Pill popping oysters

From the Museum of Hoaxes:

eatstuff.net/2005/ 12/30/2-kinds-of-people/The Viagra Oyster Email Hoax

George May had a clever idea: Let oysters soak in a solution of Viagra for a while, and then sell them as Viagra Oysters. Of course, Pfizer is objecting to this use of its drug, and food-safety officials don’t like the idea of selling purposefully contaminated oysters. But still, May is confident he’s got a successful product on his hands, and his idea has received quite a lot of media attention. So it pleased him, but didn’t surprise him, when he received the following email from Google’s corporate offices:

    “Congratulations! The Viagra oyster story is the fastest growing internet story since 9/11 with over 700,000 links in 24 hours.”

Except, of course, Google doesn’t send out congratulatory letters of this kind. If they did, they’d constantly be congratulating whoever was the latest internet-celebrity-of-the-day. The email was the work of a prankster who forged the “from” field. Or was it? Perhaps May cooked up the email himself to gain a little more media attention for himself. He’s denying this allegation, but it seems plausible to me since he’s the one benefitting from the hoax — and because his first reaction on receiving the email was to call the media and tell them about it.

A True History of Fake News

Fake Newspaper

Jon Stewart’s parody news show may make him “the most trusted name in fake news,” but these days it “comes at us from every quarter of the media,” writes journalism professor Robert Love — “not just as satire but disguised as the real thing, secretly paid for by folks who want to remain in the shadows. And though much of it is clever, it’s not all funny.” Love recounts some of the memorable frauds that have filled newspaper pages in the past: the New York Sun‘s Great Moon Hoax of 1835, Mark Twain’s “petrified man,” and H.L. Mencken’s fabricated 75th anniversary of the bathtub. More recently, he notes, video news releases and pundits-for-hire like Armstrong Williams have ushered in an era where new technologies make it “easier to deliver the news and also easier to fake it,” while “falling circulation, diminishing news budgets, and dismantled staffs” have given “third-party players — government, industry, politicians, you name ’em — sleeker weapons and greater power to turn the authority of the press to their own ends: to disseminate propaganda, disinformation, advertising, politically strategic misinformation — to in effect use the media to distort reality.”

Website: Columbia Journalism Review, March/April 2007
URL: http://www.cjr.org/issues/2007/2/Love.asp

   Originally from Center for Media and Democracy – Publishers of PR Watch on April 21, 2007

Recent Press

Pranks for Everything
Tech Space: Daily Notes on Science and Silicon
USA Today
by Angela Gunn
April 2, 2007

Joey Skaggs Launches Art of the Prank
boingboing.net
by David Pescovitz
April 1, 2007

Joey Skaggs Launches Pranks.com ArtofthePrank.com, The Art of the Prank
laughingsquid.com
by Scott Beale
April 1, 2007

The Art of the Prank
April Fools’ Is Always More Fun When The Joke’s Not on You
Washington Post
by Dan Zak
April 1, 2007

The Art of the Prank
About: Urban Legends and Folklore
by David Emery
March 31, 2007

The Wilson Show
Joey Skaggs Radio Interview (5:19) about Pranks.com ArtofthePrank.com [mp3, 1.2 MB]
WIBC, Indianapolis, Indiana
March 30, 2007

PRWEB Podcast
Joey Skaggs Interview (5:22) about Pranks.com ArtofthePrank.com [mp3, 5.0 MB]
March 29, 2007

Press Releases

3/26/07

PRWEB Press release with downloadable podcast featuring Joey Skaggs

Father Anthony (aka Joey Skaggs) pedals Portofess, his portable confessional booth

Joey Skaggs, Notorious Artist and Satirist, to Launch The Art of the Prank Blog at ArtofthePrank.com on April 1, 2007

Summary: A new Web site and Blog all about pranks, hoaxes, culture jamming and reality hacking launches on April Fools Day. Honest!

New York, NY, (PRWeb) March 26, 2007 — Artist and satirist Joey Skaggs is proud to announce the debut of his new blog The Art of the Prank at ArtofthePrank.com on April Fools Day, April 1, 2007. Here visitors will find insights, news and discussions on everything to do with pranks, hoaxes, culture jamming and reality hacking around the world – past, present and future – mainstream and counter culture.

