Traditionally, in some countries such as Canada, New Zealand, the UK, Australia, Cyprus, and South Africa, the jokes only last until noon, and someone who plays a trick after noon is called an "April Fool" and taunted "April Fool's Day's past and gone, You're the fool for making one.
thanks to Google's Custom Time feature launched on April 1st 2008, you can. Simply select the '1 hour ago' or '6 hours ago' option when sending your mail and the very concept of late no longer exists.
With April Fool’s day coming up on the 1st of April (obviously) we thought it would be a good idea to collate all our favourite pranks into a blog post for your entertainment and also for some inspiration!
Prank Calls
Prank calls are one of the best and most traditional April Fool’s Day jokes, because they are easy to play and don’t require a lot of preparation! We love all prank calls Fonejacker makes, but we doubt we could put on as many different voices as he could. The key to making your prank call a success is to disguise your voice and make up a good story. Get hold of a free sim card so that your friends don’t recognise your number. You can prank call anyone but normally the best pranks are when you call someone you know because that way you can make sure they appreciate the joke! Check out one of our favourite prank calls below.
Work pranks
If you have to work on April fool’s day, don’t worry, you can still make a few jokes!
Do you have a really important document at work? Perhaps your team has been working on a project for a long time. Take this document and save it in a different location (do this very carefully!). Afterwards replace the old document with a joke or some confusing formulas. Tell your work collegues the document has broken and watch their reaction. Don’t forget to put “April Fools” at the bottom of the document!
When your co-workers are at lunch, go over to their computer (slyly) and search for something embarrassing on Google like discoloration of toenails or Home remedies ingrown toenail. Leave that page open for everyone else passing by to see.
Cling film/Ceran wrap pranks.
Whether you call it cling film or ceran wrap, it doesn’t matter, what matters is that it makes an ace prank! You can wrap anything in cling film! Our favourite cling film prank is wrapping your friend’s car inn cling film because it looks hilarious, check out the video below!
If you are going to play this prank, make sure you don’t damage your friend’s car. It would ruin the joke if your friend had to call their car insurance company! You can also wrap other house hold objects, for example, the toilet seat (messy), doorways, or even an entire room!
Whatever prank you play this April fool’s day, make sure you do it before midday otherwise the joke is on you!
Leave a comment if you know of any other good April fool’s day pranks, we love to watch funny videos!
No related posts.
With April Fool’s day coming up on the 1st of April (obviously) we thought it would be a good idea to collate all our favourite pranks into a blog post for your entertainment and also for some inspiration!
Prank Calls
Prank calls are one of the best and most traditional April Fool’s Day jokes, because they are easy to play and don’t require a lot of preparation! We love all prank calls Fonejacker makes, but we doubt we could put on as many different voices as he could. The key to making your prank call a success is to disguise your voice and make up a good story. Get hold of a free sim card so that your friends don’t recognise your number. You can prank call anyone but normally the best pranks are when you call someone you know because that way you can make sure they appreciate the joke! Check out one of our favourite prank calls below.
Work pranks
If you have to work on April fool’s day, don’t worry, you can still make a few jokes!
Do you have a really important document at work? Perhaps your team has been working on a project for a long time. Take this document and save it in a different location (do this very carefully!). Afterwards replace the old document with a joke or some confusing formulas. Tell your work collegues the document has broken and watch their reaction. Don’t forget to put “April Fools” at the bottom of the document!
When your co-workers are at lunch, go over to their computer (slyly) and search for something embarrassing on Google like discoloration of toenails or Home remedies ingrown toenail. Leave that page open for everyone else passing by to see.
Cling film/Ceran wrap pranks.
Whether you call it cling film or ceran wrap, it doesn’t matter, what matters is that it makes an ace prank! You can wrap anything in cling film! Our favourite cling film prank is wrapping your friend’s car inn cling film because it looks hilarious, check out the video below!
If you are going to play this prank, make sure you don’t damage your friend’s car. It would ruin the joke if your friend had to call their car insurance company! You can also wrap other house hold objects, for example, the toilet seat (messy), doorways, or even an entire room!
Whatever prank you play this April fool’s day, make sure you do it before midday otherwise the joke is on you!
Leave a comment if you know of any other good April fool’s day pranks, we love to watch funny videos!
No related posts.
April Fools' Day is celebrated in different countries on April 1 every year. Sometimes referred to as All Fools' Day, April 1 is not a national holiday, but is widely recognized and celebrated as a day when people play practical jokes and hoaxes on each other.
In France and Italy, children and adults traditionally tack paper fish on each other's back as a trick and shout "April fish!" in their local languages (poisson d'avril! and pesce d'aprile! in French and Italian, respectively).
The earliest recorded association between April 1 and foolishness can be found in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1392). Many writers suggest that the restoration of January 1 as New Year's Day in the 16th century was responsible for the creation of the holiday, but this theory does not explain earlier references.
[edit] Origins
Precursors of April Fools' Day include the Roman festival of Hilaria, held March 25,[1] and the Medieval Feast of Fools, held December 28,[2] still a day on which pranks are played in Spanish-speaking countries.
In Chaucer's Canterbury Tales (1392), the "Nun's Priest's Tale" is set Syn March bigan thritty dayes and two.[3] Modern scholars believe that there is a copying error in the extant manuscripts and that Chaucer actually wrote, Syn March was gon.[4] Thus, the passage originally meant 32 days after April, i.e. May 2,[5] the anniversary of the engagement of King Richard II of England to Anne of Bohemia, which took place in 1381. Readers apparently misunderstood this line to mean "March 32", i.e. April 1.[6] In Chaucer's tale, the vain cock Chauntecleer is tricked by a fox.
In 1508, French poet Eloy d'Amerval referred to a poisson d’avril (April fool, literally "April fish"), a possible reference to the holiday.[7] In 1539, Flemish poet Eduard de Dene wrote of a nobleman who sent his servants on foolish errands on April 1.[5] In 1686, John Aubrey referred to the holiday as "Fooles holy day", the first British reference.[5] On April 1, 1698, several people were tricked into going to the Tower of London to "see the Lions washed".[5]
In the Middle Ages, New Year's Day was celebrated on March 25 in most European towns.[8] In some areas of France, New Year's was a week-long holiday ending on April 1.[1][2] Many writers suggest that April Fools originated because those who celebrated on January 1 made fun of those who celebrated on other dates.[1] The use of January 1 as New Year's Day was common in France by the mid-16th century,[5] and this date was adopted officially in 1564 by the Edict of Roussillon.
A study in the 1950s, by folklorists Iona and Peter Opie, found that in the UK and those countries whose traditions derived from there, the joking ceased at midday.[9] But this practice appears to have lapsed in more recent years.
[edit] Other prank days in the world
Iranians play jokes on each other on the 13th day of the Persian new year (Norouz), which falls on April 1 or April 2. This day, celebrated as far back as 536 BC ,[10] is called Sizdah Bedar and is the oldest prank-tradition in the world still alive today; this fact has led many to believe that April Fools' Day has its origins in this tradition.[11]
The April 1 tradition in France, Romandy and French-speaking Canada includes poisson d'avril (literally "April's fish"), attempting to attach a paper fish to the victim's back without being noticed. This is also widespread in other nations, such as Italy, where the term Pesce d'aprile (literally "April's fish") is also used to refer to any jokes done during the day. In Spanish-speaking countries, similar pranks are practiced on December 28, día de los Santos Inocentes, the "Day of the Holy Innocents". This custom also exists in certain areas of Belgium, including the province of Antwerp. The Flemish tradition is for children to lock out their parents or teachers, only letting them in if they promise to bring treats the same evening or the next day.
Under the Joseon dynasty of Korea, the royal family and courtiers were allowed to lie and fool each other, regardless of their hierarchy, on the first snowy day of the year. They would stuff snow inside bowls and send it to the victim of the prank with fake excuses. The recipient of the snow was thought to be a loser in the game and had to grant a wish of the sender. Because pranks were not deliberately planned, they were harmless and were often done as benevolence towards royal servants.[citation needed]
In Poland, prima aprilis ("April 1" in Latin) is a day full of jokes; various hoaxes are prepared by people, media (which sometimes cooperate to make the "information" more credible) and even public institutions. Serious activities are usually avoided. This conviction is so strong that the anti-Turkish alliance with Leopold I signed on April 1, 1683, was backdated to March 31.
In Scotland, April Fools' Day is traditionally called Hunt-the-Gowk Day ("gowk" is Scots for a cuckoo or a foolish person), although this name has fallen into disuse. The traditional prank is to ask someone to deliver a sealed message requesting help of some sort. In fact, the message reads "Dinna laugh, dinna smile. Hunt the gowk another mile". The recipient, upon reading it, will explain he can only help if he first contacts another person, and sends the victim to this person with an identical message, with the same result.[9]
In Denmark, May 1 is known as "Maj-kat", meaning "May-cat", and is also a joking day. May 1 is also celebrated in Sweden as an alternative joking day. When someone has been fooled in Sweden, to disclose that it was a joke, the fooler says the rhyme "April April din dumma sill, jag kan lura dig vart jag vill" (April, April, you stupid herring, I can fool you to wherever I want") for April 1 jokes, or "Maj maj måne, jag kan lura dig till Skåne" (May May moon, I can fool you into Scania) for May 1 jokes. Both Danes and Swedes also celebrate April Fools' Day ("aprilsnar" in Danish). Pranks on May 1, are much less frequent. Most Swedish news media outlets will publish exactly one false story on April 1, for newspapers this will typically be a first-page article but not the top headline.
