Jean Shepherd’s “I, Libertine” Hoax Remembered

From Emerson Dameron: An homage to a great prankster!


The Man Behind The Brilliant Media Hoax Of “I, Libertine”
by Matthew Callan
The Awl
February 14th, 2013

ShepherdIn the 1950s, a DJ named Jean Shepherd hosted a late-night radio show on New York’s WOR that was unlike any before or since. On these broadcasts, he delivered dense, cerebral monologues, sprinkled with pop-culture tidbits and vivid stretches of expert storytelling. “There is no question that we are a tiny, tiny, tiny embattled minority here,” he assured his audience in a typical diatribe. “Hardly anyone is listening to mankind in all of its silliness, all of its idiocy, all of its trivia, all of its wonder, all of its glory, all of its poor, sad, pitching us into the dark sea of oblivion.” Shepherd’s approach was summed up by his catchphrase: a mock-triumphant “Excelsior!”, followed by an immediate, muttered “you fathead”¦”

Shepherd inspired fierce loyalty in his listeners who would tune in to listen to him in the middle of the night. These listeners embraced his term for them, “night people,” and under his direction they would execute one of the biggest and most bizarre media hoaxes of the 20th century. The hoax was meant as a strike against their opposite: “day people,” that is, against phoniness and squareness””all those 50s words””as well as a joke on New York pretension.

In our time of memes, virality, and reality blurring, the hoax Shepherd dreamt up seems extremely modern and prescient in its contours””as does the fact that, eventually, it got out of his control. Continue reading “Jean Shepherd’s “I, Libertine” Hoax Remembered”

Another Winning Lottery Ticket Hoax

Submitted by Emerson Dameron. Editor’s note: This is reminiscent of Alan Abel’s 1990 Lottery Ticket Hoax.


Man Fools More Than 500,000 Facebook Users Pretending To Be Lottery Winner
by Justin Lafferty
allfacebook.com
November 30, 2012

As we learned earlier with the ubiquitous “In response to the new Facebook guidelines” posts, Facebook users will share just about anything “” especially if they”ve got a shot at $1 million. Recently, a Facebook user named Nolan Daniels posted a photo of himself with the $587.5 million-winning Powerball ticket, with the caption, “Looks like I won”t be going to work EVER!!!! Share this photo and I will give a random person 1 million dollars!” More than 500,000 people have shared the photo. One problem, though: the ticket isn”t real.

Gawker pointed out that the numbers on the ticket would be in order, citing the Powerball FAQ:

The tickets print the white ball numbers (the first five numbers) in numerical order.

It”s plain to see that the numbers on Daniels” faked ticket appear to read: 4, 22, 29, 23, 46, 5.

Other than that, the real winners have already come forward.


Kumaré: The True Story of a False Prophet

Submitted by Emerson Dameron:

American filmmaker Vikram Gandhi examines gurus and gullibility. In the process, he goes undercover as Kumaré, an enlightened spiritual leader from the East who develops a following in the West. His documentary The True Story of a False Prophet premiers in the US this summer. Read more here.


Movie Trailer:

Continue reading “Kumaré: The True Story of a False Prophet”

Manufactured Fame

Submitted by Emerson Dameron:


The pranksters at Chill Hill Media decided to treat one of their own like a celebrity, and mall security unwittingly signed on:

And now Thomas Elliot actually is sort of famous:

  • Pranksters Prank Nobodies Into Believing Some Nobody Is Somebody, Gawker, April 10, 2012
  • The eXile did a more elaborate version of this before:

  • Feis The Music! Buns Moons Moscow Nightclubs
  • Buns Unplugged