Do you ever pull pranks in your office?

HeHe! Back when I was working in a sheetmetal shop, we had a cool pregnant girl (about 8.5 mos preg at the time of this story)...our supervisor was deathly afraid one of the pregnant women would go into labor. Soooooo, being the sport she was, she offered to douse herself with water (groin & legs) to simulate her water breaking....several of us squealed, gasped, etc...she did a great job huffing and puffing and freaking out....it was hilarious! Our supervisor nearly passed out!!! Priceless!
 
I've been telecommuting for the last several years... However, when I went to the office every day I used to enjoy starting or embellishing rumors. I didn't make them personal, usually something about a "coming change" in the company. Suggesting some favorite benefit would soon be changed or eliminated always got folks all excited, e.g., we will soon get more vacation time, more floating holidays, fewer holidays, new office furniture, etc.
 
When I worked in Radiology we had a real fun loving crew and pulled many pranks .One April Fools Day we all called in sick from the phone in the lobby .
 
I LOVE playing pranks at the office....April Fool's is my favorite day in the whole world!
 
I LOVE playing pranks at the office....April Fool's is my favorite day in the whole world!

My wife and I got married on April Fool's Day... certainly had some fun pranks to play on the guests - one person actually thought he won $50,000 from the fake lottery ticket! He was ready to split it in half with us :)
 
Back in the '80s when personal computers seemed more mysterious than they do now, one of my co-workers programmed another co-worker's computer to sound as if it were a washing machine going through all of its cycles. The guy who did the programming laughed harder than anyone else.
 
Back when all the telephones were corded in the office, we removed the receiver from a coworker's phone and substituted a zucchini. We then called him from a near by phone and he picked up the "receiver" without looking. He felt pretty foolish after he realized he was talking into a squash.

After that, when he was slow to answer his phone, we'd say "Charlie, your zucchini is ringing".
 
Back in the '80s when personal computers seemed more mysterious than they do now, one of my co-workers programmed another co-worker's computer to sound as if it were a washing machine going through all of its cycles. The guy who did the programming laughed harder than anyone else.


Reminds me of some co-workers who loved the PC vs. Apple debate. The PC user was a woman who was not technically savvy. When she got up to use the restroom, the Apple guy went over to her computer and navigated it to a page that maximizes and looks exactly like an Apple.

She knew who did it, but she kept telling him to fix it and make it better (she didn't realize that an escape or an ALT+F4 would do the trick).

Another great one is if you know somebody who doesn't touch-type, just replace the 'M' and 'N' keys.
 
One time we removed all the furniture from the boss' office before he came in. Good thing he had a sense of humor.
 
I was board one night and started switching the letters on our in car laptops. When the person in the car after me discovered the problem he tried to just rip the keys off and he broke half of them. I had to essentially buy a keyboard for that one, but it was funny. His co-workers that night laughed the hardest.
 
The best one was when my boss at the time went on a vacation. He always was afraid to go on vacation because he thought "bad things" would happen............

While he was gone, we made up the following: fake letterhead, fake business cards, even a fake banner that was hung out front. About an hour before he landed, we put up all the stuff. He came from the airport right to the company, and just about drove off the road when he saw that his company had been "sold".......:)
 
I used to work for a large department store back in the early 90's, when I was in my 20's and immature :angel:. We had a phone at every register stand, but only a few of those phones could actually make outside phone calls. It was possible to call an outside number from one of those phones, and then transfer it to another phone. That phone would then ring, and the person could pick it up, and then have access to that outside call.

Well, we got ahold of some naughty 1-800 number. I think it was 1-800-256-9562. It had a pre-recorded message that would start off with a sultry female voice that said something like "Hi sexy. You've just reached the hottest chat line in America!" Then it would go through the menu. "For hot redheads, press 1". "For guys...who do it with guys...press 2". etc. It didn't actually COST anything unless you pressed one of those options.

We got a kick out of calling that number and then transferring it to another register stand. That person's phone would ring, they'd pick it up, and start to hear that sultry voice. It was pretty funny, for awhile. I got one of the managers with it one night, but I must've had a reputation by that time, because after listening to it for about three seconds, she looked over RIGHT at me! She thought it was pretty funny, though.
 
We used to have a guy in our office who always ordered stuff and had it shipped to the office so his wife wouldn't find out. One day while he was in Court his new ski poles arrived. We took the poles out of the box and then went to the parking lot and ran over the box with a car 9 or 10 times. We got back, lovingly placed the poles back in the box, then re-taped the box. He was on the phone yelling at the company when he noticed us all cracking up. He didn't look in the box until after he saw us.