In Spain and Ibero-America, an equivalent date is December 28, Christian day of celebration of the Massacre of the Innocents. The Christian celebration is a holiday in its own right, a religious one, but the tradition of pranks is not, though the latter is observed yearly. After somebody plays a joke or a prank on somebody else, the joker usually cries out, in some regions of Ibero-America: "Inocente palomita que te dejaste engañar" ("You innocent little dove that let yourself be fooled"). In Spain, it is common to say just "Inocente!" (which in Spanish can mean "Innocent!", but also "Gullible!"). Nevertheless, on the Spanish island of Minorca, "Dia d'enganyar" ("Fooling day") is celebrated on April 1 because Menorca was a British possession during part of the 18th century.[12]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b c April Fools' Day, Encyclopædia Britannica
- ^ a b Santino, Jack (1972). All around the year: holidays and celebrations in American life. p. 97.
- ^ The Canterbury Tales, "The Nun's Priest's Tale" - "Chaucer in the Twenty-First Century", University of Maine at Machias, September 21, 2007
- ^ Carol Poster, Richard J. Utz, Disputatio: an international transdisciplinary journal of the late middle ages, Volume 2, pp. 16-17 (1997).
- ^ a b c d e Boese, Alex (2008) "April Fools Day - Origin " Museum of Hoaxes
- ^ Compare to Valentine's Day, a holiday that originated with a similar misunderstanding of Chaucer.
- ^ Eloy d'Amerval, Le Livre de la Deablerie, Librairie Droz, p. 70. (1991). "De maint homme et de mainte fame, poisson d'Apvril vien tost a moy."
- ^ Groves, Marsha, Manners and Customs in the Middle Ages, p. 27, 2005.
- ^ a b Opie, Iona & Peter (1967). The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren. Oxford: OUP. pp. 246–247. ISBN 0-19-282059-1.
- ^ "Sizdah Bedar & Purim". blogspot. http://sizdahbedarpurim.blogspot.ca/2012_02_01_archive.html. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
- ^ "The History of April Fools' Day". Life123. http://www.life123.com/holidays/more-holidays/april-holidays/the-history-of-april-fools-day.shtml. Retrieved March 31, 2011.
- ^ "Avui és el Dia d'Enganyar a Menorca [Today is Fooling Day on Minorca]". VilaWeb. April 1, 2003. http://www.vilaweb.cat/noticia/670807/20030401/noticia.html. Retrieved May 24, 2012. (Catalan)
[edit] External links
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Top 100 April Fool's Day Hoaxes of All Time
As judged by notoriety, creativity, and number of people duped.Note from the Curator: I created the first version of this list in the late 1990s. Back then, there was hardly any information collected about April Fool's Day pranks, so I had to do a lot of research in newspaper archives to put this together. Luckily I was in grad school, so I had a lot of spare time on my hands ;-). Over the years I've tweaked the list, rearranging it slightly and adding new entries based on reader feedback and ongoing research, but my top choices have remained pretty much the same. This list is easily the most popular article I've ever posted on the Museum of Hoaxes. Extracts from it (some attributed, some not) can be found on hundreds of other websites. Plus, it's inspired some spinoffs. A couple of years ago, someone created an iPhone app version of it (which I've never seen because I don't have an iPhone), and the folks at the Drama Pod created a dramatized audio version of it in 2011. I hope you enjoy it — and if you know of any old hoaxes that I haven't mentioned on the site, send me an email and let me know. ~Alex
On 1 April 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. Many called the BBC wanting to know how they could grow their own spaghetti tree. To this the BBC diplomatically replied, "place a sprig of spaghetti in a tin of tomato sauce and hope for the best." More→The April 1985 issue of Sports Illustrated contained a story about a new rookie pitcher who planned to play for the Mets. His name was Sidd Finch, and he could reportedly throw a baseball at 168 mph with pinpoint accuracy. This was 65 mph faster than the previous record. Surprisingly, Sidd Finch had never even played the game before. Instead, he had mastered the "art of the pitch" in a Tibetan monastery under the guidance of the "great poet-saint Lama Milaraspa." Mets fans celebrated their teams' amazing luck at having found such a gifted player, and they flooded Sports Illustrated with requests for more information. In reality this legendary player only existed in the imagination of the author of the article, George Plimpton, who left a clue in the sub-heading of the article: "He's a pitcher, part yogi and part recluse. Impressively liberated from our opulent life-style, Sidd's deciding about yoga —and his future in baseball." The first letter of each of these words, taken together, spelled "H-a-p-p-y A-p-r-i-l F-o-o-l-s D-a-y A-h F-i-b". More→
In 1962 there was only one tv channel in Sweden, and it broadcast in black and white. But on 1 April 1962, the station's technical expert, Kjell Stensson, appeared on the news to announce that, thanks to a new technology, viewers could convert their existing sets to display color reception. All they had to do was pull a nylon stocking over their tv screen. Stensson proceeded to demonstrate the process. Thousands of people were taken in. Regular color broadcasts only commenced in Sweden on April 1, 1970. More→The Taco Bell Corporation took out a full-page ad that appeared in six major newspapers on 1 April 1996, announcing it had bought the Liberty Bell and was renaming it the Taco Liberty Bell. Hundreds of outraged citizens called the National Historic Park in Philadelphia where the bell was housed to express their anger. Their nerves were only calmed when Taco Bell revealed, a few hours later, that it was all a practical joke. The best line of the day came when White House press secretary Mike McCurry was asked about the sale. Thinking on his feet, he responded that the Lincoln Memorial had also been sold. It would now be known, he said, as the Ford Lincoln Mercury Memorial. More→On 1 April 1977, the British newspaper The Guardian published a special seven-page supplement devoted to San Serriffe, a small republic said to consist of several semi-colon-shaped islands located in the Indian Ocean. A series of articles affectionately described the geography and culture of this obscure nation. Its two main islands were named Upper Caisse and Lower Caisse. Its capital was Bodoni, and its leader was General Pica. The Guardian's phones rang all day as readers sought more information about the idyllic holiday spot. Only a few noticed that everything about the island was named after printer's terminology. The success of this hoax is widely credited with launching the enthusiasm for April Foolery that gripped the British tabloids in subsequent decades. More→The 1 April 1992 broadcast of National Public Radio's Talk of the Nation revealed that Richard Nixon, in a surprise move, was running for President again. His new campaign slogan was, "I didn't do anything wrong, and I won't do it again." Accompanying this announcement were audio clips of Nixon delivering his candidacy speech. Listeners responded viscerally to the announcement, flooding the show with calls expressing shock and outrage. Only during the second half of the show did the host John Hockenberry reveal that the announcement was a practical joke. Nixon's voice was impersonated by comedian Rich Little.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. Soon the article made its way onto the internet, and then it rapidly spread around the world, forwarded by 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 physicist Mark Boslough.Burger King published a full page advertisement in the April 1st edition of USA Today announcing the introduction of a new item to their menu: a "Left-Handed Whopper" specially designed for the 32 million left-handed Americans. According to the advertisement, the new whopper included the same ingredients as the original Whopper (lettuce, tomato, hamburger patty, etc.), but all the condiments were rotated 180 degrees for the benefit of their left-handed customers. The following day Burger King issued a follow-up release revealing that although the Left-Handed Whopper was a hoax, thousands of customers had gone into restaurants to request the new sandwich. Simultaneously, according to the press release, "many others requested their own 'right handed' version."The April 1995 issue of Discover Magazine reported that the highly respected wildlife biologist Dr. Aprile Pazzo had found 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.During an interview on BBC Radio 2, on the morning of 1 April 1976, the British astronomer Patrick Moore announced 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 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. Moore's announcement (which, of course, was a joke) was inspired by a pseudoscientific astronomical theory that had recently been promoted in a book called The Jupiter Effect, alleging that a rare alignment of the planets was going to cause massive earthquakes and the destruction of Los Angeles in 1982. More→All text Copyright © 2011 by Alex Boese, except where otherwise indicated. All rights reserved.
Google has a tradition of perpetrating hoaxes, especially on April Fools' Day, as well as various easter eggs.
[edit] Easter Eggs
Google has added many Easter eggs to its products and services.
[edit] Calculator
- The Calculator accepts many humorous units of measurement, including the Beard-second (5 nm), Potrzebie (2.2633 mm), Smoot (5 ft, 7 inches), ngogn (11.5938151 ml), blintz (36.4253863 g), donkeypower (250.033167 W), the prefix hella- (10^27), etc.
- The Calculator recognizes a number of strings as numbers. They can be entered by themselves or used in expressions. They must be entered without quotation marks. When used in an expression, the phrases must be entered in lowercase. In addition to mathematical and scientific constants like pi, e and Avogadro's number the Calculator also accepts:
[edit] Search
Various Google services also hide Easter eggs meant to be amusing entertainment.
- Searching for "anagram" shows "Did you mean: nag a ram".
- Searching for "do a barrel roll" or "Z or R twice" will rotate the results page a full 360 degrees. This is a reference to the Nintendo video game Star Fox 64.
- Searching for "recursion" shows "Did you mean: "recursion", which allows you to recursively run searches for recursion.
