Scientific Objectivity Tested by Fake TV News Story

From Miso: “Now THAT’S a well done hoax!”


Hoax, Lies and Videotape
by RefractiveIndex
July 6, 2012

The fifth in our series on this year”s group projects by Sci Com students – this week, it”s the turn of Stephen McGann, Emma Houghton-Brown and Haralambos Dayantis.

Do scientists see the world as objectively as they like to think?

[Watch this hoax video & then read on]

Arguments have raged for years between those who regard science as an entirely objective discipline, and certain social scholars that believe science is subject to the same cognitive biases as every other human enterprise. At times, these debates have become less than polite. Continue reading “Scientific Objectivity Tested by Fake TV News Story”

Classic Car Club Quickly Reverses Over Prank

Submitted by Erin:


A Fake Tax Rattles Classic Car Buffs
by Michael Barbaro
The New York Times
April 7, 2011


Click to see the mock New York Times article.

As April Fool”s gags go, the Shelby American Automobile Club”s 2011 spoof did not seem especially convincing. Until, that is, hundreds of classic car lovers across the country were duped, became enraged and started to organize against a nonexistent threat.

A few days ago, the Connecticut club printed a fake front page of The New York Times that included what purported to be a major scoop: to close the federal deficit, Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York was proposing a federal tax on specialty automobiles. Continue reading “Classic Car Club Quickly Reverses Over Prank”

Universal Studios Promotes Movie with Fake News Articles

Studio settlement reported for fake movie news
1010WINS
November 12, 2009

the-fourth-kind-movie-200Fairbanks, Alaska (AP) — Universal Pictures has agreed to pay $20,000 to the Alaska Press Club to settle complaints about fake news archives used to promote the movie “The Fourth Kind,” the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner reported.

The Anchorage lawyer who negotiated the settlement for the Fairbanks paper and six other media outlets, John McKay, said the fake online stories undermined the credibility of the news organizations.

Universal created a series of fabricated online news articles to publicize the movie about a purported plague of alien abductions in Nome a decade ago. The articles posted appeared to be from real Alaska publications.

The articles included a fake obituary and news story about the death of a character in the movie, Dr. William Tyler, that supposedly were from the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Continue reading “Universal Studios Promotes Movie with Fake News Articles”