List of hoaxes: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
Revanneosl (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
|||
Line 168: | Line 168: | ||
* ''[[The Amityville Horror]]'' - ghostly events reported by the buyers of a house where another family had been murdered {{harvcol||Hines|1988|pp=64–66}}. |
* ''[[The Amityville Horror]]'' - ghostly events reported by the buyers of a house where another family had been murdered {{harvcol||Hines|1988|pp=64–66}}. |
||
* [[Ghost Hunters]] - during a televised live [[Halloween]] special on October 31, 2008 [[Grant Wilson]] of [[The Atlantic Paranormal Society]] (TAPS) is widely believed to have been part of a hoax involving a coat pull incident that has been debunked and believed to have been rigged. ([[Ghost_Hunters#Criticism]]) |
* [[Ghost Hunters]] - during a televised live [[Halloween]] special on October 31, 2008 [[Grant Wilson]] of [[The Atlantic Paranormal Society]] (TAPS) is widely believed to have been part of a hoax involving a coat pull incident that has been debunked and believed to have been rigged. ([[Ghost_Hunters#Criticism]]) |
||
* [[Glocal Warming]] - the concept of man-made climate change |
|||
* [[Lake Anjikuni#Unsolved mystery|Lake Anjikuni]] - mysterious disappearance of Eskimos |
* [[Lake Anjikuni#Unsolved mystery|Lake Anjikuni]] - mysterious disappearance of Eskimos |
||
* The [[Southern Television broadcast interruption hoax (1977)]] |
* The [[Southern Television broadcast interruption hoax (1977)]] |
Revision as of 13:19, 20 October 2011
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2008) |
The following are lists of hoaxes:
Proven hoaxes
These are some claims that have been revealed to be deliberate public hoaxes. This list does not include hoax articles published on or around April 1, a long list of which can be found in the "April Fool's Day" article.
A-F
- George Adamski's claims to have gone into space in UFOs. His book was based on his earlier book of fiction.
- The Col de Vence Medusa
- Ray Santilli's Alien autopsy
- The Archko Volume, a collection of documents related to the life of Jesus.
- Avirginsplea.com, a website that was part of a viral marketing experiment (2006).
- The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk, a book about purported sexual enslavement of a nun
- The balloon boy hoax - a boy thought to be traveling at high altitudes in a home-made helium balloon was later discovered to be hiding in the attic of his house instead
- Bananadine, a fictional drug made from bananas
- Bathtub hoax, an imaginary history of the bathtub published by H.L. Mencken
- Berners Street Hoax in 1810
- Johann Beringer's "lying stones"
- Franz Bibfeldt, a fictitious theologian originally invented to provide a footnote for a divinity school student, which later became an in-joke among academic theologians.
- The Big Donor Show, a hoax reality television program in the Netherlands about a woman donating her kidneys to one of three people requiring a transplantation
- Biggest Drawing in the World, Erik Nordenankar's "drawing" of a self-portrait over the entire world using a GPS receiver[1]
- Jayson Blair's plagiarized and fabricated articles for the New York Times
- Steve Brodie, who did not jump from the Brooklyn Bridge
- Calaveras Skull
- The Cardiff Giant, of which P. T. Barnum made up a replica when he could not obtain the "genuine" hoax
- Andrew Carlssin, a nonexistent "time travelling" stock broker arrested for SEC violations.
- Thomas Chatterton's "medieval" poetry
- The Shakespeare discoveries of John Payne Collier
- The Cottingley Fairies
- Crop circles. English pranksters Doug Bower and Dave Chorley claimed they started the phenomenon, and hundreds of "copycat" circles have been fabricated since by other hoaxers.
- Donald Crowhurst who entered the Sunday Times Golden Globe Race in an attempt to become the first person to single-handedly sail around the world non-stop. Instead he abandoned the race early on but continued to report false positions in an attempt to make it appear as if he was still competing.
- Death in the Air: The War Diary and Photographs of a Flying Corps Pilot, a book containing World War I Aerial combat photos that were actually models superimposed on aerial backgrounds.
