Warning: mkdir() [
function.mkdir]: Permission denied in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
12
Warning: mkdir() [
function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
12
Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/50/50ee4d27ace775dcbf5885919fe5783e0cc287fa.tc2cache) [
function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
130
Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
131
Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
132
A
hoax is an attempt to deception an audience into believing that something false is real. There is often some material object (e.g., snake oil) involved which is actually a forgery; however, it is possible to perpetrate a hoax by making only true statements using unfamiliar wording or context (see
Dihydrogen monoxide hoax). Unlike a
fraud or
confidence trick (which is usually aimed at a single victim and are made for illicit financial or material gain), a hoax is often perpetrated as a practical joke, to cause embarrassment, or to provoke social change by making people aware of something. Many hoaxes are motivated by a desire to
satire or educate by exposing the credulity of the public and the media or the absurdity of the target. For instance, the hoaxes of
James Randi poke fun at believers in the
paranormal. The many hoaxes of Alan Abel and
Joey Skaggs satirize people's willingness to believe the media. Political hoaxes are sometimes motivated by the desire to ridicule or besmirch opposing politicians or political institutions, often before elections.
Governments often perpetrate hoaxes to assist them with unpopular aims such as going to war (e.g., the
Ems Dispatch). In fact, there is often a mixture of outright hoax, and
Censorship to give the desired impression. In wartime, Rumor abound; some may be deliberate hoaxes.
There is often considerable controversy about whether a given factoid is true or a hoax.
The word
hoax is said to have come from the common magic (illusion) incantation
Hocus Pocus (magic). "Hocus pocus", in turn, is commonly believed to be a distortion of "hoc est corpus" ("this is the body") from the Latin
mass (liturgy). Many etymology dispute the latter claim.
Character of hoaxes
Hoaxes are not always created, initiated or sourced the same way. Examples:
- Hoax by tradition (see below)
- Hoax by design (such as in war)
- Hoax originating in legitimate non-hoax use (see email hoax below)
- Hoax by scare tactics (virus hoaxes)
- Urban legend
This is by no means a complete list; but the import is to show that hoaxes take many forms. The main characteristic of hoaxes is presenting the information or media as something real or believable to human understanding but is in fact false. Whether there is intent to deceive is not part of the hoax characteristics, as hoaxes are known both with and without it.
Other hoaxes
- Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre radio Broadcasting on October 30, 1938, entitled "The War of the Worlds (radio)" has been called the "single greatest mass media hoax of all time", although it was not — Welles said — intended to be a hoax. The broadcast was heard on CBS radio stations throughout the United States. Despite repeated announcements within the program that it was a work of fiction, many listeners tuning in during the program believed that the world was being attacked by invaders from Mars (planet). (Rumors claim some even committed suicide.) Rebroadcasts in South America also had this effect even to a greater extent. The War of the Worlds, search on "South America". See also Broadcast Remakes It has also been suggested that the story of the hoax is, in fact, a hoax, or at least a significant exaggeration: that the broadcast did not cause widespread panic .
- Wolfgang von Kempelen construction of the chess-playing The Turk in 1770.
- The Protocols of the Elders of Zion () is an antisemitism literary forgery that purports to describe a Jewish Conspiracy (political) to achieve world domination.
- The 1934 "Surgeon's Photograph" of the Loch Ness Monster#Photographs and films, revealed some sixty years later to have been a plastic head and neck mounted to a toy submarine.
- The Bathtub hoax, perpetrated by American journalist and satirist H. L. Mencken in 1918, which was cited as factual even after the hoax had been revealed by the author.
- The Great Moon Hoax of 1835, which helped to establish the market position of the New York Sun (historical).
- The Cardiff Giant of 1869, which was created and "discovered"; reputedly after an argument about the reality of giants.
- Our First Time, possibly one of the first major internet hoaxes, although some characterized it as a botched scam.
- Idaho, the northwestern US state, was named as the result of a hoax. Lobbyist George M. Willing suggested the name, claiming it was a Native Americans in the United States term meaning "gem of the mountains." It was later discovered that Willing had made up the word himself. As a result, the original Idaho Territory was renamed Colorado. Eventually, the controversy was forgotten and the made-up name stuck.
- The Sokal Affair was a fake paper published in the journal Social Text, which was intended to reveal the uncritical misuse of scientific terms and ignorance of science in the field of postmodern cultural studies.
- The Piltdown Man fraud caused some embarrassment to the field of paleontology when apparently ancient hominid remains discovered in England in 1912 were revealed as a hoax some 41 years later.
- In 1970, Clifford Irving and Richard Suskind contrived to write an autobiography of Howard Hughes, believing Hughes would not come out of hiding to denounce it. Irving sent a manuscript to his publisher McGraw-Hill in late 1971. Authentication tests and Hughes's initial silence led some to believe the manuscript was genuine, but Hughes eventually gave a teleconference by phone denying both participation in the book and knowledge of Irving. Weeks later, Irving confessed to the hoax and was later convicted of fraud. He served 17 months of a two and a half year prison sentence. Suskind, sentenced to six months, served five.
