comedy, and that threshold is where the best street posters always live.

If this gallery is your natural frequency and you need more immediately, street art and public humor is an ecosystem with no floor and no ceiling, covering everything from wheat-paste murals to handwritten notices left in office kitchens that probably belong in this gallery. Obvious Plant and similar absurdist prank content belongs right beside it for the more produced end of the same sensibility. And for anyone who wants the same energy deployed at internet scale rather than telephone-pole scale, absurdist memes broadly are the digital equivalent of finding a Joe the People Follower flyer, and they are updated far more frequently.

Katie Rodriguez is a seasoned writer with eight years dedicated to meme commentary, viral internet events, and digital storytelling. Formerly a senior meme analyst at Bored Panda and an occasional guest contributor at Vice's Motherboard, Kat specializes in meme culture’s intersection with social media phenomena—covering trends like Milk Crate Challenge, Area 51 Raid, and Baby Yoda. She’s known for her witty writing style and deep understanding of why certain memes resonate across generations, making her a valuable voice on Thunder Dungeon.
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