List of hoaxes

The following are lists of hoaxes:

Proven hoaxes

These are some claims that have been revealed, or proven definitively, 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 "List of April Fools' Day jokes" article.

A–F

  • Cedric Allingham, fictitious author who wrote a book about meeting the pilot of a Martian spacecraft. Allingham was created by British astronomer Patrick Moore and his friend Peter Davies.
  • Alien autopsy, a hoax film by Ray Santilli
  • Amina Abdallah Arraf al Omari, a fake Syrian blogger
  • Apollo 20, a series of YouTube videos claiming to show evidence of intelligent, extraterrestrial life on the moon
  • The Archko Volume, a collection of documents related to the life of Jesus
  • The Awful Disclosures of Maria Monk, a book about purported sexual enslavement of a nun
  • The Balloon-Hoax, depicting a cross-Atlantic hot air balloon trip
  • The balloon boy hoax, a boy reported to be traveling uncontrollably at high altitudes in a home-made helium balloon but later discovered to be hiding in the attic of his house
  • Bananadine, a fictional drug made from bananas
  • Bathtub hoax, an imaginary history of the bathtub published by H.L. Mencken
  • Johann Beringer's Lying Stones
  • Berners Street hoax in 1810
  • 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
  • Blue waffle, a supposedly contagious sexually-transmitted disease affecting only women, causing a blue discoloration of the vagina
  • C.W. Blubberhouse, whose letters in UK national newspapers were exposed as a hoax by the Sunday Times
  • Calaveras Skull was a human skull found by miners in Calaveras County, California, which was purported to prove that humans, mastodons, and elephants had coexisted in California.
  • The Cardiff Giant was a hoax of a hoax, when P. T. Barnum made up a replica because he could not obtain the "genuine" hoax item
  • CERN ritual, supposed occult sacrifice on the grounds of CERN.
  • The Cottingley Fairies, cut-out fairies accepted as real
  • 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.
  • Dahu, a legendary creature well known in France, Switzerland and the north of Italy
  • Disappearing blonde gene
  • Document 12-571-3570, supposedly established that sex had taken place during a U.S. space mission
  • Donation of Constantine, a forged imperial decree by which the 4th-century emperor Constantine the Great supposedly transferred authority over Rome and the western Roman Empire to the Pope.
  • The Dreadnought hoax, perpetrated in 1910 by Horace de Vere Cole and a group of friends who, pretending to be an official delegation from Abyssinia, tricked the Royal Navy into giving them an official tour of the battleship HMS Dreadnought
  • Drop bear, a supposed dangerous species of koala
  • 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
  • Fiji mermaid, the supposed remains of a half-fish half-human hybrid
  • Sidd Finch, fictional baseball player[1]
  • Furry trout

G–M

N–S

T–Z

  • Tania Head (Alicia Esteve Head) became the most prominent survivor of 9/11, meeting with politicians and leading a group of survivors, when in fact, on 9/11 she was in Barcelona. Her whole story was a lie, the second famous hoax in her life.
  • The Taughannock Giant, a petrified giant "discovered" in Ithaca, New York, in 1879. This copycat hoax was inspired by the Cardiff Giant ten years earlier.[10][11]
  • Manti Te'o girlfriend hoax
  • Thatchergate Tapes, a fake conversation with which the punk band Crass fooled the governments of the US and UK
  • Slowing of Satellites above Tirunallar Saniswaran Temple, because of mysterious UV rays from Saturn, claimed to have been admitted as a Miracle, by NASA[12]
  • Robert Tilton's "prayer cloths"
  • Mary Toft, the 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
  • Taro Tsujimoto, a fictional Japanese ice hockey player selected by the Buffalo Sabres in the 1974 NHL amateur draft. The Sabres' general manager, Punch Imlach, made the selection as a protest against the NHL's draft procedures.
  • 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 an IBA broadcast in the United Kingdom on 26 November 1977
  • David Weiss, a fictitious 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)
  • Wolpertinger, a Bavarian cousin of the Jackalope
  • 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.

Journalistic hoaxes

Deliberate hoaxes, or journalistic fraud, that drew widespread attention include:

See also

References

  1. Plimpton, George (2004). The Curious Case of Sidd Finch. New York, NY: Four Walls Eight Windows. ISBN 1-56858-296-X.
  2. Mikkelson, Barbara & David P. "Hunting For Bambi" at Snopes.com: Urban Legends Reference Pages.
  3. Mehta, Ankita (2014-08-28). "'Two Moons' Hoax: Absence of Twin Moon on 27 August Disappoints Many". International Business Times. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
  4. Heyd, Theresa (2008). Email Hoaxes: Form, Function, Genre Ecology. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 4. ISBN 90-272-5418-4. Retrieved October 30, 2010.
  5. Brown, Dan (2003). The Da Vinci Code. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-50420-9.
  6. Cohn, Norman (1966). Warrant for Genocide: The Myth of the Jewish World-Conspiracy and the Protocols of the Elder of Zion. New York: Harper & Row..
  7. Sarah Dai (2018-08-17). "Redcore CEO admits '100pc China-developed browser' is built on Google's Chrome, says writing code from scratch would 'take many years'". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 2018-08-17. Retrieved 2018-08-17.
  8. "Maccas in damage control over Seriously McDonald's picture hoax". News.com.au. 14 June 2011. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  9. "Alien hoax dismays scientists". BBC News. 1998-11-03. Retrieved 2012-05-23.
  10. Rogers, A. Glenn (1953). "The Taughannock Giant" (Fall 2003). Life in the Finger Lakes. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  11. Githler, Charley (26 December 2017). "A Look Back At: Home-Grown Hoax: The Taughannock Giant". Tompkins Weekly. Retrieved 28 June 2019.
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-12-23. Retrieved 2015-12-23.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. https://www.economist.com/blogs/bagehot/2011/09/unethical-journalism

Further reading

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