- The Hitler Diaries; the 1983 forgeries claiming to be the diary of Adolf Hitler.
- In 1928 Margaret Mead published Coming of Age in Samoa, a book largely concerned with the sexual practices of adolescents in Samoa. In 1983, five years after Mead's death, Derek Freeman published Margaret Mead and Samoa: The Making and Unmaking of an Anthropological Myth, in which he said that he had interviewed the sources of Mead's information, and was told that they had hoaxed Mead. Freeman's conclusions are controversial.
- The Cottingley Fairies, a series of trick photographs taken by two young British girls from 1917 to 1920.
- The alien autopsy film, supposedly footage of the examination of an Extraterrestrial life which had purportedly died in the Roswell UFO incident. The film, presented by Ray Santilli in 1995, was later revealed to have been faked by Santilli and Gary Shoefield.
- In the late 1970s and early 1980s, photographer Robert B. Stein created convincing Unidentified flying object photographs using only a Kodak Pocket InstaMatic camera and throwable discs, and claimed to be a contactee. His pictures appeared in many publications devoted to the paranormal. In 1985, he revealed how it was done.
- Rosie Ruiz finished first in the women's division of the 1980 Boston Marathon by riding the subway to a point near the finish line and jumping back into the race. Her marathon title was revoked when the hoax was discovered.
- The sale of the Eiffel Tower for scrap, an elaborate scam run twice by the master con artist Victor Lustig.
- American con artist George C. Parker made his living selling and re-selling public monuments in New York City.
- The Helius Project, about a non-existent alien being communicating with people on Earth, launched in 2003 and still online. http://heliusproject.bravehost.com Many people who interacted with Helius argue that Helius is real.
- Project Alpha, a hoax conceived by stage magician James Randi to fool psychic researchers.
- The Carlos hoax, another creation of The Amazing Randi, staged to discredit the New Age belief called trance channelling.
- The residents of Palisade, Nevada, once earned their living by pretending to be the "toughest town in the West". The violence was actually an elaborate show put on for tourists arriving on the train.
- Georg Paul Thomann, a fictional artist created by the group monochrom, who represented the Republic of Austria at the Sao Paulo Art Biennial. During the course of the event, no one had realized that the artist never really existed.
- The Priory of Sion (French:Prieuré de Sion), an alleged secret order sworn to defend the mythical Jesus bloodline which protected Jesus' descendants, including the Merovingian rulers of France and their heirs, was fabricated by French royalist Pierre Plantard in the 1950s as part of a personal plan to become King of France; fake documents created as part of the hoax have been included in best sellers purporting to be non-fiction such as The Holy Blood and the Holy Grail as well as novels such as Dan Brown's controversial The Da Vinci Code.
- The Paul is dead hoax of 1969 had it that the famous bassist of The Beatles was actually replaced after he had a fatal car accident in the late 1960s. "Clues" have been discovered by fans on different Beatles songs and album covers. This hoax was not started by The Beatles themselves (although they seemed to anticipate it in the song Glass Onion, released a year before the hoax took off), and Paul McCartney is one of the two Beatles still alive as of October 2007.
- Bonsai Kitten, an Internet hoax consisting of a fictional domain of a company that sold kittens inside jars as ornaments.
- In early summer 2006 an Internet hoax went around saying Jaleel White of the TV show Family Matters (TV series) committed suicide, mirroring similar urban legends of other celebrity suicides and deaths.
- In what became known as the Berners Street Hoax in 1810, Theodore Hook tricked hundreds of people into showing up at 54 Berners Street, London.
- In 2006, A.N. Wilson was the victim of a hoax when he included a love letter by John Betjeman in his biography of the poet. It turned out to be a fake letter with an acrostic that said "AN Wilson is a shit".Brooks, Richard "Betjeman love letter is horrid hoax", The Sunday Times, August 27, 2006. Retrieved on 28 August, 2006. The letter was sent to Wilson by "Eve de Harben", who then wrote to The Sunday Times. Wilson's arch rival, Betjeman's authorized biographer, Bevis Hillier, initially denied all knowledge (the envelope sent to the newspaper was bought in Hillier's home town, Winchester).{{cite news
| last = Brooks
| first = Richard
| title = Betjeman biographer confesses to literary hoax
| publisher = The Sunday Times
| date = [2006-09-03
| url = http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2340567,00.html
| accessdate = 2006-09-05 -->Hillier subsequently admitted being responsible.
- In April, 1985, Sports Illustrated ran a profile written by George Plimpton of an amazing new pitching prospect for the New York Mets named Sidd Finch. Finch was a student of yoga ("Sidd" being short for "Siddhartha") who had studied with Tibetan monks to perfect his pitching and claimed to throw a 168 mph fastball. The Mets helped with the initial story but the magazine admitted to the hoax on April 15.
