Australia One Year Behind On New Year’s Day
1 January 2019
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Picture with typo goes viral on Twitter

A ‘Happy New Year’ projection with a typo in the year is seen during New Year’s Eve celebrations in Sydney, Australia, on January 1, 2019.

The spectacular fireworks show on Sydney’s harbour that rang in 2019 and dazzled spectators around the world was picture perfect, except for one element — it got the year wrong.

More than 1.5 million people packed the harbour front of Australia’s largest city to watch the extravaganza, and noticed a signage beamed onto one of the Sydney Harbour Bridge’s pylons had the words “Happy New Year 2018!”

Photos of the typo were shared on social media sites.

“According to Sydney, it’s still 2018, so I’m going back to bed,” one Twitter user quipped. Another wrote: “Oh will this horrible year never end.”

Organisers the City of Sydney, who invested huge resources and time into planning one of the world’s first New Year’s parties, saw the funny side of the mistake.

“We just laughed about it, you know these things happen as we said, it takes 15 months to organise an event of this size and scale,” the fireworks’ executive producer Anna McInerney said.