Famous hoaxes
Hoax
- noun: a deliberate deception, for humor or mal (bad) intent
- verb: to deceive deliberately
This page is a list of famous hoaxes See also
Academic hoaxes[edit | edit source]
Sokal Affair[edit | edit source]
- a hoax by Professor of Physics Alan Sokal
- Sokal published a paper purporting to take seriously the idea that the laws of physics are social constructs
- he objective was to satirize post-modernist theories in the social sciences
- link to his paper: Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity (nyu.edu)
- see:
April Fools hoaxes and pranks[edit | edit source]
- for list of pranks, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_April_Fools%27_Day_jokes
- see Geographic hoaxes below for fake volcano April Fools pranks
Sid Finch Sports Illustrated hoax[edit | edit source]
- in its April 1, 1985 issue, Sports Illustrated rana story about a yoga-practicing baseball pitcher who could throw the ball 168 mph
- named Hayden Siddhartha "Sidd" Finch
- he was supposedly raised in an English orphanage and had gone to Tibet to study under a Buddhist monk
- the story claimed that Finch chose not to play baseball and instead decided to "play the French horn or golf or something"
- Finch was pictured throwing the ball in bare feet
- the NY Mets participated in the hoax with players and coaches appearing with Finch
- see The Curious Case of Sidd Finch (bostonbaseball.com)
Spaghetti trees hoax[edit | edit source]
- in 1957, a British BBV TV program ran a fake report on "spaghetti trees" in Switzerland
- the report showed Swiss workers harvesting spaghetti from trees
- others have copied the hoax, including in California
Taco Liberty Bell hoax[edit | edit source]
- on April 1, 1996, Taco Bell published ads in 7 newspapers claiming the company had purchased the Liberty Bell
- the purpose was to "reduce the country's debt"
- it would, however, be renamed the "Taco Liberty Bell".
General hoaxes[edit | edit source]
Geographic hoaxes[edit | edit source]
April's Fool volcano prank[edit | edit source]
- on April 1, 1974, pranksters climbed atop the dormant 3002 ft high volcano, Mt. Edgecumbe, near Sitka, Alaska
- a helicopter had dropped off old tires, kerosene, smoke bombs and rags, which the pranksters lit and threw into the crater
- a Coast Guard helicopter was dispatched to observe the eruption and instead saw a man standing by spray-painted show reading, "APRIL FOOL."
- see
- https://school4schools.com/wiki/index.php?title=Geography_fun_facts_%26_oddities#Volcanos
- https://www.iflscience.com/environment/the-greatest-april-fools-day-prank-of-all-time-took-four-years-to-plan-and-involved-a-volcano/ Greatest April Fools Day Prank of All Time (iflscience.com)]
- http://hoaxes.org/af_database/permalink/the_eruption_of_mount_edgecumbe/
Great Blue Hill eruption prank[edit | edit source]
- at 6:00 pm on April 1, 1980, a Milton, MA news station aired a fake news bulletin that announced that a nearby, small mountain was erupting
- the report was one week after the tremendous eruption of Mt. St. Helens
- the report showed edited statements of concern by Massachusetts Governor and President Carter
- panicked residents called the police and the state Civil Defense office
- some were reported to have fled the area
- at 11:00 the state apologized for the hoax
- the producer of the 6:00 news segment was fired the next day
- in addition "failure to exercise good news judgment," the producer had also violated FCC rules regarding use of "stock footage" (old news footage) without identifying it as such
- in addition "failure to exercise good news judgment," the producer had also violated FCC rules regarding use of "stock footage" (old news footage) without identifying it as such
Historical hoaxes[edit | edit source]
Religious hoaxes[edit | edit source]
The Da Vinci Code (Christianity)[edit | edit source]
- while a work of fiction, Dan Brown's series, "The Da Vinci Code" is based on an unsupported claim that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were married
Letter of Benan (Christianity)[edit | edit source]
- in 1910, Ernst Edler von der Planitz claimed he had discovered a 5th century Coptic (ancient Egyptian derivative language) text
- he claimed it was a translation from a Greek text in 83 AD
- the text was about the encounters of an Egyptian physician with Jesus and the apostles
The Protocols of the Elders of Zion (Judaism)[edit | edit source]
- published in 1903 in Russia, which was strongly anti-Semitic (anti-Jewish) at the time
- a literary forgery, the papers outlined Jewish plans for global domination
Scientology (cult)[edit | edit source]
- technically not a hoax, as its inventor did not deliberately aim to deceive or he never admitted it
- however, its practices have been questioned by governments, medical experts, and theologians
- especially the claim of secret Scientology texts that were created 70 million years ago by an outer space alien ruler
- in 1950 author L. Ron Hubbard published, "Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science" in a science fiction magazine
- the book mentioned the term, "Scientology"
- Hubbard, who had undergone psychiatric treatment, hated psychology and offered a new counseling treatment, "Dianetics"
- it was intended to be a form of psychotherapy, but he morphed into a "religious philosophy" in 1952
- he said he created it as "scientific rather than religious" thought
- however, after being banned from running a medical clinic, he established it as a religious organization, instead
- over 25,000 people follow Scientology today
The Unknown Life of Jesus Christ[edit | edit source]
- in 1894, a Russian journalist published a book that claimed historical evidence that Jesus had visited India and studied under Hindu & Buddhist priests