Home » Mystery 23-Mile-Long Yellow Line On Highway Confuses Everyone And Leads To Possible Explanation

Mystery 23-Mile-Long Yellow Line On Highway Confuses Everyone And Leads To Possible Explanation

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Human brains are kind of strange things, especially when it comes to tasks like driving. We’re really surprisingly good at driving, considering that nothing in our evolution could have predicted that we’d need to process visual information and react to it physically at speeds of a mile-a-minute, yet we somehow can pull it off just fine. At the same time, it’s remarkable how much we rely on visual cues like road lines and markings. When those visual cues are disordered, even if rationally we can understand that something is off, and we can see what should be right, just the presence of the misplaced marker manages to make everything really confusing. A great demonstration of this happened on Interstate 95 around Jacksonville, Florida, when a 23-mile long yellow line appeared on the highway, weaving among lanes and generally being confusing.

The line looks pretty much just like a conventional yellow road marking-type of line, though it’s just one line, not a double yellow or a broken yellow or some combination. Just a yellow line, straight but meandering among lanes with the ruthless abandon of a flock of starlings.

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Local news coverage has been predictably delighted, with news trucks following the line from where it starts at the base of the Acosta Bridge to where it ends, at the gates of a company in an industrial park called Acme Barricades:

It’s probably worth noting that Acme Barricades lists among its services Thermoplastic Pavement Marking and Profiled Pavement Marking, and Road Paint striping, any of which could have been the method used to lay down 23 miles of yellow stripe.

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So far no company, Acme included, has taken credit for the Great Yellow Stripe, but is it really that hard to figure out? It leads right to a company with the equipment to paint road lines? Maybe someone forgot to turn off the line-spigot on the back of the truck? I’m just wildly guessing here, not accusing anyone of anything, mind you.

I mean, this could also be a set-up from a rival road striping firm? Does Acme Barricades have any enemies? Did they send one too many defective pairs of rocket shoes to a certain coyote?

As you can see from the videos, the line was at the very least confusing to drivers, and would likely play havoc with automated lane-keeping and semi-automated driving systems. It’s remarkable to think about how something as minor as an unexpected line of color can cause so many problems, but that’s just how it works.

The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) is in for a tricky time as they figure out how to remove the line. Painting over it may simply make it even more visually prominent, for example.

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FDOT Community Outreach Manager Hampton Ray was asked by news outlets of the department’s plans:

“We’re going to have an operation, where we take a street sweeper, with a wire brush, and we will be going and doing our best to dislodge some of the yellow paint from the roadway. We do not expect this to be the end-all solution.”

Man, what a mess. I tried reaching out to Acme Barricades, but got no response. I wonder if everyone in Acme Barricades was just told to lay low until the shit blows over?

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Drive By Commenter
Drive By Commenter
1 year ago

This is why adults drink coffee, kids.

James Davidson
James Davidson
1 year ago

Auditioning for one of the new writer/editor spots… The phrase should have been reckless abandon, not ” ruthless abandon”…

KevFC
KevFC
1 year ago
Reply to  James Davidson

Do you really think the editors are looking with reckless abandon for writers who only ejaculate standard phrases?

Chris D
Chris D
1 year ago
Reply to  KevFC

Standard English would be a very good thing to employ when working in the field of journalism.

KevFC
KevFC
1 year ago
Reply to  Chris D

I would expect standard usage in the NYT or WSJ, but in Autopian nothing wrong with a little fun with words in addition to fun with cars. “Ruthless abandon” was quite possibly an error but it is perfectly fine English with its own connotation.

M K
M K
1 year ago
Reply to  KevFC

Torch makes up words and phrases all the time…and honestly it works. Everyone gets the gist of his colorful lexicon and we are all better for it. Keep it up Torch, I don’t want to be spork-fed the news in standard issue packets…AI could do that.

Vetatur Fumare
Vetatur Fumare
1 year ago
Reply to  KevFC

As long as they never write “wreckless” (unless on purpose), I am perfectly fine.

Drew
Drew
1 year ago
Reply to  Vetatur Fumare

As long as they never write “wreckless” (unless on purpose), I am perfectly fine.

It works especially well when you use them both together: “To promote wreckless driving, we’ve been trying to discourage reckless driving. Make sure not to get those swapped, though, like this driver, who crashed while filming himself entering a roundabout at 95 mph.”

RataTejas
RataTejas
1 year ago
Reply to  Vetatur Fumare

irregardless still makes me twitch.

KevFC
KevFC
1 year ago
Reply to  RataTejas

Of course,“ear regardless” is often confused with “ear regardless” meaning irrespective of what you hear.

KevFC
KevFC
1 year ago
Reply to  KevFC

Disregard my previous post which should have said: Of course,“irregardless” is often confused with “ear regardless” meaning irrespective of what you hear.

RataTejas
RataTejas
1 year ago
Reply to  KevFC

+1 for using ejaculate in a non-sexual context. Superbly cromulent.

Chartreuse Bison
Chartreuse Bison
1 year ago
Reply to  James Davidson

It’s Torch, he makes point of never using normal phrases

The Dude
The Dude
1 year ago

They stole my idea I had for a garage sale when I was in college where I wanted to paint lines all over town leading to our house to attract visitors. Probably for the best we were too lazy to action on my idea…

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 year ago

All I can think of is Kramer painting the lines out the door of his awesome
“Experimental” 73 Impala
“Wide open lanes!”