- Searching for "Jason Isaacs" shows "Hello to Jason Isaacs", a reference to Kermode and Mayo's Film Reviews which greets Jason Isaacs with a 'hello' every week
- Before and during the span of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, searching for various terms which Google has statistics related to, such as "world cup", "world cup usa vs england", or "world cup brazil", causes the result index at the bottom of the page to read as "Gooooooooooal!" instead of "Goooooooooogle".[1]
- Searching for "tilt" or "askew" using a Webkit based browser (such as Google Chrome, Safari, or Android/iOS built-in browsers) or a recent version of Firefox (7+), makes the page 'lean' to the right a bit.
- Around December 2011 and January 2012, Searching for "let it snow" simulates snowfall and frost on the search results. After a while, the search screen fogs up and the blue search button changes to Defrost, enabling the user to defrost the page clicking and rubbing it like a window. Interaction with the actual search screen is disabled until the Defrost button is pressed (even if the entire screen is manually defrosted). Search screen will cease to fog up once the Defrost button is pressed.
- Searching for "hanukkah" changes the border between the search bar and search results into a row of lights shaped like the Star of David.
- Searching for "santa claus", "christmas lights", "12 days of christmas", "father christmas", "candy cane","merry christmas" or "christmas" changes the border between the search bar and search results into a row of Christmas lights.
- Searching for "kwanzaa" changes the border between the search bar and search results into a row of Kinara
- Searching for "kerning" or "keming" changes the letter-spacing of the word "kerning" or "keming", respectively.
- Searching for "binary" changes the number of found results to read out in binary, unless personal results are found. This also works with other number systems such as "hexadecimal" and "octal".
- Searching for "qingming festival" returns a search page containing a stylized tree in the top right, water buffalo in the bottom right, and a jumping koi when the page is clicked.
- Searching for "zerg rush" returns a search page with 'O's eating the search results. Clicking each 'O' a few times kills it. This is a reference to an early attack known as a 'zergling rush' in the Blizzard game Starcraft. After all links have been destroyed, the 'O's form the letters GG in reference to the standard end of game formality and means good game.[2]
[edit] Google Maps/Earth
- In early versions of Google Maps, searching for a route between locations separated by expanses of water (e.g. Paris and New York) provided road directions to the coast of the destination country (in this case, the west coast of France) before suggesting "Swim the Atlantic Ocean (3,500 miles)" or another ocean for a different distance.[3] You can now achieve a similar effect by asking Google Maps for directions across the Pacific Ocean, which will return "Kayak across the Pacific Ocean (2,756 miles)." This route includes a short stretch via land across Hawaii.
- If you ask for walking directions from China to Japan at Step 38 it will state "Jet ski across the Pacific Ocean"
- The measurement tool in Google Earth allows users to measure distance in smoots, a unit of length derived from a tradition at MIT. Smoots are also recognized by Google calculator: 1 smoot in m gives the result 1 smoot = 1.7018 meters.
- On Google Earth, tapping out Ctrl+Alt+A would open a flight simulator feature. This is also available through the menu bar. This is not actually a hoax, just an app provided in Google Earth.
- Going on Google Street View, and heading to the rear of the company's Googleplex headquarters in Mountain View, California, the Google Street View's production team can be seen.
- Google Earth's search example is the Google Inc. headquarters (37 25' 19.1"N, 122 05' 06"W).
- Dragging the Google Street View "Peg man" onto Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, CA used to display him with a tie-dyed shirt. He is also given special clothing for some widely observed special occasions: for Halloween he rides a broomstick; for Valentine's Day he stands upon a heart; and during Christmas week, he becomes a snowman.[4] When dragged into Lego Land in Carlsbad, the "Peg Man" turns into a Lego man.
- The Mars Feature of Google Earth allows you to speak to a primitive ELIZA clone on the planet, by searching for "Meliza".[5]
- There is a photo spot on the northern point of Antarctica that is slightly larger than the others. When the man is dragged on this spot, the man turns into a penguin and you can explore the area the same as a road.[6]
- Searching for "Niniane kicks ass" in Google Maps used to direct to the tech firm's headquarters in Mountain View, California, where an engineering manager called Niniane Wang worked until 2009.[3]
- Another 3D buildings easter egg involves the famous bridge jump scene from The Blues Brothers, which is recreated in Google Earth at the Tacony–Palmyra Bridge linking New Jersey and Philadelphia.[3]
- In Google Maps, when "The Shire" or "Rivendell" is entered as the start point and "Mordor" as the destination and the walking directions button is clicked, the directions return the warning: "Use caution – One does not simply walk into Mordor."[7][8]
- On July 20, 2005, the 36th anniversary of the first human landing on the moon, Google debuted a version of Google Maps that included a small segment of the surface of the moon. It is based entirely on NASA images and includes only a very limited region. Panning causes the map to tile. The map also gives the locations of all moon landings, and the Google Moon FAQ humorously mentions a connection to the Google Copernicus hoax, which Google claimed to be developing. Supposedly, by 2069, Google Local will support all lunar businesses and addresses. Zooming to the closest level in Google Moon used to show that the moon was made of cheese.[9]
[edit] Google.com homepage
- type "where is chuck norris" then press the "i'm feeling lucky" and it says "google won't search for chuck norris because it knows you don't find chuck norris, he finds you.
and for the suggestions it says run, before he finds you, try a diffrent person, try someone less dangerous.
- Pressing the "I'm feeling lucky" bar without any text shows all of the variations on the "Google" logo throughout the years.
- In December 2009, Google added an easter egg on their homepage whereby clicking the "I'm Feeling Lucky" box with no text entered brings up a clock counting down the seconds until 2010. When it reached zero it displayed "Happy New Year" in fireworks.[citation needed]
- In December 2009 when typing in a search term including the word "Christmas" the line separating the sponsored links from the normal search is replaced with Christmas lights. Also, when typing in a search term including the word "Hanukkah" the line separating the sponsored links is replaced with a Dreidel design.
- From May 21–23, 2010, Google replaced its usual homepage with a playable Google-style Pac-man game to celebrate its 30th anniversary. By pressing Insert Coin (which replaced the "I'm feeling lucky" button) multiple times, users could also play a 2-player Ms. Pacman version (moving in WASD). The game is still playable here [1].
[edit] Google Mail
- On the Suggest a feature page for Gmail, it shows "Have Gmail do the laundry" as a suggestion.[10]
- Above the list of emails in Gmail, there is normally an ad, except in the spam folder, where there is instead a link to a recipe containing SPAM™.
[edit] Google Translate
- Go to translate.google.com/translate_buttons and drag the word English (if your computer is in English) into your bookmark bar and then click on it. It will load the page with a very old retro kind of logo.
- Go to translate.google.com and set 'translate from' to English. By pasting "pv zk bschk" at the beginning of the string to be translated, the translator will be changed to a "beatbox" mode. The tooltip which shows when the cursor is held over the speaker icon, will now show "beatbox" rather than "listen". Various combinations of consonants typed into the translator after the initial string will result in a beatbox output rather than the usual speech narrator output. Note that there are other languages besides English which may be chosen for the beatbox mode to be operable, though the choice seems random. For example, Albanian, Armenian, and Belarusian will work, but not Azerbajaini or Basque.
- Pressing control-shift-y in Picasa will cause a teddybear to appear on the screen.[11]
- Pressing the keys "up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A" in Google's Feed reader will cause the screen to turn blue and a ninja to appear on the left.[12] It also causes the phrase "Ninja!" to appear in the search box.
- Google offers services in many languages, including several uncommon ones like Swedish Chef's Bork bork bork, Pig Latin, Hacker (usually known as 1337sp34k), Elmer Fudd, Klingon and Pirate.
- Taking the term Easter egg literally (and perhaps to celebrate the Easter holiday), Google has an official Easter Eggs page.
- If one sets the iGoogle theme to the "Beach" option, then at 3:14 am every morning, the Loch Ness Monster surfaces for 1 minute, then at 3:15 dives back under. The reason for the timing of 3:14 is rumoured to be a tribute to the number pi. Additional 3:14 eggs include the "Seasonal Scape" showing off the Northern Lights, the "City Scape" with UFOs, the "Spring Scape" with a monster, the "Sweet Dreams" with the stars aligning to the shape of the symbol pi, and the "Tea House" that has spirits in the mist.
- In Chrome, Google's Web browser, entering "about:internets" into the address bar brings up a copy of the Windows Screen Saver 3D Pipes, with the title "Don't Clog the Tubes". In the event that this does not occur due to the fact that the screensaver file does not exist in the system, the browser will instead display a gray screen with the title "The Tubes are Clogged!" This has been removed as of the 2.0.169.1 release.
- The Google Gears Firefox add-on description line reads "These are the gears that power the tubes! :-)". Google Chrome's gears.dll's description also reads "These are the gears that power the tubes! :-)".
- During the course of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, YouTube had a button shaped like a soccer ball in certain videos that plays a recurring vuvuzela sound throughout the video.
- In Google's iPhone and iPod touch search application, swiping downwards (past About) repeatedly in the Settings interface brings up a hidden menu item, called Bells and Whistles, allowing customization of colors, sounds and more within the app. This is now standard on the newest update.[13]
- In YouTube, holding down the left and up arrow while pausing or watching a video will cause a game of Snake to launch. This is actually a result of two steps; pressing the up arrow while a video is loading launches the game, while pressing the left arrow forces the video to rewind and load momentarily, thus allowing the game to launch.[14]
- In YouTube during December 2011, a button was added which, when clicked, caused animated snow to fall from the top of the video.