- Disappearing blonde gene
- Document 12-571-3570 supposedly establishing that sex had taken place during a space mission
- The Donation of Constantine
- Drake's Plate of Brass, accepted for 40 years as the actual plate Francis Drake posted upon visiting California in 1579
- George Dupre, who claimed to have worked for SOE
- The Education of Little Tree, widely acclaimed autobiography by Asa Earl Carter, later revealed to be fictional.
- Albert Einstein quotation supporting Astrology (Hamel 2007)
- Emulex hoax, a stock manipulation scheme
- The English Mercurie, a literary hoax purporting to be the first English language newspaper.
- Ern Malley, a fictitious poet
- Essjay controversy, a false claim of academic credentials, starting on Wikipedia and continued into a New Yorker interview
- The False Decretals
- Fiji mermaid, the supposed remains of a half fish half human hybrid.
- Sidd Finch, fictional baseball player[2]
- Spiritualist Arthur Ford's claim of psychic contact with Harry Houdini.
- Fragments: Memories of a Wartime Childhood 1939-1948, Binjamin Wilkomirski's memoirs, which were supposed to be a faithful account of his childhood in a Nazi death camp
- Furry trout
G-M
- Stephen Glass's falsified articles for The New Republic
- Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia claims by Eugenia Smith and Anna Anderson
- The Great Stock Exchange Fraud of 1814
- Gundala (film) a super hero movie that was promoted on the web despite the fact that it did not exist
- The Hand that Signed the Paper, purportedly based on the experiences of "Helen Demidenko", actually Helen Darville
- Hanxin, industrious and scientific hoax of a forgery Digital signal processor
- Recordings allegedly made by the pianist Joyce Hatto
- Jimi Hendrix supposed recording of the Welsh National Anthem - see The Red Dragonhood
- Joice Heth, African-American slave exhibited by P. T. Barnum as George Washington's nurse.
- Histoire de l'Inquisition en France, the 1829 book by Etienne Leon de Lamonthe-Langan
- The Hitler Diaries
- Supposed UK ban on teaching about the Holocaust - see Holocaust teaching controversy of 2007
- The Horn Papers
- The hundredth monkey effect, a supposed zoological behavioral phenomenon
- Idaho's name
- Il Bambino, a sculpture created by Michelangelo but sold as a classic Greek statue.
- The Ireland Shakespeare forgeries, a collection of Shakespeare-related documents supposedly discovered by William Henry Ireland and published in 1795 by his father, Samuel Ireland; the discoveries included a "lost" play, Vortigern and Rowena
- Clifford Irving's biography of Howard Hughes
- The Jackalope, supposedly a form of rabbit with antlers.
- Jdbgmgr.exe virus hoax
- Anthony Godby Johnson, a nonexistent author of a hoax autobiography A Rock and A Hard Place.
- The Lady Hope Story, a claim of Charles Darwin's deathbed conversion to Christianity
- Lobsang Rampa
- Enric Marco, who presented himself as a victim of the extermination camp of Mauthausen until uncovered in 2005.
- Mars hoax, a yearly hoax, started in 2003, falsely claiming that at a certain date Mars will look as large as the full moon
- The Masked Marauders, an album issued by a Warner Bros. Records subsidiary that reportedly featured a jam session between Bob Dylan, Mick Jagger, John Lennon and Paul McCartney. The perpetrator: Rolling Stone magazine.
- Memorial Heroes of Chernobyl - fake chess tournament
- Michelle Remembers, a memoir of Satanic child abuse
- The Microsoft hoax, a 1994 hoax claiming that Microsoft had acquired the Roman Catholic Church. The hoax is considered to be the first hoax to reach a mass audience on the Internet.
- The Moles' "We Are The Moles", a 1967 single promoted with not-so-subtle hints [who?] that it might be The Beatles recording under a pseudonym. It was actually recorded by Simon Dupree and the Big Sound - a 1960s UK pop group, members of whom later formed the progressive rock band Gentle Giant.
- Mon cher Mustapha letter, a letter supposedly written by a Muslim immigrant in France, designed to stir up anti-immigrant sentiment
- My 61 Memorable Games, a fake version of My 60 Memorable Games by Bobby Fischer
N-S
- Ompax spatuloides Castelnau, a fish "discovered" in 1872 in Australia, made of a mullet, an eel and the head of a platypus.
