Foot job. Very nice. They're great images for "footwork" also, but dancing, boxing, and basketball aren't naughty most of the time.
I've had one posted in this thread for more than a month that no one has gotten, since 6 July. Answer: pindick (a compound noun, as previously indicated). Perhaps it was a bit too intergenerational. The image of the "pin" will be familiar as the symbol for a particular location on a digiital map to anyone using 21st century technology - a phone rarely used for voice calls. The image of Dick Tracy is from a newspaper comic strip that began in 1931 and once reached 50 million readers. It isn't totally obscure. It was popular, and the main character, the eponymous Dick, was the title subject of feature films with wide releases in both 1945 and 1990. DIck Tracy is a tech-savvy, hard-as-nails plain-clothes police detective, who had something very much like a modern Apple watch back in the 1930s. Although print newspaper journalism has certainly fallen on very hard times in the last decade, the comic strip remained very popular for as long as newspaper comics did.