Klmat-aghnyh-sdam-yabw-aday Review
Try swapping 1st & last, 2nd & 2nd last etc. within each part: klmat: k↔t → tlmak → "tlmak" no.
, maybe this is an encoded phrase that says something like "interesting report: [this string]" and the string itself is a puzzle.
Given the playful nature, I'll guess it's a after removing hyphens: klmataghnyhsdamyabwaday reversed = yadawbaymadsyhnyghatamlk — no. klmat-aghnyh-sdam-yabw-aday
But "yada yada" is a phrase (aday aday reversed), "mads" is a word, "yabw" reversed is "wbay" — maybe "WBAY" is a TV station? Then "klmat" reversed = "tamlk" — possibly an anagram of "talking"?
k (11th letter) ↔ p (16th) — let's check systematically? Might be tedious manually. Try swapping 1st & last, 2nd & 2nd last etc
This looks like a coded or scrambled phrase. Let me try to see if it's a simple substitution or rearrangement.
Could be the phrase is: but with cipher. Given the playful nature, I'll guess it's a
But "yabw" reversed "wbay" — maybe "wb" as in "web" + "ay" → "webay"? Unlikely.