With Skaggs as editor, the site will have submissions from many known and not so known pranksters, artists, performers, activists and writers. The Art of the Prank, launching April Fools Day, will provide a continuing and growing exploration into the art of the prank; the role of the prankster as artist, activist and social observer; and the contribution of the prank to society.

Pranks have traditionally been relegated to the realm of the juvenile bad-boy or special occasions, like April Fools Day. People typically think of the word prank as referring to funny, embarrassing, humiliating, non-redeeming acts of just plain silliness or revenge. And while this may represent the majority of pranks in the world, the role of the prankster throughout history has been quite significant and influential. Mythic archetypes such as the trickster and coyote; the jester in the royal court; and pranksters throughout literature will all be explored.

In addition, topics such as pranks in the news, the sociology and psychology of pranks; political pranks; First Amendment issues; hoax etiquette; publicity stunts; urban legends; illusion and magic; fraud and deception; hype; spin; and propaganda will all be fodder for thought. As will, of course, all sorts of practical jokes and mischief…

April Fools Day, my favorite holiday, is the perfect launch date. This site will provide one stop shopping for anyone interested in mounting an insurrection, over-throwing a government, crashing a stock market, creating global chaos, growing hair, losing weight or keeping their horny dog satisfied. It will provide a sure way to get the federal government to tap your phone line, or, at the very least to embarrass and humiliate yourself, says artist, Joey Skaggs.”

Pranks offer an alternative palette for criticism and dissent, as well as a looking-glass into the human gullibility that results when critical analysis is suspended for wishful thinking. “I challenge personal belief systems that sustain status-quo thinking and that support close-mindedness, bias and prejudice, says Skaggs.” Key motives running throughout his personal work are to inspire people to question authority in all of its guises and to ultimately think for themselves.

With this new endeavor, launching April Fools Day, Skaggs hopes to reach a broad audience of people interested in the intersection of reality and illusion. Those interested in contributing content will be invited to do so once the blog launches.

The Art of the Prank blog, at ArtofthePrank.com, will shed light on all aspects of the topic, examining the intent, content, technique, and the magic that makes a prank live. It will even include tutorials and how-to instructions. Although the site will not encourage or condone irresponsible, misguided, unlawful or unethical practices, some meaningful pranks rightfully test the limits and cross the boundaries of lawfulness. To trivialize, ignore or dismiss them for this reason would be a disservice to everyone.

About Joey Skaggs: Joey Skaggs has been a doctor, a lawyer, and an Indian chief. Hailed as an entrepreneur extraordinaire, he created a bordello for dogs, was the proprietor of a celebrity sperm bank, and founded an organization to wipe out fat. He has saved the world with his cockroach vitamin elixir and was the first and only person to ever windsurf from Hawaii to California. As a pedaling priest with a confessional booth mounted on the back of a tricycle, he took confessions from politicians at the Democratic National Convention. As a real estate developer, he created the Final Curtain cemetery theme park mall and time share program for the dead. And as a computer scientist, he revolutionized the American Judicial System using a series of super computers that meted out equal justice to all.

Although these and other illustrious activities have been presented as truth in the annals of the international news media, in reality they have all been hoaxes, products of his imagination. For over 40 years Skaggs has been an artist and a satirist with a serious message. He has used the media as his canvas, creating performances to bring to light many of the difficult and complex socio-political issues of our day.

A life-long educator and performance art practitioner, Skaggs has taught at the School of Visual Arts and Parsons/New School and he lectures and does presentations at schools, festivals and conferences around the world. His commentaries on media literacy and creative independent thinking are hilarious and thought provoking and have reached millions of people on a global scale. He has been hailed as The World’s Greatest Hoaxer.

To add to his bag of tricks, he recently designed and manufactured the Universal Bulls**t Detector Watch (a real product) to enable people to humorously call it as they see it. Available online at www.bswatch.com, it flashes, moos and poops. It also tells time.

And, if that”s not enough, New Yorkers are encouraged to attend prankster and performance artist Joey Skaggs” 22nd Annual April Fools Day Parade. The press release is available in the News Flash section of joeyskaggs.com.

About The Art of the Prank blog: The ArtofthePrank.com blog is designed by David Bunde of DGB Design using WordPress software, and hosted, by Laughing Squid.

Download Portofess Photo

Photo caption: Father Anthony (aka Joey Skaggs) pedals Portofess, his portable confessional booth, because the church must go where the sinners are. Religion on the move for people on the go!

Contact:
Joey Skaggs
212-254-7878

###