- In Google Voice, once a text-message being typed exceeds 320 characters ( 2 x 160-per-SMS), the countdown changes to "Really?"
- A 500 Internal server error on YouTube will cause this message to appear: 'A team of highly trained monkeys has been dispatched to deal with this situation. If you see them, show them this information:' followed by a random code.
- In Google Docs, within a spreadsheet, pressing Shift+F12 brings up a message: "Dragon slain! Congratulations, you've slain the dragon!".
- In YouTube, adding &wadsworth=1 to the URL will apply Wadsworth's constant, skipping the first 30% of the video.[15]
- Typing "清明节" into Google will use a calligraphy background in the search results page.
- Going to www.google.com/heart gives a video of a jumping heart in the background.
[edit] April Fool's Hoaxes
Google's first April Fools' Day hoax, the MentalPlex hoax, invited users to project a mental image of what they wanted to find whilst staring at an animated gif.[16] Several humorous error messages[17] were then displayed on the search results page,[18] all listed below:
- Error 001: Weak or no signal detected. Upgrade transmitter and retry.
- Error 666: Multiple transmitters detected. Silence voices in your head and try again.
- Error 01: Brainwaves received in analog. Please re-think in digital.
- Error 8P: Unclear on whether your search is about money or monkeys. Please try again.
- Error 005: Searching on this topic is prohibited under international law.
- Error CKR8: That information is protected under the National Security Act.
- Error 144: That information was lost with the Martian Lander. Please try again.
- Error 006: Query is unclear. Try again after removing hat, glasses and shoes.
- Error 008: Interference detected. Remove aluminum foil and remote control devices.
- Error: Insufficient conviction. Please clap hands 3 times, while chanting "I believe" and try again.
- Error: MentalPlex(tm) has determined that this is not your final answer. Please try again.
Google reveals the technology behind its PageRank Systems—PigeonRank. Google touts the benefits of this cost-effective and efficient means of ranking pages and reassures readers that there is no animal cruelty involved in the process. The article makes many humorous references and puns based on computer terminology and how Google PageRank really works, (for example, a chart showing the pigeons' consumption of linseed and flax, represented as "Lin/Ax Kernels," a pun on the Linux kernel).[19]
Fictitious job opportunities for a research center on the moon. Luna/X (a pun to Linux and the Latin word for moon, as well as a reference to both the Windows XP visual style and Mac OS X) is the name of a new operating system they claimed to have created for working at the research center.
Google Gulp, a fictitious drink, was announced by Google in 2005. According to the company, this beverage would optimize one's use of the Google search engine by increasing the drinker's intelligence. It was claimed this boost was achieved through real-time analysis of the user's DNA and carefully tailored adjustments to neurotransmitters in the brain (a patented technology termed Auto-Drink; as the "Google Gulp FAQ" suggests, partly through MAO inhibition). The drink was said to come in "4 great flavors": Glutamate Grape (glutamic acid), Sugar-Free Radical (free radicals), Beta Carroty (beta carotene), and Sero-Tonic Water (serotonin).[20]
This hoax was probably intended as a parody of Google's then invite-only email service called Gmail. Although ostensibly free, the company claimed the beverage could only be obtained by returning the cap of a Google Gulp bottle to a local grocery store: a causal loop. In the Google Gulp FAQ, Google replies to the observation "I mean, isn't this whole invite-only thing kind of bogus?" by saying "Dude, it's like you've never even heard of viral marketing."
On April Fool's Day 2006, Google Romance was announced on the main Google search page with the introduction, "Dating is a search problem. Solve it with Google Romance." It pretends to offer a "Soulmate Search" to send users on a "Contextual Date". A parody of online dating, it had a link for "those who generally favor the 'throw enough stuff at the wall' approach to online dating" to Post multiple profiles with a bulk upload file, you sleaze in addition to Post your Google Romance profile. Clicking on either of these gave an error page, which explained that it was an April Fool's joke and included links to previous April Fool's jokes.
[edit] Gmail Paper
At about 10:00 pm, Pacific time (where Google has its headquarters) on March 30, 2007, Google changed the login page for Gmail to announce a new service called Gmail Paper. The service offered to allow users of Google's free webmail service to add e-mails to a "Paper Archive", which Google would print (on "96% post-consumer organic soybean sputum") and mail via traditional post. The service would be free, supported by bold, red advertisements printed on the back of the printed messages. Image attachments would also be printed on high-quality glossy paper, though MP3 and WAV files would not be printed. The page detailing more information about the service features photographs of Ian Spiro and Carrie Kemper, current employees of Google. Also featured are Product Marketing Managers of Gmail Anna-Christina Douglas, and Shane Lawrence
[edit] Google TiSP
Google TiSP (short for Toilet Internet Service Provider) was a fictitious free broadband service supposedly released by Google. This service would make use of a standard toilet and sewage lines to provide free Internet connectivity at a speed of 8 Mbit/s (2 Mbit/s upload) (or up to 32 Mbit/s with a paid plan). The user would drop a weighted end of a long, Google-supplied fiber-optic cable in their toilet and flush it. Around 60 minutes later, the end would be recovered and connected to the Internet by a "Plumbing Hardware Dispatcher (PHD)". The user would then connect their end to a Google-supplied wireless router and run the Google-supplied installation media on a Windows XP or Windows Vista computer ("Mac and Linux support coming soon"). Alternatively, a user could request a professional installation, in which Google would deploy nanobots through the plumbing to complete the process. The free service would be supported by "discreet DNA sequencing" of "personal bodily output" to display online ads that relate to culinary preferences and personal health. Google also referenced the diet coke-and-Mentos reaction in their FAQ: "If you're still experiencing problems, drop eight mints into the bowl and add a two-liter bottle of diet soda."
[edit] Blogger "Google Weblogs (beta)"
The Blogger dashboard featured an announcement for Google Weblogs, or "GWeblogs," or "Gblogs," the next revolution in personal publishing. Features include algorithms putting your best content at the top of your blog (rather than publishing by reverse chronology), automatically populating your blog's sidebar with the most relevant content, posting directly into Google search results for maximum visibility, blog headers refreshed with images from Google's team of artists for anniversaries of a scientific achievement (similar to Google Doodle), and automatic content generation ('Unsure of what to post about? Just click "I'm Feeling Lucky" and we'll "take care" of the rest!')
The announcement was followed by a link to a video tour of the product, which actually led to Tay Zonday's cover of Rick Astley's "Never Gonna Give You Up."
[edit] Dajare
Google launches Dajare in Japan (google.co.jp), with the mission of "organizing the world's laughter."[21]
Google announces gDay in Australia, a new beta search technology that will search web pages 24 hours before they are created.[22] The name is a play on the phrase "g'day".
[edit] Gmail Custom Time
Gmail's sign-in page and a banner at the top of each Gmail inbox announced a new feature, called Gmail Custom Time, that would allow its users to "pre-date" their messages and choose to have the message appear as "read" or "unread". The new feature uses the slogan "Be on time. Every time."
Around 11:00 pm EST March 31, 2008, on the newer and older version of Gmail, but not in the basic HTML version, in the upper right corner, next to Settings, a link appeared labeled, "New! Gmail Custom Time". The link led to a 404 error until April 1,[23][24] when it led to the full Gmail Custom Time hoax page.[25] Clicking any of the three links at the bottom of the page brought the user to a page stating that Gmail Custom time was, in fact, their April Fool's Day joke.
Google wrote that the new joke feature "utilizes an e-flux capacitor [a pun from the film Back to the Future] to resolve issues of causality." Fake testimonials were given by "beta users"; one example is, "I used to be an honest person; but now I don't have to be. It's just so much easier this way. I've gained a lot of productivity by not having to think about doing the 'right' thing."
The feature only allowed for ten pre-dated emails per year, claiming that any more "would cause people to lose faith in the accuracy of time, thus rendering the feature useless."
[edit] Google Book Search Scratch and Sniff
Google Book Search has a new section allowing users to "scratch and sniff" certain books. Users are asked to "...please place your nose near the monitor and click 'Go'", which then "loads odors". When clicking on "Help", users are redirected to a page in a book that describes the origins of April Fools' Day.[26]
[edit] Google Calendar is Feeling Lucky
Google added the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button to its calendar feature. When a user tries to create a new event, the user was given the regular option of entering the correct details and hitting "Create Event", and also the new option of "I'm Feeling Lucky" which would set the user up with an evening date with, among others, Matt Damon, Eric Cartman, Tom Cruise, Jessica Alba, Pamela Anderson, Paris Hilton, Angelina Jolie, Britney Spears, Anna Kournikova, Johnny Depp, George W. Bush, or Lois Griffin.
[edit] Google Dialect Translation
Google announces Google 사투리 번역 (Google dialect translation) for translating regional Korean dialects to and from Standard Korean.[27]
[edit] Google Docs
A little easter egg was added, where a user can click the file menu and directly under new document is "New Airplane" which immediately opens a copy of a Google branded paper airplane. To reach the file menu, click the new menu, then "Document" then a new window opens.
[edit] Google Manpower Search
Google launches Manpower Search (谷歌人肉搜索) in China (google.cn). This new feature is powered by 25 million volunteers who do the searching around the clock. When the user entered a keyword, volunteers will search any possible answers from a mass of paper documents as well as online resources. The user is expected to get the search result within 32 seconds. The "search" button now avoids the user's cursor, making it tricky to click on the button.
