Akademik

coffee-spitter
n.
Something that is outrageous, shocking, or upsetting, particularly a newspaper headline or article. Also: coffee spitter.
Example Citation:
On Saturday, Feb. 8, the New York Post went predictably bonkers with a story headlined "Nutty nudes protest war," about a group of naked people who registered their displeasure with the Iraq buildup by spelling out "No Bush" while lying in the snow in front of Central Park's Bethesda Fountain on Feb. 7.
It made for a fun read, one that played rather neatly into the Post's gung-ho attitude about an Iraqi invasion and its general glib dismissal of protesters, naked or not. But the full-color photo accompanying the piece was a little bit of a coffee-spitter, since even though it was a long-distance shot, it clearly contained multiple vaginas.
— Sridhar Pappu, "Libeskind Acolytes Barrage The Times Attacking Muschamp," New York Observer, February 17, 2003
Earliest Citation:
It was one of those stories we in the business call by a variety of names — Hey, Martha' (as in, Hey, Martha, look at this); a coffee spitter; an outrage story — because it is a compelling read that will get people talking.
— "Solutions to complex problems come one at a time," Austin American-Statesman, October 27, 1997
Related Words:
charticle
cheapuccino
driveway effect
Hey Mabel effect
latte art
latte factor
marmalade-dropper
muffin-choker
Second Coming type
Categories:
Food and Drink
Media and Journalism

New words. 2013.