- The Works of Ossian, "translated" by James MacPherson
- "Our First Time", an early popularized Internet hoax.
- Edward Owens (hoax), perpetrated on the English-language Wikipedia in 2008 by a class at George Mason University.
- The Pacific Northwest tree octopus (Octopus paxarbolis)
- The shoot-outs of Palisade, Nevada
- Paul is dead (Paul McCartney death hoax)
- The perpetual motion engines built by John Ernst Worrell Keely and Charles Redheffer
- Pickled dragon
- Piltdown Man
- Platinum Weird, deliberate hoax by David A. Stewart and Kara DioGuardi about a non-existing band from 1974 promoted using false advertising.
- Pope Joan - the one and only supposed female pope.
- Princess Caraboo, aka Mary Baker
- The Priory of Sion, a made-up secret society that plays a prominent role in The DaVinci Code
- Progesterex, a date rape drug.
- The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, a book instrumental in the surge of antisemitism during the last hundred years.
- George Psalmanazar and his "Formosa"
- Psychic surgery
- Q33 NY, an Internet hoax based on the 9/11 event
- A Racial Program for the Twentieth Century
- Tamara Rand prediction of the 1981 assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan, which was actually made after the fact (Randi 1982:329).
- Rejecting Jane chronicles the rejection by publishing houses of the opening chapters of Jane Austen novels submitted to them under a pseudonym by British writer David Lassman.
- The Report From Iron Mountain, a literary hoax claiming that the government had concluded that peacetime was not in the economy's best interest.
- Rosie Ruiz, who cheated in the Boston Marathon
- Frank Scully's 1950 book Behind the Flying Saucers, which claimed that aliens from a crashed flying saucer were being held
- "Seriously McDonalds", a viral photograph apparently showing racist policies introduced by McDonald's.[3]
- The Skvader, a form of winged hare supposedly indigenous to Sweden.
- Songs of Bilitis, supposed ancient Greek poems "discovered" by Pierre Louÿs
- Space Cadets, a 2005 TV programme by Channel 4, in which contestants were fooled into thinking that they were training at a Russian space academy to become space tourists.
- The "R. E. Straith" letter sent to George Adamski by James W. Moseley (Moseley & Pflock 2002:124–27, 331–32).
- James Vicary's Subliminal advertising (Boese 2002:127–8)
- The "Surgeon's Photo" of the Loch Ness Monster
T-Z
- Thatchergate Tapes, a fake conversation with which the punk rock band Crass fooled the governments of the USA and UK.
- Robert Tilton's "prayer cloths"
- John Titor's time travelling claims
- Mary Toft, rabbit mother
- Toothing, an invented fad about people using Bluetooth phones to arrange sexual encounters
- Tourist guy, fake photo of a tourist at the top of the World Trade Center building on 9/11 with a plane about to crash in the background
- Trodmore Racecourse, a fictitious Cornish race meeting.
- The Turk, a chess-playing automaton that actually contained a person.
- Tuxissa, a computer virus hoax.
- Benjamin Vanderford's beheading video
- Villejuif leaflet, a pamphlet distributed in Europe with claims of various food additives having carcinogenic effects.
- Southern Television broadcast interruption hoax (1977), hoax message inserted into a IBA broadcast in the United Kingdom on 26 November 1977.
- David Weiss a non existing person that was used by the Jerusalem Post as a source.
- Laurel Rose Willson's claims to be a survivor of Satanic ritual abuse (as Lauren Stratford), and of the Holocaust (as Laura Grabowski)
- Yellowcake forgery, the false documents suggesting Iraq's Saddam Hussein was to purchase uranium from Niger
- Zzxjoanw, a fictitious word that fooled logologists for 70 years
Proven hoaxes of exposure
"Proven hoaxes of exposure" are semi-comical or private sting operations. They usually encourage people to act foolishly or credulously by falling for patent nonsense that the hoaxer deliberately presents as reality. See also culture jamming.
- The Atlanta Nights hoax
- The British television series Brass Eye encouraged celebrities to pledge their support to nonexistent causes, to highlight their willingness to do anything for publicity.
- The Centaur from Volos displayed at the John C. Hodges library at The University of Tennessee
- Carlos, a fictional spirit medium created by James Randi and Jose Luis Alvarez.
- Crop circles
- Dihydrogen monoxide hoax
- Disumbrationism
- Genpets, the bio-engineered pet creatures
- Grunge speak, an alleged slang of the Seattle rock underground, concocted by a Sub Pop employee and profiled in the New York Times
- ID Sniper rifle, a rifle that shoots GPS chips to mark and track suspects
- The Lovelump bio-engineered sex toy
- Project Alpha - exposed poor research into psychic phenomena
- Pacific Northwest tree octopus, by Lyle Zapato
- Sina, the Society for Indecency to Naked Animals
- Media pranks of Joey Skaggs
- The Sokal Affair
- The Taxil hoax by Léo Taxil, poking fun at Freemasonry
- The avant-garde "music" of "Piotr Zak"
- The practice of growing Bonsai Kittens
- January 2009 Quadrant Hoax
- The "Commercial Whaling New Zealand" spokesman Jay Pryor on TVNZ Breakfast
Possible hoaxes
- The Amityville Horror - ghostly events reported by the buyers of a house where another family had been murdered ( & Hines 1988:64–66).
- Ghost Hunters - during a televised live Halloween special on October 31, 2008 Grant Wilson of The Atlantic Paranormal Society (TAPS) is widely believed to have been part of a hoax involving a coat pull incident that has been debunked and believed to have been rigged. (Ghost_Hunters#Criticism)
- Glocal Warming - the concept of man-made climate change
- Lake Anjikuni - mysterious disappearance of Eskimos
- The Southern Television broadcast interruption hoax (1977)
- The Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot film
- The Buddha Boy - a meditating boy of apparently superhuman perseverance
- Trance Channeling, a New Age form of spiritualism.
- Concordia (1696 ship), an early Dutch sailing ship that went missing.
- Natasha Demkina - Russian woman who claims to have x-ray vision
- The works of James Frey which were at least partially fictional and have been alleged to be a complete hoax.
- Psychic performances of Uri Geller
- Kensington Runestone - an artifact which implies Scandinavian explorers reached the middle of North America in the 14th century
- The Killian documents - documents used in a 60 Minutes story alleging George W. Bush did not fulfill his National Guard duty requirements
- The Loudon demonic possession of 1634 that led to the execution of local priest Urban Grandier for witchcraft.
- Mel's Hole - a pit alleged to be bottomless
- Metallic Metals Act - a study that may not have actually been conducted about a fictional piece of legislation; the study is still cited in textbooks
- NESARA conspiracy theory, a purported secret law under gag order by Supreme Court of the United States, which would abolish the IRS and eliminate all credit card debt.
- Walam Olum - alleged migration legend of the Lenape people, likely perpetrated by Rafinesque
- The Philadelphia Experiment, a supposed experiment to make a ship completely invisible to radar even to the eye. Many factual errors have emerged and official U.S. navy records show no proof or record of the experiment ever taking place or of the ship ever having been in the alleged locations of the experiment.
- The Policeman's Beard is Half Constructed, book supposedly written by AI program Racter
- Josef Papp's solo thirteen hour trans-Atlantic submarine voyage
- Philippine historical figure Kalantiaw
- Rendlesham Forest Incident - possible hoax
- Chief Seattle's speech
- The Tasaday tribe
- The Book of Veles
- The Vinland map - alleged medieval map of the "New World"
- The Voynich Manuscript - a mysterious book in an unknown and never-translated language
- The Well to Hell hoax - an urban legend that may have started either as a hoax or a misunderstanding
- Zinoviev Letter- alleges a socialist conspiracy between the Soviet Union and British Labour Party
- Zeno map - shows lands known not to exist,
Practical joke hoaxes
- Alternative 3 - a British conspiracy theory documentary broadcast in 1977
- The Balloon-Hoax
- The "British Arctic Territory" flag [4]
- The Dreadnought hoax
- Peter Jackson's Forgotten Silver
- The Fortsas hoax, a purported auction of one-of-a-kind books in 1840 in Belgium.
- I, Libertine, originally nonexistent book
- Naked Came the Stranger- a purposely horribly-written novel
- Plainfield Teacher's College and its football team
- Sawing off of Manhattan Island
- Society for Indecency to Naked Animals - ("A nude horse is a rude horse")
- The spaghetti tree harvest was a hoax broadcast by the BBC in 1957.
- Christopher Walken for US president.
Accidental hoaxes
"Accidental hoaxes" are not strictly hoaxes at all, but rather satirical articles or fictional presentations that ended up being taken seriously by some.
- Ghostwatch, a BBC television play broadcast on Halloween in 1992, was on its surface a live outside broadcast from a haunted house presented by well-known television personalities. Despite appearing in a drama slot and having a credit for a writer, viewers afterwards complained about being fooled.[5]
- The Masked Marauders, a non-existent "super group" supposedly consisting of Bob Dylan, Mick Jagger, John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison. Their supposed "bootleg album" was listed in a mock review in the 18 October 1969 issue of Rolling Stone Magazine. An album entitled The Masked Marauders was shortly released, but the sound-alike musicians were later exposed to be members of The Cleanliness and Godliness Skiffle Band.[6]
- The Necronomicon, a fictitious occult book quoted by writer H. P. Lovecraft in many of his stories.
- Orson Welles' Mercury Theatre radio broadcast on October 30, 1938, entitled "The War of the Worlds" has been called the "single greatest 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. (Rumors claim some even committed suicide.) Rebroadcasts in South America also had this effect even to a greater extent.[7]
Known pranksters, scam artists and impostors
- Frank Abagnale, professional impostor and check forger
- Alan Abel, US professional hoaxer
- P. T. Barnum, US showman known for his sensational hoaxes
- Sacha Baron Cohen, British comedian and media prankster - a.k.a. Ali G and Borat Sagdiyev
- Pablo Belmonte, Spanish video editor known for his Nintendo-related hoax videos (Nintendo On, Super Mario Galaxy DS, etc.)
- Philippe de Chérisey, forged two parchments as part of the Priory of Sion hoax
- Horace de Vere Cole, British aristocrat
- Noël Corbu, French restaurateur who claimed that Bérenger Saunière discovered the treasure of Blanche of Castile in the village of Rennes-le-Château
- Benjamin Franklin, American patriot, scientist and publisher
- Rémi Gaillard, modern French prankster with a wide internet presence
- William Randolph Hearst, a newspaper tycoon known as "the father of yellow journalism".
- Danny Hellman, NY cartoonist sued for impersonating Ted Rall in e-mails
- Elmyr de Hory, art forger
- Brian G. Hughes, US banker
- Reginald Jones, British professor
- Andy Kaufman, US comedian and inter-gender wrestling champion
- M. Lamar Keene, Self-exposed fraudulent medium
- J. Z. Knight, trance channeller who claims to contact an entity called Ramtha
- Victor Lustig, professional con artist
- Jim Moran, publicist, actor and TV panellist
- Chris Morris, British comedian and actor of Brass Eye, The Day Today
- Frederick Emerson Peters, professional impostor and check forger
- Charles Ponzi, originator of the Ponzi Scheme
- Peter Popoff, faith healer
- Pierre Plantard, claimed descent from Dagobert II
- George Psalmanazar, European writer
- James Randi, professional stage magician, hoaxer and hoax debunker
- James Reavis, professional forger and impostor
- Harry Reichenbach, Hollywood publicist
- Joey Skaggs, US media prankster
- Soapy Smith, Jefferson Randolph Smith, infamous 19th century confidence man
- Edward Askew Sothern, British actor
- George Steevens, critic and Shakespeare scholar
- Jonathan Swift, Irish humorist and writer
- Robert Tilton, evangelist
- Hugh Troy, US painter
- Dick Tuck, US political prankster who harassed Richard Nixon.