[edit] Google Talk
Google announces plans to, on April 22, 2008 (Earth Day), shorten all conversations over Google Talk thereby reducing the energy required to transmit chats in an effort to reduce carbon output.
[edit] Google Wake Up Kit
Google launched their "Wake Up Kit" as a calendar notification option.
The 'wake up' notification uses several progressively more annoying alerts to wake you up. First it will send an SMS message to your phone. If that fails, more coercive means will be used. The kit includes an industrial-sized bucket and is designed to be connected to your water main for automatic filling. In addition, a bed-flipping device is included for forceful removal from your sleeping quarters.
[edit] Virgle
Google announces a joint project with the Virgin Group to establish a permanent human settlement on Mars. This operation has been named Project Virgle. The announcement includes videos of Richard Branson (founder of Virgin Group) as well as Larry Page and Sergey Brin (the founders of Google) on YouTube, talking about Virgle.[28] An "application" to join the settlement includes questions such as:
I am a world-class expert in:
- Physics
- First Aid
- Engineering
- Guitar Hero III
After the user submitted the application, the site notifies the user that the user is not fit for space, or that the user's application is fine and "all you have to do is submit your video" [as a response to their video on YouTube]. As a result, an open source Virgle group has been established, OpenVirgle. On the FAQ page, the final question is "Okay, come on – seriously. Is this Virgle thing for real?" The reply links to a page that tells the user it's an April Fool's joke, and then mentions that the user "Dragged us out of our lovely little fantasy world, to crush all our hopes and dreams."[29]
[edit] Yogurt
Google's Orkut displayed its name as yogurt, Google Bang, Inc.
[edit] YouTube
On April 1, 2008, all featured videos on the UK and Australian homepages, and later, all international homepages, of Google-owned YouTube linked to a video of Rick Astley's song "Never Gonna Give You Up", causing all users of the website who clicked on featured videos to be Rickrolled. This was the first year YouTube participated in Google's April Fool's Day tradition.
[edit] Google runs on Microsoft Windows IIS/3.0
google.com.au reported as if it ran on IIS/3.0[30] and google.com on Apache/0.8.4[31] (on Linux).
The announcement of CADIE was made on March 31, 2009 11:59 pm by the CADIE Team, not on April 1. The announcement on the Google blog was made at 4/01/2009 12:01:00 am.
The introduction page and all of the references to CADIE in Google's Products were taken down on April 2, replaced with a message stating:
We apologize for the recent disruption(s) to our service(s).
Please stand by while order is being restored.
However the technology page describing the technical capabilities of the software remained at:
When using Google Books or GMail, a user would come across an announcement dated March 31, 2009 at 11:59:59, declaring a new "Cognitive Autoheuristic Distributed-Intelligence Entity". CADIE is also mentioned on the gBall FAQ page: "Google's new CADIE technology will interpret the data obtained from each ball to provide useful tips to owners". There was also a link on Google's Homepage for CADIE, and a blog entry in Google's official blog.
CADIE technology is also used to generate "senryu" (a type of Japanese poem similar to haiku) based on search terms for certain Japanese queries.
The Google Search homepage had a link to the CADIE announcement, stating that "For several years now a small research group has been working on some challenging problems in the areas of neural networking, natural language and autonomous problem-solving. Last fall this group achieved a significant breakthrough: a powerful new technique for solving reinforcement learning problems, resulting in the first functional global-scale neuro-evolutionary learning cluster." The page links to the blog below.
On mobile devices, a link shows up to Brain Search, which uses CADIE technology to "index your brain". This[dead link] is what it all looks like from a mobile device.
[edit] YouTube
On April 1, 2009, YouTube gave some users a look at a new "viewing experience"[dead link] when they selected a video within certain areas such as the "recommended for you" section. This new interface caused the whole layout including the video you were watching to flip upside down. Although the option was not visible for some, it could be viewed by adding &flip=1 to the end of a video URL. Adding &flip=1 to the end of a video URL no longer causes this effect, and the video loads normally. A page on "tips for viewing the new layout" suggested users hang their monitors upside down from the ceiling, although the layout did not reverse mouse-control.
When one is using the Gmail service, they will notice that it has a new option, named "Gmail Autopilot" in which the service would analyze an email. On that page it says under the FAQ section,"You can adjust tone, typo propensity, and preferred punctuation from the Autopilot tab under Settings." However, if a person logs into their Gmail account and goes under the Settings tab they will notice that there is no Autopilot tab. The program could be customised to contain certain types of grammatical or spelling errors, as well as complexity and length of the sentence. It also has a way of responding to relationship related messages, such as if someone spoke aggressively, even in a humorous way, the system would "terminate relationship."
Google Australia announced the development of a ball that will change how Australian Football is played the world over. The newest football technology—"gBall"—is a prototype ball for use in the Australian Football League with GPS.
Google Australia announces ("New! Get the newest football technology – gBall.") that they are developing a prototype ball for use in the Australian Football League with GPS. Apparently, the ball will measure the location, force, and torque of a kick, and "vibrate if player agents or talent scouts want to speak to you". Google claimed that the ball will cost $10 with a cost-per-kick set of payments in addition to the basic fee.
[edit] Google Analytics
A blog post to the Google Analytics Blog investigates the analytics reports of CADIEs activities.[32]
[edit] Google Maps
Google's CADIE has a recommended places to visit using Google Maps. Viewing "CADIE's recommended places for humans" one will see each of her suggested places listed, that, when clicked, displays a photo and humorous commentary.
There is also a "CADIE's recommended places for humans." link in Google Maps, which leads to the "Panda Mapplet" and includes several marked locations with "CADIE's" commentary. Under Redmond WA a link is listed which will rick roll the viewer.
[edit] Blogger
CADIE's personal blog/homepage
[edit] Google Chrome with 3D
A build of Google Chrome was offered rendering web pages in Anaglyph 3D, "powered" by CADIE. A 3D effect was actually possible with this browser, but it only made the window appear to be sunken into the monitor.
[edit] Google Earth Powered by CADIE
Google announced a new Google Earth powered by CADIE, which claimed to allow the user to see ocean terrain imagery from the world's most advanced submarine, explore the deep sea, soar with CADIE in real time, view CADIE's Recommended Summer Vacation, and chat with CADIE, among other options.
[edit] Google Code
The Google Code Search homepage is featuring LOLCODE examples.
CADIE is set to write code for you based on specified features; however all that is returned is bad code or witty criticisms of your request and choice of programing language, recommending the use of INTERCAL.
CADIE's source code was supposedly uploaded to Google Code,[33][34] but she changed her mind and replaced it with a "fun program"[35] consisting of 31 lines of INTERCAL. When executed, this program prints out the message "I do not feel like sharing."
[edit] Google Book Search
CADIE recommends some books at Google Book Search homepage. Also, when viewing a book, there is a Generate book report button. When clicked it says "Gotcha! It's April Fools' Day! Sorry, but you'll have to actually read the book yourself."
[edit] Google Docs on Demand
Google has announced new Google Docs features enhanced by CADIE
Add subliminal messages and images to documents.
If a person makes a new presentation and looks for the subliminal message and image buttons under the insert menu they will notice it is not there.
Upgrade your Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level automatically, and many other savvy new features.[edit] Google Mobile
Google Mobile has a link to "Brain Search[dead link]". The instructions are to "Put phone to forehead for brain indexing" and "Think your query". When you click "Try Now", a page loads with "Brain indexing" status. When indexing is complete, a button comes up with "search me". By clicking this button, the user is directed to fake search results. There are several possible results:
Should I order the pizza? I don't remember if it makes me gassy.[dead link]
Wow, cute guy. Should I go up to him?[dead link]
Why is everyone looking at me so strangely?[dead link]
When is Mom's birthday? I should send her a card.[dead link]
[edit] Google Knol
Knol was updated so that all of the featured articles were about Artificial Intelligence, with a message from CADIE indicating that this "improvement" was for the good of mankind.
In keeping with the CADIE theme Google has altered the server HTTP header to contain the name of various AI entities, including HAL 9000, WOPR, and GLaDOS.[36]
Other server HTTP headers found were IIS/Bob (a reference to Microsoft Bob), IIS/Clippy (a reference to Clippy), IIS/3.0, Netscape iPlanet, Chrome/3.0, Google Operating System (BETA), CERN/3.0 (a reference to CERN HTTPd), Apple (a reference to Apple II), IRIX, MCP, Apache/0.8.4, Conficker, and Skynet.
[edit] Oil Tanker Data Center
During the last minutes of Google's Data Center Efficiency Summit, Urs Hoelzle presented in a "special topic": Google had bought an oil tanker, the "M/S Sergey", where Google's data center containers were being submerged in oil tanks to enable extremely high-efficiency cooling. The presentation can be seen in the video, and includes slightly customized Wikipedia images from the article Oil tanker, including a retouched photo of commercial oil tanker AbQaiq and the oil tankers side view graphic.
Even though Google did apply for a US patent to build data centers on cargo ships and oil cooling is an existing technology, summit attendee James Hamilton believed this topic to be an April Fools joke. The ship's name "M/S Sergey" is also likely to be a pun on Google's co-founder Sergey Brin.
