The Dalai Lama Twitters and then is gone
Status: Hoax
February 1: The Dalai Lama joins the micro-blogging service Twitter and starts posting updates, which soon almost 20,000 people are following.
February 9: Twitter announces that the Dalai Lama's account is a fake and cancels it. This
explanatory message was posted on the Twitter blog:
One of the essential doctrines of Buddhism is Impermanence. The word expresses the notion that everything we can experience through our senses is in flux, constantly changing, and ceasing to be—nothing is permanent. Is there some meaning, therefore, in the sudden disappearance of a Twitter account thought to be the official account of The Office of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama?
There may be a higher meaning if you meditate enough but the account was suspended because it violated our Terms of Use regarding impersonation. Using Twitter to impersonate others in a manner that does or is intended to mislead, confuse, or deceive others is also cited in the Twitter Rules. Should His Holiness decide to take up Twittering for real, we'll be sure to Follow.
I have a Twitter account, but I never use it. I can't figure out what the point of Twitter is, especially for people who already have a Facebook account. (Thanks, Cranky Media Guy!)
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Tue Feb 10, 2009 |
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Comments (4)
Category:
Identity/Imposters,
Social Networking Sites
Baby Brain
Status: medical myth debunked
News from the frontiers of medicine:
"Baby Brain" is a myth; that syndrome being the supposed decline in intelligence that women suffer while pregnant. A study led by Dr. Helen Christensen of the Australian National University in Canberra tracked 2500 women over ten years and "found no difference between their brainpower before and during their pregnancies."
Baby Brain reminds me of Josh Whicker's 2004
Hoosier Gazette hoax in which he claimed that a five-year Indiana University study had found that "having children significantly lowers parents’ IQs." If I remember, that fooled a lot of the media, including Keith Olbermann.
Anyway, I still believe there's such a thing as Internet Brain.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Mon Feb 09, 2009 |
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Comments (8)
Category:
Birth/Babies
Dildo Boulevard
Status: Unexplained mystery
First there was
Shoe Corner (the place in New Jersey where shoes kept mysteriously getting dumped); next there was
Pantyhose Corner in Massachusetts. Now we have
Dildo Boulevard. That's the name that's been given to the street in Darwin, Australia where 30 sex toys were inexplicably found lying in the road. Where did they come from? Nobody knows:
One theory is that it is an elaborate - and expensive - practical joke. Another school of thought is that they fell off the back of a delivery truck. Some said the sex toys could have been inside somebody's rubbish bin, and fell onto the street on Thursday night when the garbage was collected.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Mon Feb 09, 2009 |
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Comments (3)
Category:
Places,
Sex/Romance
Radio station fined for cash hoax
Status: news story
The FCC has
charged a Pittsburgh radio station a $6000 fine for a Thanksgiving day hoax in which the station told listeners they were giving away one-million dollars to the thirteenth caller. There wasn't actually any money, but they kept one guy on hold for 45 minutes, making him believe he had won.
I can see the FCC's point. A million-dollar prize isn't something that's inherently unbelievable. So for the radio station to claim it had the money when it didn't isn't exactly an amusing hoax. It's more like a blatant lie.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Fri Feb 06, 2009 |
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Comments (10)
Category:
Radio
Astrological Discrimination
Status: Undetermined (but seems to be a hoax)
Two days ago the
Daily Mail published an article describing an unnamed "Salzburg insurance company" that seems to be
practicing a form of astrological discrimination in its hiring. The company is said to have placed this ad in newspapers:
We are looking for people over 20 for part-time jobs in sales and management with the following star signs: Capricorn, Taurus, Aquarius, Aries and Leo.
When accused of discrimination, the company responded: "A statistical study indicated that almost all of our best employees across Austria have one of the five star signs." And a spokeswoman later followed up with this argument: "When an employer considers star signs and says: 'I want to only hire Pisces,' for an example, it must be assumed that within this group of people born under the sign of Pisces there are old and young people, women and women etc. It does appear like a certain limitation, but it is not discrimination."
The story has now begun to appear in other papers and websites, although the
Daily Mail appears to be the sole original source. So is there any evidence the story is true? Not that I can find. My German-language skills aren't too good, but I can't find any sign of the story in papers such as the
Salzburger Nachrichten.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Fri Feb 06, 2009 |
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Comments (7)
Category:
Journalism,
Pseudoscience
Krassner’s Anti-Communism Poster
Status: Undetermined
In 1963
Paul Krassner included a poster that said
"Fuck Communism" in his magazine
The Realist. The poster was very popular with counter-culture types. Kurt Vonnegut described it as a "miracle of compressed intelligence nearly as admirable for potent simplicity, in my opinion, as Einstein's e=mc2" because it demonstrated "how preposterous it was for so many people to be responding to both words with such cockamamie Pavlovian fear and alarm."
Krassner himself often told
this story about the poster:
At a midwestern college, one graduating student held up a FUCK COMMUNISM! poster as his class was posing for the yearbook photo. Campus officials found out and insisted that the word FUCK be air-brushed out. But then the poster would read COMMUNISM! So that was air-brushed out too, and the yearbook ended up publishing a class photo that showed this particular student holding up a blank poster. Very dada.
I wanted to add this yearbook photo to the
Hoax Photo Database. I thought it would make a great addition, particularly to the
Deleted Details category. However, I can't locate a copy of it anywhere, and I'm beginning to suspect it's existence is an urban legend. After all, why was Krassner so vague about the exact college?
I'd love to be proven wrong, but what I suspect happened is that someone held up a copy of the poster during graduation, and then people started to speculate about what campus officials would do if a picture of this stunt made it into the yearbook, and eventually this turned into what campus officials
had done.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Thu Feb 05, 2009 |
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Comments (6)
Category:
Photos/Videos,
Pranks
Computer Tan
Status: hoax

Get a tan as you sit in front of your computer by logging onto
ComputerTan.com:
This technological breakthrough is enabled by converting the electrical impulse delivered to your pc into radiated factor-free UV rays.
It's Tan-Tastic!
The
Times Online reveals that the site is actually a hoax created by the UK skin cancer charity Skcin "to raise awareness of skin cancer in the UK." However, within only 24 hours, 30,000 people had registered their interest in getting a "computer tan" before the site was revealed to be a hoax.
This isn't the first online tanning salon we've seen. Back in
2004 I posted about
sunnysite.com.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Thu Feb 05, 2009 |
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Comments (6)
Category:
Websites,
Technology
Forensic Astrology
Status: pseudoscience
What would Grissom have to say about this:
Forensic Astrology
Forensic Astrology is the art of using Horary and Birth Charts in combination to determine the nature of events as they occurred in unsolved crimes and missing persons cases.
In its defense, I'm sure the guy gets results that are just as good as those psychics who try to solve crimes.
Posted By: Alex | Date:
Thu Feb 05, 2009 |
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Comments (6)
Category:
Future/Time,
Pseudoscience