- Dead fairy hoax: On April 1, 2007, an illusion designer for magicians posted on his website some images illustrating the corpse of an unknown eight-inch creation, which was claimed to be the mummified remains of a fairy. He later sold the fairy on eBay for £280." April fool fairy sold on internet" from BBC News. Retrieved on July 31, 2007.
- De Grote Donorshow, a hoax reality television program which was broadcast in the Netherlands on Friday, June 1, 2007 by BNN. The program involved a supposedly terminally ill 37-year-old woman donating a kidney to one of three people requiring a kidney transplantation. Viewers were able to send advice on who they think she should choose to give her kidney to via text messages. After the airing of the show, 50.000 people had requested a donor form.
Famous Musical Hoaxes
(Music composed by purported existent or nonexistent individuals but in reality composed by someone else)
Other Musical Hoaxes
- Recordings by the pianist Joyce Hatto
- The voices of Milli Vanilli
Hoax traditions
During certain events and at particular times of year, hoaxes are perpetrated by many people and groups. The most famous of these is certainly
April Fool's Day, which is open season for pranks and dubious announcements.
A
New Zealand tradition is the capping stunt, wherein
university students perpetrate a hoax upon an unsuspecting population. The acts are traditionally executed near
graduation (the "capping").
Many Spanish-speaking countries have Innocent's Day, on December 28, to make "innocent" a person with jokes and hoaxes. The origin for the pranking is derived from the Catholic feast day
Massacre of the Innocents#Feast days for the infants slaughtered by King Herod at the time of Jesus' birth.
Email hoax
An example email hoax is a doctored image distributed via chain emails, as pictured here. The photo image imbedded in this email was actually intended for an online photo-manipulation contest and not for distribution as a falsehood, but was distributed by another person who allegedly attributed the photo as originating from a 1954 Popular Mechanics Magazine article. In truth, the magazine never published it in 1954, but they did publish an article in December 2004 exposing it as a hoax. Popular Mechanics Magazine, December 9, 2004
Careful examination of the image will typically reveal unnatural flaws in it; for example, shadows and lighting. The television set appears to be hung on the wall without any apparent means of supporting mechanisms, and the shadow is wrong. The man has shadows on his clothing inconsistent with the surrounding lighting, and he has no shadow on the wall behind him. The form-feed paper exit on the front of the teletype printer is misaligned with the paper feed port at top, and the paper exit port is supposed to be behind and under the printer, not in the front. In addition, the computer's console is actually the Maneuvering/Reactor Control Panel of a nuclear submarine (specifically the
USS Trepang (SSN-674)) on display at the Smithsonian Institute.
In 2001 Helicopter Shark, purporting to be the "National Geographic Photo of the Year" and depicting a shark leaping from the sea to attack a helicopter crew member, was widely distributed by email, prompting the magazine to publish an article uncovering the hoax. As the article revealed, the image had been composited from two photographs taken in entirely different locations.
See also
Footnotes
References
External links
- The Culture Jammer’s Encyclopedia
- Virus Hoax Busters
- US DOE Computer Incident Advisory Capability (CIAC) Hoaxbusters Web Page
Hoax - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A hoax is a deliberate attempt to dupe, deceive or trick an audience into believing, or accepting, that something is real, when in fact it is not; or that something is true, when ...
BBC NEWS | UK | England | Oxfordshire | Book deal for dragon hoax ...
An author who created a hoax that a dragon had been found in his garage lands a lucrative book deal.
BBC NEWS | Entertainment | TV kidney competition was a hoax
A Dutch TV competition in which patients vied to win a dying woman's kidneys is revealed as a hoax.
BBC Inside Out - Rendlesham UFO hoax
BBC Inside Out uncovers the mystery of the Rendlesham UFO ... Web interview: Inside Out reveals exclusive new evidence: Watch an extended interview with Kevin Conde - part one
NASA's Moon Hoax
Examines numerous claims the Apollo Moon landings were hoaxes constructed by NASA.
'Biggest drawing in world' revealed as hoax - Telegraph
A Swedish artist who claimed to have drawn the biggest picture in the world using a GPS device stuffed inside a briefcase has been exposed as a hoaxer.
Humorous Hoaxes, Practical Jokes, Pranks, Humorous hoax phone calls.
practical jokes, humorous hoaxes, april fool pranks, funny asbos to 'wind anyone up'. plus, jokes, spoofs, practical jokes to play , prank ideas.
The Apollo Hoax
this article was written to prove, once and for all, that we are not being told the truth about the nasa film footage of the apollo missions.
AskOxford: hoax
hoax • noun a humorous or malicious deception. • verb deceive with a hoax. — DERIVATIVES hoaxer noun. — ORIGIN probably a contraction of obsolete hocus trickery, from ...
WARNING - Hoax emails
The Institute of Food Research (IFR) undertake independent science for food and health. Research at the Institute of Food Research stimulates industrial innovation, improves the ...