[edit] Google and Topeka, Kansas, Switch Places
In early March, the city of Topeka, Kansas, temporarily changed its name to Google in an attempt to capture a spot in Google's new broadband/fiber-optics project. Then, on April 1 (April Fools' Day), Google jokingly announced that it would be changing its name to Topeka, to "honor that moving gesture" and changed its home page to say Topeka in place of the Google logo.[37]
[edit] Google Books available in Anachrome 3D
Google books introduced a feature which allows any book to be read in 3D, assuming the viewer has appropriate glasses. It was enabled by clicking the "View in 3D" button in the menu bar above the book. This feature was removed after April 1, but on June 29, 2010, Google announced its restoration.[38] Google also released the latest form of 3D glasses, similar to the ones you would use today when seeing a film.
[edit] Store anything on Google Docs
Google announced that Google Docs will have the capacity to upload anything, including physical objects like keys, remote controls, etc. The site declared that one could use this to find items like keys using CTRL-F and send objects around the globe by "uploading" and "downloading" them, at the low price of $0.10 per kg.
[edit] Search results generated in different units
Google's search results page displayed the time taken to load the results in different units from seconds. Several of these are pop culture references, as with 1.21 gigawatts, while others refer to slang:
[edit] YouTube ASCII video filter
The logo of YouTube was overlaid with ASCII text repeating the character "1".[39] The YouTube logo was a reference to some videos having a new quality setting, namely "TEXTp". According to a notice underneath the videos, viewing the video with this quality setting enabled allowed YouTube to save one US dollar ($1) per second on bandwidth costs. The notice also remarked on the source of this new "feature," wishing the reader a happy April Fool's Day.
However in accordance with the announcement, the video quality on many videos was indeed able to be set to 'TEXTp' and video output was rendered through an ASCII filter. This feature was removed on April 2, 2010.
[edit] Animal Translator BETA
Google placed a link on the main page, advertising a new Google Animal Translator service to add to their Language Translator service. Clicking the link would take you to a page advertising an app for Android phones for the translator, with the tagline being "Bridging the gap between animals and humans".
Once the app is installed on an Android phone, it provides some amusing translations depending on the animal selected.
[edit] Standard Voicemail Mode for Google voice
Google placed a New! Standard Voicemail Mode link in the Google Voice main page.
[edit] Evil Bit
Google added an "evil bit" to their AJAX APIs, to aid in generating an appropriate response to nefarious deeds. If an evildoer is "detected", the code returns with, among other things, "For Great Justice", a quote from the video game Zero Wing.[40]
[edit] Wave Wave Notifications
Google Wave can be set to have a human being wave at you to notify you of a change to a Google Wave. The user can also select the volume of the human notifier from a list of silent, medium, loud and vibrate. They can also select which human notifier they want, including Ashton Kutcher, Dr. Wave, Grandma, Werner Heisenberg, and Puppy. Clicking on any of the links on the new notifications page redirected the user to a Google help page, alerting them that it was an April Fools' joke, but also that email notifications are possible.
[edit] Google Annotations Gallery
The Google Annotations Gallery ("GAG") is an exciting new Java open source library that provides a rich set of annotations for developers to express themselves.[41]
[edit] Japanese Input System
Google's proposed keyboard includes a single key for each Japanese character.[42]
[edit] Disemvoweling on Google Mail
The English-language home page of Google Mail, including its logo, was disemvowelled. A post on the GMail blog was created to address the issue, claiming that they had encountered a server error which firstly made the datacenters fail to render the vowel 'a' before failing to render the vowels, and were working on the problem. They also claimed to be investigating whether the letter 'y' was impacted.[43]
[edit] Chrome Sounds (Google Chrome Extension)
Google created a new extension, Chrome Sounds, after "months deep in psychoacoustic models, the Whittaker-Nyquist-Kotelnikov-Shannon sampling theorem, Franssen effects, Shepard-Risset Tones, and 11.1 surround sound research".[44] The extension provides audio for actions performed within the Google Chrome web browser. For a few interesting sounds, try going to different countries' localized Google pages. The full list of sounds that this extension makes can be found by going to the Chrome Tools menu, choosing Extensions, turning on developer mode, and viewing the source of the extension.
[edit] Google Analytics Goes Back to Hits
Google decided that hits really is the only metric for tracking web site usage.[45]
[edit] Life size Picasa
Google offered an option which allows the user to print lifesize cardboard cutouts of all of their photos.[46]
[edit] ReaderAdvantage Program
Google announced a reward program for Google Reader, known as ReaderAdvantage™, in which they would assign points to users depending on the number of items read on Google Reader. The rewards were different badges, which, on visiting the ReaderAdvantage™ page and clicking on the enroll button, shows this page.
[edit] Wingdings in Adsense
Wingdings was announced as a new font option for Adsense users.[47]
[edit] YouTube
A button was added to the video player which, when clicked, would apply a video filter to the video and replace the audio with piano music to resemble the style of a film from 1911 in a Phrygian mode. If subtitles are enabled when watching the video, intertitles will be displayed containing the dialogue. The upload page also featured an option to "send a horse-drawn carriage to me to pick [the video] up".[48] In addition, a few videos were made parodying several viral videos, such as the "Flugelhorn Feline".
[edit] Gmail Motion
A body gesture oriented way to send and view mail through Gmail. In the "How it Works" Section it reads "Gmail Motion uses your computer's built-in webcam and Google's patented spatial tracking technology to detect your movements and translate them into meaningful characters and commands. Movements are designed to be simple and intuitive for people of all skill levels." An overview video presented by Gmail product manager Paul McDonald explains Gmail Motion's "language of movements that replaces type entirely" while a mime artist performs the full-body Gmail actions.[49]
Upon clicking the "Try Gmail Motion" button, it tells you about the prank, and says "Gmail Motion doesn't actually exist. At least not yet..." The page also offers a preview of the features of Google Docs Motion.
[edit] Google Docs Motion
Using Gmail Motion's technology, Google has promoted the BETA version of Google Docs Motion which "will introduce a new way to collaborate – using your body" in their Documents, Spreadsheets, Presentations, Drawings, and Document List tools.[50]
[edit] Autocompleter Job
A YouTube video was posted by Google showing a "Google Autocompleter" employee explaining the job. Also, a job opening was featured for an "Autocompleter."[51] Clicking on the "Add to job cart" or "View cart" links to a google search for "google april fools day pranks".[52]
[edit] Chromercise
Google Chrome launched a new website called "Chromercise", which aims to increase people's hands' strength and dexterity while browsing the web faster, and also allowing their hands to fit "into sleeker, sexier gloves". On the website, they also gave away free Google Chrome finger sweatbands for a limited time.[53]
Due to the large-scale devastation from the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, in lieu of a traditional April Fools hoax, Google Japan featured many never-before featured drawings from its 2009 Google Doodle competition, themed "What I Love About Japan" drawn by Japanese schoolchildren, saying "We promised that only the top prize winners would be featured on Google, but as this is the only day where lies are forgiven, we have obtained the other children's understanding." As a small concession to the usual festivities, the Google Blog mentioned, "This year's April Fools joke has been postponed until next year. Next year's April Fool's joke has been postponed until the year following that."[54]
[edit] Google 穿越搜索
Google 穿越搜索 (Google teleport) is a service that allows user to time travel. The site is written in Simplified Chinese. It claims that it can take you on a journey through time and space. You can experience everything in first-person.[55]
[edit] Search
Searching for "helvetica", "comic sans", or "comic sans ms" temporarily changed the entire webpage's font to Comic Sans.[56]
[edit] Comic Sans for Everyone
Announcement that Comic Sans will become the default font for all Google products. Google also created a Google Chrome extension which changes the font to Comic Sans on all webpages.
[edit] Google Cow
The Google Body homepage appeared as Google Cow, where a cow's body can be examined in 3D. There was a toggle button that switched to human models.
[edit] Google Maps
Google Maps used to display a dragon in Germany's biggest forest, the 'Pfälzer Wald'.[57] Also a shark in Holland's lake called IJmeer, East of Amsterdam was featured. When viewed in Earth Mode or Google Earth. These can be rendered in 3D. There is also a narwhal in the Thames in London, outside Millbank Tower. The Loch Ness monster also makes an appearance in 'Loch Ness' A giant red lobster sits atop the Zakim Bridge in Boston. Also a pink elephant at "Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA".
[edit] Google Translate for Animals
Google UK purportedly offered a version of Google Translate which could be used to talk with animals.[58]
[edit] Google Voice
Google Voice has a new function that makes users spell out common words like “embarrassed”, ”dizzy” or ”Czechoslovakia”, before they connect your call in order to prevent embarrassing messages.