Mudd
 
A couple workers and I had a manager that we were all pretty buddy-buddy with. We put a program on his computer that allowed us to remotely control his machine. Throughout the morning we would periodically minimize the windows he had up, randomly open new files, and make his monitor flash off and on. By lunch he kept complaining to us that his computer was broken and that he thought he had a virus - we somehow managed not to crack up and just expressed our "concern". After another hour or so we look up to see our manager unplugging his monitor, picking it up, and shaking it in disgust - at this point we all lose it and he quickly realizes that we were behind all his computer problems. He thinks it is funny and we all have a good laugh.
 
In grad school, my advisor wasn't computer literate. I hacked his mainframe account so that when he logged on, the computer would say:

"Gimme cookie!"

and wouldn't continue unless he typed in something like "here's a cookie" or "cookie."

Unfortunately, he didn't figure that out, and did not appreciate the prank at all.
 
One of the Radiologists that I worked for finally got a new car .He had a beat up Mustang for years and he finally bought a new Datsun 300Z .We got all the tacky bumper stickers we could find and lightly scoth taped them onto his bumpers .He went beserk !!
 
After high school I worked in an equipment rental shop, which provided endless tool related pranks. A fellow employee bought an old 1950's vintage pickup truck and was always concerned that it would break down and leave him stranded. We put a hydraulic jack under the rear axle, close to the tire (to hide it), and lifted the tire 1/16" off the ground. Of course, with a differential, the raised tire just spun and the truck would not move. He was sure the transmission or clutch had failed until he saw us laughing. :D

He paid me back by using an electric staple gun to attach my metal lunch bucket to a bench with a hundred or so staples. At first I though it was full of rocks! :eek:
 
I heard a few of these from a friend (who works as an engineer in a nearly all-male lab).

Guy was collecting tin cans to recycle for his kid's team uniforms. Asked his colleagues to help him out. Went to the parking lot one day to find out he'd got more help than he'd bargained for -- his car was filled to the ceiling with cans.

Same friend restored a vintage BSA motorcycle and drove it to work. One of his colleagues (sick of hearing about the bike's progress over the preceeding year), took a quart of oil and dribbled some of it under the bike sometime in the morning. Friend checked on his baby at lunch, saw the oil, scratched his head, then rolled the bike a few feet to see if the oil was his or whether he had simply parked over an existing puddle.

His colleage poured out another dribble in the afternoon.

Friend saw the second puddle and came back into the lab cursing, at which time the sight of six guys shaking silently and trying not to pee their pants gave the game away.

Next day the oil-spilling colleague started for home after a day's work only to find that his car's brake pedal had somehow become connected to his horn.


Another time construction workers were digging a big hole with a backhoe outside the lab. The backhoe accidentally backed into the hole (nobody hurt) so that only the bucket showed above ground. Within an hour a sign appeared on the fence outside the construction site: "Chinese laborer backhoes his way to freedom after perilous 8-thousand-mile journey. Film at 11:00"
 
Another great one is if you know somebody who doesn't touch-type, just replace the 'M' and 'N' keys.
"Back in the day" when keyboard key sizes were the same I swapped a co-worker's Ctrl and Alt keys. Mostly DOS (remember edlin anyone?) programs that took a Ctrl-C to stop from running. We laughed so hard when he couldn't stop the programs from running.
 
A pretty good one is to take the receiver out of the handset in a phone. They can hear, but nobody can hear them...
 
Had a guy at work who was a bit annoying - conversation about him was that he must have been the guy who had his lunch money stolen when he was a kid - one day my husband goes up to him and demands his lunch money - he hands it over and the rest of the office nearly died laughing.

They put a pinhole in my water bottle that leaked slowly while I took a drink - leaked all over my uniform (not a good thing) - of course I thought I had problems with my mouth until everyone atarted laughing at me - the culprit? yup - my future husband

He is the ultimate jokester at work - I've laughed so hard sometimes - he really does know how to have fun while working
 
Used to page people with phone numbers like the police department, the gay hotline, etc....

Had a group of maintenance guys all in one small [-]torture chamber[/-] office area. I programmed all their phone numbers into speed dial, and used to play "bounce the ring around the room"...

In one factory where I worked, guys using a grinding wheel to remove welding burrs wore aprons, the strings of which, inexplicably, would burst into flames, with a little help from a cig lighter... >:D
 
When I was in 8th grade we had a crusty old Civics teacher that liked to use film strips as a teaching tool. The smart alect who sat next to me hollowed out a book and packed it with batteries and flashbulbs. When the room was completely dark he triggered it and everyone was temporarily blinded, allowing him to stow the book. The Civics teacher looked and looked afterward but never found the evidence. I ran in to said smart alec at my 30 year HS reunion - yep, an engineer, now. :LOL:

I used to carefully wrap the prongs of the Civic teacher's projector cord with electrical tape and plug it back in. It drove him crazy wondering why even a new bulb wouldn't fix it. :angel:
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom