A clip of a randy couple having sex in a Vienna underground has become an internet sensation.
The camera phone video footage shows a young man having intercourse with a woman in a train of the Wiener Linien’s U1 U-Bahn service. While he is standing with his pants down, his partner is on one of the carriage's seats.
The horny pair do not seem to be bothered by the soaring number of passengers filming their actions on their mobile phones.
Footage of the incident has been watched hundreds of thousands times on video platforms like YouTube. Some platforms immediately deleted the clips after being put online for violating their conditions of use.
Answer Lang – a spokesman for Wiener Linien, the Austrian capital’s public transport agency – said today (Thurs): "This could have been the first time such a thing happened on one of our trains. No one reported the couple to the police. It’s impossible to avoid such incidents."
Wiener Linien made headlines in less amusing context earlier this month when more than 200 passengers got stuck in a U4 line train in a tunnel near Schottenring station after a power outage for two hours.
The company’s error management guidelines say that the evacuation of a faulty train must not take longer than 15 minutes.
Wiener Linien decided to offer eight-day rider tickets costing 28.80 Euros to the affected customers, but controversially dismissed appeals to compensate them financially.
Sat Dec 25, 2010 11:23 am
MarievonGablitz Site Admin
Joined: 13 Oct 2010 Posts: 183 Location: Austria
Thanks A Million
A millionaire who gave away all his cash to charity two years ago because it didn't make him happy has told how he's finally found contentment.
Businessman Karl Rabeder, 49 - from Telfs, Austria - sold his business, a luxury Alpine mansion, limos and sports cars, a private plane and donated the cash to a charity that sponsors small loans to customers in the Third World who would never be given cash by a bank.
He now lives on 1,000 GBP a month from fees for talks to businessmen about his new life and is buying a modest home.
"Only now am I happy. If you write down the things that really make you happy and their cost, you will realise what I mean," said Rabeder.
"Love, sunshine, fresh air - those are the things that make me happy," he added.
And he thanked the charity for taking his cash and finally letting him enjoy life.
"Having only a little money makes me happier. Seeing pictures of me back then as a millionaire, I look so miserable," he said.
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