[edit] Adwords
AdWords announced a new format, Google Blimp Ads, that would be flying over major cities starting in May.[59]
[edit] Google I/O
The announced sessions for the Google I/O conference for software developers were changed to include talks featuring technologies from the late 1990s.[60]
[edit] Contoso has gone Google
On the Google Enterprise Blog, Google announced that Contoso (a fictional company used by Microsoft in Microsoft's product documentation materials) has switched from Microsoft Office and Microsoft Exchange to Google Apps. The post included references to 2007's TiSP and 2011's Gmail Motion jokes.[61]
[edit] Meow Me Now Mobile
On the Google Mobile Blog, Google announced a new mobile-based search option for Android and iOS devices which locates kittens near the user's current location.[62]
[edit] Blogger
The blogging service Blogger announced that it was being acquired by Google, even though it has been part of Google since 2003.[63]
[edit] Google Maps 8-bit for NES
Google partnered with Square Enix and announced a "NES version" of their Google Maps service, to be released "as soon as possible". The version would be released in NES and Famicom versions (the Famicom version will feature voice input by using the second controller's microphone). In the meantime, Google added a "Quest" layer to the Maps website, which features 8-bit tile-based graphics and sprites on landmarks, both made by Google and by Square Enix (using the Dragon Quest game series' graphics).[64]
[edit] Improved Japanese Input System
Google's proposed improved keyboard based on the experience with Japanese input system from 2010.[65]
[edit] The YouTube Collection
YouTube added a small disc on the right side of the YouTube logo, which when clicked leads to a page about a service called "The YouTube Collection". It claimed to be an at-home experience of YouTube and made everything from videos to comments physical, including a postal mail commenting service. At the bottom of the website, it had a fake shipping form which after filled said "Your order has been placed. Due to heavy demand, your anticipated delivery date is: JUNE 16, 2045" and in small grey text at the bottom said "Also, April Fools."
[edit] Google Street Roo
Google announced they will deploy a ‘roo force’ of more than 1,000 big red kangaroos who will capture up to 98% of the Australian bush within the next three years.[66]
[edit] Underwater Image Search
An underwater image search experience developed by Google China.[67]
[edit] Google Weather Control
Google added weather control to its weather search.[68]
[edit] Chrome Multitask Mode
Chrome Multitask Mode makes it possible to browse the web with two or more mice at the same time. Clicking the "Try Multitask Mode" button initially creates one fake mouse that moves around the screen, and over time adds several more. Clicking the "Exit Multitask Mode" button shows an April Fools message.[69]
[edit] Elegantizr
Google introduced the Elegantizr HTML/CSS framework. To use it, one just needs to insert the following line of HTML:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="http://www.google.com/landing/elegantizr/elegantizr.css" />[edit] Piano & Sitar Analytics Playback
Google Analytics allows the user to playback their website statistics on piano and sitar.
[edit] Google Racing
Google announced a partnership with NASCAR to help create self-driving vehicles to compete in stock car racing.[70] The "I'm Feeling Lucky" button on Google's site was also changed to "I'm Steering Lucky."[71] Google racing is available at http://www.google.com/racing/
[edit] Gmail Tap
Gmail Tap for Android and iOS doubles typing speed with a revolutionary new keyboard.[72] The system involves a keyboard with three keys: Morse code "dash" and "dot", and a spacebar (along with backspace). Shortly before midnight, on March 31, 2012 added Gmail Tap – Android and iOS Application utilizing Morse Code instead of onscreen keyboard. Selecting Download App for Your Phone produces the message: "Oops! Gmail Tap is a bit too popular right now. We suggest you try downloading it again on April 2nd." Clicking Retry button will produce "It's still April 1st, 2012. You'll have to wait till April 2nd to download Gmail Tap." On Gmail's Facebook page,[73] they also posted about a Morse Keyboard. Prior to the hoax a real iOS app with similar functionality was already available for sale on the Apple App Store called "morseLab". This had been on the App Store for over a month and was already in use in over 20 countries worldwide.
[edit] Really Advanced Search
A link on the bottom of search results pages titled Really Advanced Search takes users to a search page where they can filter their search results by, among other things, subtext or innuendo, page font (Comic Sans or Wingdings), loanword origin, or future modification date. Clicking on the "Advanced Search" button to actually run the search query redirects users to search results for "April Fools".
[edit] Click-to-Teleport Extensions
Click-to-Teleport extensions allow potential customers to instantly teleport to the business location directly from a search ad in a matter of seconds. This teleportation technology shortens the "online-to-store" conversion funnel by providing searchers with an easy way to visit any business and convert. On average, advertisers using Click-to-Teleport extensions have seen their offline sales increase by 3600%.[74]
[edit] Google Fiber
Rather than a high-speed fiber optic internet service, Google Fiber is a food bar high in dietary fiber.[75]
Solving the increasingly frustrating problem of accessing mobile internet on rotary phones across the US, Google is announcing GoRo. GoRo aims to fix the problem that 100% of people using rotary phones have trouble accessing a website.
[edit] Jargon-Bot for Google Apps
Jargon-Bot instantly recognizes business terms and provides real-time, in-product jargon translation into plain English.[76]
[edit] Google TV Click
Innovative remote control application for phone and tablet lets users interact with shows and movies as they are playing.[77]
[edit] Google Voice for Pets
Google introduced special Voice Communication Collars that fit around your pet's neck and use a series of sensors to record audio directly from your dog or cat’s vocal cords. Using your WiFi network, audio messages are uploaded to your Google Voice account within seconds. Alternately, a tiny micro-LED emitter built into the collar can project a keyboard onto the floor, so your pet can tap their front paws to send text messages. To understand cat or dog, Google took their voicemail transcription engine and combined it with millions of adorable pet videos from the Internet, training it to translate cat meows or dog growls into English.[78]
[edit] $1 Google Offer for Unlimited Good Parking Karma
$1 Google Offer for unlimited good parking karma takes the stress and guesswork out of finding a good spot by providing the following service: 1) prime spots when you need them, 2) repels parking tickets, 3) includes 1 space buffer on each side, 4) shopping cart protection plan, 5) no parallel parking for first 6 months.
[edit] Canine Staffing Team
Google revealed that dogs at Google offices go through the same detailed recruitment and hiring process by Canine Staffing Team as human Googlers do before being welcomed to the Googleplex.[79]
[edit] Analytics Interplanetary Reports
While currently you only get a partial picture of website visitor location, Google Analytics is expanding beyond Earth by announcing new Analytis Interplanetary Reports to help you understand visitor activities from neighboring stars and planets. You’ll also be able to drill down on each planet to see greater detail, e.g. which colony or outpost your visitors came from similar to the city drill down available for Earth today.[80]
[edit] "Did you mean: Beyonce" and Kanye West in the Play Music Store
Kanye West bugdroid appeared in the Play Music Store. While searching anything, "Did you mean: Beyonce" came up all the time.
[edit] AdWords Planetary Targeting
With AdWords Planetary Targeting your ads appear when your customers are in or searching for locations out of this world. Planetary targeting helps you focus your advertising on the planets where you’ll find the right life forms to establish your business and to increase your ROI.[81]
[edit] Real April Fool's Day Product launches
Google has chosen April Fool's Day and the day before it to announce some of their actual products, as a form of viral marketing.
- Shortly before midnight on March 31, 2004, Google announced[82] the launch of Gmail. However, many people believed it was a hoax, because free web-based e-mail with one gigabyte of storage was unheard of at the time.[83]
- In 2005, Google increased Gmail storage to two gigabytes and released Google Ride Finder.
- On March 31, 2010, YouTube implemented its new video page design, which had been revealed two months earlier.[84][85]
- On April 1, 2010, Google Street View received a new feature to toggle anaglyph 3D images. It was available by clicking on the icon depicting "pegman" wearing a pair of red/cyan glasses. The icon was present until April 8, when it was removed. The 3D view is now available by right-clicking on the image and selecting the 3D mode option or by pressing "T" or "3" on the keyboard. The images are genuine anaglyph images, with the red/cyan offset being greater for closer objects.
[edit] References
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- ^ Google Virgle: 404 – Page Not Found
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- ^ "Site report for www.google.com". Netcraft. http://toolbar.netcraft.com/site_report?url=http://www.google.com. Retrieved May 3, 2009.
- ^ CADIE's Google Analytics Reports Google Analytics Blog, April 1, 2009
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- ^ "CADIE.I – cadie – Project Hosting on Google Code". Google. http://code.google.com/p/cadie/source/browse/trunk/CADIE.I. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
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- ^ "The YouTube logo displayed on 2010-04-01". http://s.ytimg.com/yt/img/logo_april_fools-vfl157034.png. Retrieved April 18, 2012.
- ^ Feldman, Adam (March 31, 2010). "Google AJAX APIs Blog: Helping you help us help you". Googleajaxsearchapi.blogspot.com. http://googleajaxsearchapi.blogspot.com/2010/03/helping-you-help-us-help-you.html. Retrieved April 1, 2010.
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- ^ Looking back... YouTube Blog, March 31, 2011
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List of All Google April Fool's Day Jokes
[edit] Google pages
Can't Catch This
Tape a dollar bill to the end of the fishing line on a fishing pole. Then hide behind a bush and wait for your victim to come along. As soon as they reach for the money, reel in the line a few inches. Keep reeling until they realize they're being had.
Tricky Coin
Glue a quarter or dollar coin to the floor or the ground in a busy place. Sit nearby and watch as people try to pick it up.
Short Sheet
This is a one of the oldest April Fool's Day pranks in the world! Take the top sheet off the victim's bed, and tuck the bottom end under the top end of the mattress. Pull it down and then fold it back up so that the top end is where it would be if the bed was made normally. Replace the pillow, blanket, etc., and make up the bed like it was before. When the victim gets into bed, they'll be surprised when they can't slide their feet all the way down to the bottom of the bed!
Leave 'Em Hanging
Quick and easy classic prank. Just wait until your victim is in the shower, then sneak in and grab their clothes and all the towels. (You might want to get the bath mat too!)