- Wilhelm Voigt, the "Captain of Köpenick"
- Mike Warnke, evangelist and supposed former Satanic High Priest
- Joseph Weil, professional scam artist
- Stanley Clifford Weyman, professional impostor
- Yes Men, culture-jamming pranksters
Journalistic hoaxes
Deliberate hoaxes, or journalistic fraud, that drew widespread attention include:
- Washington Irving created a hoax about the supposedly missing Diedrich Knickerbocker
- Jayson Blair, reporter for The New York Times
- Janet Cooke, who won the Pulitzer Prize for her fictitious Washington Post story about an eight-year-old heroin addict named Jimmy
- Dark Side of the Moon (documentary) - this French mockumentary "proving" that the Apollo moon landings were hoaxes is itself an admitted hoax
- The Flemish Secession hoax of 2006[8]
- Stephen Glass, reporter for The New Republic
- Fuckart & Pimp a hoax art exhibition at London's Decima gallery, which purported to be the show of a female artist having sex with clients to consummate the sale of her paintings, created a worldwide media scandal but was later revealed to be a hoax.
- The Great Moon Hoax of 1835
- Great Wall of China hoax of 1899
- Jack Kelley, longtime USA Today correspondent
- David Lassman who wrote the 2007 'Rejecting Jane' article, which chronicled Jane Austen's rejection by modern day publishers.
- The New York Zoo hoax of 1874
- Nik Cohn's New York magazine article, "Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night", which was the source material for the movie Saturday Night Fever, and which Cohn admitted decades later had been fiction, not reportage.
- Konspiration 58 about the soccer world cup of 1958.
- David Manning, a fictitious film critic created by Sony in order to place good quotes on Columbia Pictures' film advertising.
See also
- Beale Ciphers (alleged location of hidden treasure)
- Lost Dutchman Mine (alleged location of hidden treasure)
- Oak Island (alleged location of hidden treasure)
- List of fictitious people (people it was claimed really existed – unlike fictional characters).
- Scam
- Literary hoax
References
- ^ Moore, Matthew (27 May 2008). "'Biggest drawing in world' revealed as hoax". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
- ^ Plimpton, George (2004), The Curious Case of Sidd Finch, New York, NY: Four Walls Eight Windows, ISBN 1-56858-296-X
- ^ "McDonald's issues Twitter denial after hoax poster saying blacks will be charged extra goes viral". Daily Mail. 13 June 2011. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
- ^ "British Arctic Territory Flag Hoax". Fotw.net. Retrieved 2009-11-28.
- ^ "Ghostwatch (1992)". BFI Screenonline. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
- ^ http://www.snopes.com/music/artists/masked.htm
- ^ The War of the Worlds, search on "South America". See also Broadcast Remakes
- ^ "Fictional documentary about Flemish independence causes consternation in Belgium - Wikinews, the free news source". En.wikinews.org. Retrieved 2009-11-28.
Further reading
- Boese, Alex (2002), The Museum of Hoaxes: A Collection of Pranks, Stunts, Deceptions, and Other Wonderful Stories Contrived for the Public from the Middle Ages to the New Millennium, Dutton/Penguin Books, ISBN 0-525-94678-0, OCLC 50115701
- Boese, Alex, Hippo Eats Dwarf: A Field Guide to Hoaxes and other B.S., Harvest Books 2006, ISBN 0-15-603083-7.
- Hamel, Denis (2007), "The End of the Einstein-Astrology-Supporter Hoax", Skeptical Inquirer, 31 (6): 39–43
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|month=
ignored (help)
- Hines, Terence (1988), Pseudoscience and the Paranormal: A Critical Examination of the Evidence, Prometheus Books, ISBN 0-87975-419-2, OCLC 17462273
- Moseley, James W.; Pflock, Karl T. (2002), Shockingly Close to the Truth: Confessions of a Grave-Robbing Ufologist, Prometheus Books, ISBN 1-57392-991-3
- Curtis Peebles (1994). Watch the Skies: A Chronicle of the Flying Saucer Myth, Smithsonian Institution, ISBN 1-56098-343-4.
- Randi, James (1982), Flim-Flam!, Prometheus Books, ISBN 0-87975-198-3, OCLC 9066769