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April Fool's Day Hoaxes
The Swiss Spaghetti Harvest
In 1957 the respected BBC news show Panorama announced
that thanks to a very mild winter and the virtual elimination
of the dreaded spaghetti weevil, Swiss farmers were enjoying a
bumper spaghetti crop. It accompanied this announcement with footage
of Swiss peasants pulling strands of spaghetti down from trees.
Huge numbers of viewers were taken in, and many called up wanting
to know how they could grow their own spaghetti trees. To this
question, the BBC diplomatically replied that they should "place
a sprig of spaghetti in a tin of tomato sauce and hope for the
best." Check out the actual
broadcast archived on the BBC's website (You need the RealVideo
player installed to see it, and it usually loads very slowly).
Instant Color TV
In 1962 there was only one tv channel in Sweden, and it broadcast
in black and white. The station's technical expert, Kjell Stensson,
appeared on the news to announce that thanks to a newly developed
technology, all viewers could now quickly and easily convert their
existing sets to display color reception. All they had to do was
pull a nylon stocking over their tv screen, and they would begin
to see their favorite shows in color. Stensson then proceeded
to demonstrate the process. Reportedly, hundreds of thousands
of people, out of the population of seven million, were taken
in. Actual color tv transmission only commenced in Sweden on April
1, 1970.
Alabama Changes the Value of Pi
The April 1998 issue of the New Mexicans for Science and Reason
newsletter contained an article claiming that the Alabama state
legislature had voted to change the value of the mathematical
constant pi from 3.14159 to the 'Biblical value' of 3.0. Before
long the article had made its way onto the internet, and then
it rapidly made its way around the world, forwarded by people
in their email. It only became apparent how far the article had
spread when the Alabama legislature began receiving hundreds of
calls from people protesting the legislation. The original article,
which was intended as a parody of legislative attempts to circumscribe
the teaching of evolution, was written by a physicist named Mark
Boslough.
Hotheaded Naked Ice Borers
In its April 1995 issue Discover Magazine announced that
the highly respected wildlife biologist Dr. Aprile Pazzo had discovered
a new species in Antarctica: the hotheaded naked ice borer. These
fascinating creatures had bony plates on their heads that, fed
by numerous blood vessels, could become burning hot, allowing
the animals to bore through ice at high speeds. They used this
ability to hunt penguins, melting the ice beneath the penguins
and causing them to sink downwards into the resulting slush where
the hotheads consumed them. After much research, Dr. Pazzo theorized
that the hotheads might have been responsible for the mysterious
disappearance of noted Antarctic explorer Philippe Poisson in
1837. "To the ice borers, he would have looked like a penguin,"
the article quoted her as saying. Discover received more
mail in response to this article than they had received for any
other article in their history.
Planetary Alignment Decreases Gravity
In 1976 the British astronomer Patrick Moore announced on BBC
Radio 2 that at 9:47 AM a once-in-a-lifetime astronomical event
was going to occur that listeners could experience in their very
own homes. The planet Pluto would pass behind Jupiter, temporarily
causing a gravitational alignment that would counteract and lessen
the Earth's own gravity. Moore told his listeners that if they
jumped in the air at the exact moment that this planetary alignment
occurred, they would experience a strange floating sensation.
When 9:47 AM arrived, BBC2 began to receive hundreds of phone
calls from listeners claiming to have felt the sensation. One
woman even reported that she and her eleven friends had risen
from their chairs and floated around the room.
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