Confetti Shower
If it's raining on April's Fools Day: put some confetti into their umbrella, close it and wait for the victim to open it.
Salty Surprise
Simple: put salt on the victim's toothbrush. Then stand by to watch the surprised look on their face.
Submitted by Dani
Avalanche
For this prank, the victim's bedroom door must open to the inside, and they need to be a sound sleeper. While the victim is inside the room, quietly tape newspaper across the door jam, covering it almost to the top. Then fill the gap between the newspaper and the door with Styrofoam peanuts, popped popcorn, crumpled newspaper, or even water balloons. When the victim opens the door, they'll be greeted by an avalanche.
Door Ambush
This is the most classic and simple prank ever. Balance a small disposable cup of water on the top of a partially open door. Then wait for the splash!
1. Google custom time
Ever wished you could turn back time and make sure that birthday email actually arrived on the actual birthday of its much-loved recipient rather than a day late? Or maybe you just want a little advantage when replying to a first-come, first-served free ticket offer? Well thanks to Google's Custom Time feature launched on April 1st 2008, you can. Simply select the '1 hour ago' or '6 hours ago' option when sending your mail and the very concept of late no longer exists.
2. San Serriffe
Way way back in the day, 1977 to be exact, April Fool's Day was far from a fixture in the UK's newspapers. But then The Guardian ran a seven-page feature on the remote island nation of San Serriffe, a semi-colon shaped island in the Indian Ocean – complete with descriptions of its two main islands, Upper Caisse and Lower Caisse, its capital Bodoni, and its ruler, General Pica. Of course, it was all an elaborate joke, with most of the names being punning references to typographer's terminology. But huge numbers of people fell for it – aided perhaps by the fact that the paper roped in many legitimate advertisers, including Guinness and Kodak, to play along with the gag. The Guardian's office switchboard was flooded with phonecalls from gullible people wanting more information on the fictitious islands.The San Serriffe joke is notable not only for sparking the British press's fondness for April 1 tomfoolery, but also for being the most sustained untruth ever printed by the Guardian that wasn't the result of a spelling error.
3. New York City April Fool's Day Parade
When a press release was sent around in 2000 announcing the 15th annual New York City April Fool's Day Parade, not even the facts that a) it promised a float on which Atlanta Braves pitcher John Rocker would 'spew racial epithets at the crowd', b) that it came from notorious prankster Joey Skaggs, c) that Skaggs had been issuing press-releases about the non-existent parade for a decade and a half, and d) it had the words 'April Fool' in the title, were enough to dissuade CNN from sending a film crew to cover it.
4. PigeonRank
Google has a history of entertaining – if not remotely plauible – April 1st hoaxes (see 2) and arguably the most original of these was their 2002 revelation that Google's search results were created by vast batteries of trained pigeons. This enabled them to attain speeds 'superior to traditional search engines, which typically rely on birds of prey, brooding hens or slow-moving waterfowl.'5. Dutch Elm Disease
A 1973 prank by BBC Radio, in which academic Dr. Clothier warned of the dangers of Dutch Elm Disease spreading to redheaded people. The fact that Dr. Clothier sounded suspiciously like Spike Milligan should probably have given the game away on this one.6. Cleaning The Internet
A perennial favourite, which hit hardest in 1997, is a forwarded email warning that the internet will be shut down over April 1 so that robots can crawl along it cleaning out dead sites. This is of course false: the internet actually has a nice lady called Eleanor who comes in to dust it down every second Tuesday.7. Pi
The claim that the Alabama State Legislature has voted to change the value of pi (3.1415926…) to the more 'Biblical' 3.0 was in fact a joke, from the New Mexicans for Science and Reason newsletter. The fact that so many people believed it is probably a worse reflection on Alabama than it is on them, however.8. Patrick Moore
In 1976, the hugely respected astronomer and xylophonist Patrick Moore announced on BBC Radio that a rare planetary alignment would reduce Earth's gravity temporarily, causing people to feel a floating sensation. Once again, the BBC uses a patrician authority figure to take the piss out of its audience. Is anything they say actually true?9. Colour television
In 1962, Swedish black-and-white-only television told its viewers that they could instantly convert their televisions to colour by pulling a pair of nylon tights over the set. This doesn't actually work, but it does look pretty cool.10. Spaghetti Trees
If the idea of a reputable newspaper like the The Guardian pulling their legs was too much for people in 1977, twenty years earlier the thought that the BBC – in the authoritative persona of Panorama presenter Richard Dimbleby – would tell people fibs must have seemed like communist crazy talk. Which probably explains why, when Panorama ran a short segment about how Swiss people harvested spaghetti from trees in 1957, hundreds of people wrote back asking how they could grow their own spaghetti trees. In their defence, it's worth bearing in mind that a) spaghetti was comparatively alien to most British kitchens in 1957, and b) people are incredibly stupid.
Like pretty much every inanimate object in the world, the telephone can be used for either good or evil. You can use it for good things like ordering a bouquet of puppies for a sick child. Or you can use it for evil things like ordering a bouquet of dead puppies for a sick child. Now, we would never encourage you to use the phone for evil. That said, it would be churlish if we didn’t acknowledge modern telephony’s capacity for hilarity and high mischief.
Hence, we offer to you the first five of what we consider the greatest telephonical pranks of all time, pranks that we in no way condone in any shape or form and that we don’t encourage you to replicate and that we definitely, definitely never played any phone pranks when we were younger, especially that one where we got the neighbours to run screaming and half-clothed out of their semi-detached thinking it was on fire.
You might find a spot of profanity within the videos, so make sure your boss/kids/parole officer/dog is out of the room. And if you can think of any more, drop them in the comments below.
Crank Krall
Prank calls come in many flavours. Many of them are racist, bile-filled rants by basement-dwelling virgins simply designed to reduce their victim to tears, or in the case of villainous online community Pranknet (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pranknet), to actual bodily harm. Nah, the best prank calls to our mind are those that take the victim on a surreal journey that doesn’t so much ruin their day than enhance it, maybe even giving them a story they can dine out on for a while. Lance Krall is a Vietnamese-American (which means his Vietnamese impression is okay to laugh at, right?) who is a past master at these kinds of calls. This is one of many of Krall’s triumphs.Palin gets a Nailin’
They might not be known for much else (Céline Dion aside), but French Canadians are the absolute masters of the phone prank. During the 2008 US Presidential election, Montreal DJs the Masked Adventures (Sébastien Trudel and Marc-Antoine Audette) managed to speak to then-US Vice Presidential nominee Sarah Palin, pretending to be Président de la République française Nicolas Sarkozy. During the conversation, Audette asks a credulous Palin if they can go hunting for wolves via helicopter together, and even dares a reference to Hustler’s porno-satire ‘Who’s Nailin’ Paylin?’. The gullibility of Palin and her team became a major focus of the brutal-yet-hilarious post mortem conducted by Republicans after Obama took the White House.
Somebody Needs to Fire C-Span’s Researcher
Alright, this isn’t so much a single call but a collection of calls that either proves how difficult it is to screen calls for a live broadcast (judging by the number of calls like this on Youtube, it is) or that US political news station C-Span has some incredibly dim researchers (judging by the number of crank calls let through, they do). What’s often impressive is the way the pranksters patiently pretend to be a genuine caller for several moments of insightful comment before unleashing a childish knob gag. Our favourite? The caller concerned about the ongoing war with the robots, and the way the host continues to humour him. Live television: truly the playground of the prankster.
Tales from the Tube Bar
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lh5PO_uYV60
Ah, the Tube Bar series. In the world of prank calling, this stuff was like the discovery of fire, and are arguable the first recorded prank calls to reach a mass audience. These involved a tuberculosis-sounding barman and former boxer named Jim ‘Red’ Deutsch and his exchanges with pranksters John Elmo and Jim Davidson back in the 1970s. The two New Jersey knockabouts would call the Tube Bar, and ask Red if they could speak to a particular patron. Thing is, the names they gave were a series of bizarre and often pornographic homophones – some of our favourite calls being for Clint Torres, Mike Unstinks and the classic Ben Dover. If the methodology sounds familiar, that’s because these tapes are what inspired Matt Groening to create Moe the Bartender and his infamous telephone exchanges with Bart Simpson.
Scott Mills Versus Indian Takeaway Versus Indian Takeaway
The majority of Scott Mills’ pranking oeuvre is pretty much solely directed at takeaways and low-level service sector workers – but like the best pranks, they work so well because they’re that rare fusion of juvenility, simplicity and farce. In what is easily his greatest prank, Mills rings up an Indian takeaway, places an order, and then asks them to repeat the order. Before they start to read out the order, Mills puts them onto the phone with another Indian takeaway he’s lined up waiting to take an order. With Indian takeaway yammering at Indian takeaway, it’s like some kind of vaudevillian feedback loop.
Honourable Mention:
We Are Not AmusedWhere there’s a phony call to a celeb, chances are there’s a French Canadian not far behind. In 1995 Québécois radio personality Pierre Brassard managed to con the Queen into thinking he was Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien for a truly epic 15 minute conversation, during which he convinced her to campaign against the Quebec independence referendum. Needless to say, when the hoax call was played on air, the Queen was not amused. Brassard later reserved his own personal deckchair in hell when he managed to prank Pope John Paul II, again as Prime Minister Chrétien, telling the senile pontiff that he should try affixing a hilarious propeller to his skullcap (called a zucchetto, pope fans).
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