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Hoax

A hoax is an attempt to trick an audience into believing that something false is real. Generally there is some material object involved, which is actually a forgery. Unlike a fraud or con (which usually has an audience of one or a few), which are made for illicit financial or material gain, or a pious fraud, which is perpetrated to support the revelations of a religion, a hoax is often perpetrated as a practical joke with a humorous intent, to cause embarrassment, for personal aggrandizement or to serve political purposes. Still, many confidence tricks and the like have also been labeled as hoaxes.

Many hoaxes are also motivated by a desire to satirize or educate by exposing the credulity of the public or the absurdity of the target: literary and artistic hoaxes are often of this sort, although political hoaxes are sometimes motivated in part or whole by the desire to ridicule or expose politicians or political institutions.

The status of a given factoid as reliable or hoax is often the subject of considerable controversy.

Table of contents

Historically Important Hoaxes

  • Bathtub Hoax, perpetrated by American journalist and satirist Mencken in the 1920's, was credited even after it was exposed by the author.

Proven Hoaxes

Probable Hoaxes

Possible Hoaxes

Practical Joke Hoaxes

  • The Balloon-Hoax
  • The Dreadnought Hoax
  • Forgotten Silver
  • Naked Came the Stranger
  • Sawing off of Manhattan Island
  • Dihydrogen Monoxide Hoax: a call to outlaw the dangerous chemical H2O

Known pranksters

Hoaxes of Exposure

"Hoaxes of exposure" can be thought of as semi-comical, private sting operations. Their usual purpose is to expose people acting foolishly or credulously, to encourage them to fall for something that the hoaxer hopes to reveal as patent nonsense. See also culture jamming.

  • Disumbrationism
  • The Sokal Affair
  • The Spectra hoax
  • The Taxil hoax
  • Media pranks of Joey Skaggs
  • The avant-garde "music" of "Piotr Zak"

Too creative journalists

Journalist may be over-eager to "get a story", both to increase his own prestige or write something that would increase the sales of the publication.

Fictitious people

  • George P. Burdell
  • Allegra Coleman, nonexistent supermodel
  • Sidd Finch, nonexistent baseball prodigy
  • Lester Green, inventive farmer
  • Ern Malley, Australian poet
  • Claude Émile Jean-Baptiste Litre
  • Simonya Popova, nonexistent tennis player
  • Henry Root and Henry Raddick (possibly the same person)
  • Udo of Aachen

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, the annual 'open season' for fictional accounts and dubious announcements.

A New Zealand tradition is the capping stunt, wherein university students perpetrate a hoax upon an unsuspecting population. They are traditionally executed near autumn graduation (the "capping").

See also

External links

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