KevFC
KevFC
1 year ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

My first thought. And then, “Oh the humanity!”

Stacks
Stacks
1 year ago

We’re really surprisingly good at driving

I’ve heard several people who live in chill areas with low traffic density and no commute say this lately.

SLM
SLM
1 year ago

It’s just ACME© YellowBrickRoad® New version.

Hugh Crawford
Hugh Crawford
1 year ago

It’s a good thing that the stripe is not painted with Acme tunnel paint, you would have cars just falling right into it. Well at least it would probably be worse that those San Francisco cable car slots.

James Davidson
James Davidson
1 year ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

Love this!

Balloondoggle
Balloondoggle
1 year ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

Oh, what if it opened up a 23 mile long crevasse? Florida’s version of the San Andreas fault. Hey, if we ever get angry enough at Florida we can just run a line of tunnel paint along I-10 and wave goodby as the peninsula floats off to Cuba.

Bob
Bob
1 year ago

But really, don’t we all know that the *other* end of the Acme Company’s yellow line leads directly to a tunnel opening that has been painted onto a cliff face?

[dit dit dit Meep Meep!]

UnseenCat
UnseenCat
1 year ago
Reply to  Bob

Nah, they slapped down an ACME© Portable Hole™, dived in and escaped!

Cayde-6
Cayde-6
1 year ago
Reply to  Bob

Are cliffs even geologically possible in Florida?

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 year ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

Sure are: they call them sinkholes

ok, ok, I know where the door is!

Bob
Bob
1 year ago
Reply to  Cayde-6

I think ACME just painted a cliff face on the back of a Best Buy. Same result.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 year ago

Someone forgot to read the MUTCD (Google it)

Scott Morrison
Scott Morrison
1 year ago

Several years ago a crew forgot to turn off the yellow paint and made a u-turn just past an intersection in the Charlotte area.

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 year ago

Or, hear me out, someone was trying to find the secret local Stonecutters lodge, and it just happens to be in an unassuming building somewhere in the same industrial park as Acme Barricades

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
1 year ago

Funny/typical how the local news, once at Acme, does a quick close up of a vat of paint with an open spigot, but avoids actually showing any context, that it’s in fact sitting on Acme’s lot, etc. and then specifically does not directly address what it just showed.

Frankencamry
Frankencamry
1 year ago

If I were Acme, I might also have a lane striping truck load up some asphalt gray paint under cover of darkness.

Jack Trade
Jack Trade
1 year ago
Reply to  Frankencamry

Or Kramer in his Impala.

Harvey Park Bench
Harvey Park Bench
1 year ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

Or Rob in his old Discovery, dripping oil naturally onto the strip.

Who am I kidding, that line is 23 miles long, the Disco would never make it.

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
1 year ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

This has ASSMAN written all over it. Mystery solved.

Parsko
Parsko
1 year ago
Reply to  Frankencamry

Absolutely this. This yellow line would be gone tomorrow if it were me.

Dodsworth
Dodsworth
1 year ago
  1. World’s longest first down marker.
  2. Captain Queeg, have you ever heard the term, “Old Yellow Stain?”
  3. Kramer!
Hillbilly Ocean
Hillbilly Ocean
1 year ago

All I know is that regular random wheel marks etc give my VW’s steering help absolute fits. This line…oh man

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 year ago

Sounds like Acme has a big yellow stripe up its back.

Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
1 year ago

a company that makes everything doesn’t necessarily make everything good

Stink E. Jones
Stink E. Jones
1 year ago

All I can think about is 23 miles of my wife’s Subaru flashing a “lane departure” warning and trying to correct the issue, and more importantly how dangerous that might be–especially people who might not know how to disable it quickly before it cancels itself out.

Soso Tsundere
Soso Tsundere
1 year ago

This would have been more Florida if the line had started at a recently robbed bank check cashing place.

Parsko
Parsko
1 year ago
Reply to  Soso Tsundere

COTD

Mr Sarcastic
Mr Sarcastic
1 year ago

Well can’t assume anything but yeah that ACME company is always making defective roadrunner trapping company why not this? But duck and cover bad idea.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 year ago

As my late civil engineer uncle who worked on interstate projects used to say: “expect the uninspected.”

A. Barth
A. Barth
1 year ago

Thaaat’s a good one. Clever guy, your uncle.

Balloondoggle
Balloondoggle
1 year ago

I work in municipal permitting. I’m using this.

Thank you SOOO much.

TOSSABL
TOSSABL
1 year ago

Housekeeping note: 4th paragraph states the line is 23 feet long, not 23 miles

oops: A. Barth notes the typo in the very first comment

Last edited 1 year ago by TOSSABL
Chris D
Chris D
1 year ago
Reply to  TOSSABL

That makes it much, much less of a story.

AssMatt
AssMatt
1 year ago

Starlings are indeed renowned for their lack of ruth.

Eggsalad
Eggsalad
1 year ago

I believe Acme Barricades is where Wile E. Coyote purchased his road-striping paint.

Andy Individual
Andy Individual
1 year ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Their trompe l’oeil tunnel paint is amazing too!

A. Barth
A. Barth
1 year ago

Man, what a mess. I tried reaching out to Acme Barricades, but got no response.

Acme Barricades was… blocking you?

any of which could have been the method used to lay down 23 feet of yellow stripe

Or 23 miles of yellow stripe 🙂

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