Article April Fools Day - 2007

Type: April Fool’s Day Hoaxes.
Summary: Hoaxes perpetrated on April Fool’s Day, 2007.

Table of Contents

The Top 4 of 2007

The Derbyshire Fairy

Images of an 8-inch mummified creature resembling a fairy were posted on the website of the Lebanon Circle Magik Co. Accompanying text explained how the creature had been found by a man walking his dog along an old roman road in rural Derbyshire. Word of this discovery soon spread around the internet. Bloggers excitedly speculated about whether the find was evidence of the actual existence of fairies. The Lebanon Circle website received tens of thousands of visitors and hundreds of emails. But at the end of the day, Dan Baines, the owner of the site, confessed that the fairy was a hoax. He had used his skills as a magician’s prop-maker to create the creature. Baines later reported that, despite his confession, he continued to receive numerous emails from people who refused to accept the fairy wasn’t real. He later sold the fairy to an American collector for £280.

Ring-Tone Rage

National Public Radio’s Weekend Edition Sunday reported that New York City Democratic councilman David Yassky had called for a ban on obnoxious ring tones. The councilman claimed that objectionable ring tones were costing the economy upwards of $1.2 billion and were the cause of numerous fights induced by “ring-tone rage.” As of April 1, 2008, NPR reported, cell phone users would be restricted to four city-approved ring tones.

Toilet Internet Service Provider

Google announced a new technology called TiSP that would allow it to provide FREE in-home wireless broadband service. TiSP stood for “Toilet Internet Service Provider.” Users would connect to the internet via their bathroom’s plumbing system. Installation involved dropping a weighted fiber-optic cable down the toilet and then activating the “patented GFlush™ system” which would send the cable “surfing through the plumbing system to one of the thousands of TiSP Access Nodes.” Google promised that it would provide a higher-performance version of the service for businesses which would include “24-hour, on-site technical support in the event of backup problems, brownouts and data wipes.”

Sweden to Phase out Å, Ä and Ö

Sweden’s English-language paper, The Local, reported that in the interests of globalization and technological competitiveness Sweden’s government was considering banning “complex letters” such as Å, Ä and Ö. Å would be replaced by AA, Ä by AE and Ö by OE. The Centre Party’s Åsa Bäckström was quoted as saying, “Language is constantly changing and we must be prepared to meet the linguistic challenges of the modern world. Communication barriers are a hindrance to competitiveness, so we should do whatever we can - within reason - to eliminate them.” However, the move was resisted by many, including the town council of Båstad, whose spokesman said, “We already have enough trouble with English-speakers who think the name of our town is amusing. If the Å becomes a regular A it will just make things worse. We might as well go the whole hog and include an R.”

Online

The Loch Ness Crocodile

A fake news article, supposedly from a Scottish paper, circulated online, claiming that a crocodile had been sighted in Loch Ness. The article read, in part: “Several reports of a large unidentified creature seen wading along the Loch edge below the Lip’O’Flora viewpoint (the place where Flora MacDonald helped Rob Roy MacGregor escape the English redcoats) near the present day Clansman hotel have proven to be true. Much as some locals might wish it to be The Loch Ness Monster, it is believed to be a large Floridian crocodile (Crocodylus acutus). It is thought the reptile may be native to southern Florida and has simply drifted along the path of the Atlantic Gulf Stream before finding its new home in Scotland, or be yet another legacy from the British Pet Animals Act of 1951, which saw the release into the wild of many exotic animals by owners who did not have the facilities to be licensed as responsible ‘pet’ keepers or traders.”

Tattoo Your Toddler


DJs from North Dakota’s Y94 radio station created a hoax website called tattooyourtoddler.com. The site claimed to be “the first tattoo studio for kids, with the trendiest body-art designed specifically for youths ages 2 through 17!” Parents who wanted to tattoo their child were promised that “Our patented needle-free system only causes slight discomfort and ensures a vibrant tattoo, guaranteed not to fade for at least 10 years!” The FAQ section of the site included the question: “Is this legal?” To which the reply was: “This is still America, isn’t it?” A similar April Fool’s Day hoax had been perpetrated in 2003 by DJs at at Channel 933 KHTS-FM radio in San Diego who created a site called BabyInk.com, which claimed to be a tattoo parlor catering to infants and children.

LivePoke

The social networking site Facebook posted a notice about a new feature called LivePoke. Supposedly Facebook would “dispatch a real live person to poke a friend of your choice.” The offer was said to be good for only the first 100 pokers in each network. The joke was a reference to Facebook’s “poke” feature, which causes a poke icon to appear on another user’s home page.

Mayfair Mall To Use Face Recognition Technology

Wisconsin-based blogger Peter Hart posted a fake news article on the community news site WauwatosaNOW.com, claiming that the local Mayfair Mall planned to start using face recognition technology to scan for known criminals. The story fooled a reporter for WTMJ-TV who reported it as fact on the 4 pm news show.

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