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April Fool
» Wonderful Achievers No One Ever Knew About
Wonderful Achievers No One Ever Knew About
One of the popular ways often used to hoax people on
April Fool's Day is to report about some wonder people who have managed
to do something really extraordinary. It is really hilarious to imagine,
think and perceive the people who readily believe the gossips and
rumors, even on 1st of April, and be crowned as April Fool. Here are
some classic examples of wonder-achievers that have sprung out from the
minds of the people with high level of imagination.
- Sports Illustrated, in its April 1985 issue, published an article
by George Plimpton reporting that Mets team has struck a pot of gold
by discovering a new rookie pitcher for them named Sidd Finch. This
wonder player was reported to throw a baseball with pinpoint
accuracy at 168 mph (65 mph faster than anyone else till then). What
was more wonderful was the fact that Sidd Finch, who was the student
in a Tibetan monastery till then under the training of the monk
known as Lama Milaraspa, had never played the game before! The
excited Mets fans eager to know more about this gifted player were
disappointed to know that hey had been hoaxed.
- In 1981, the upright and kind Londoners were much moved by the
report published by the Daily Mail about a Japanese long-distance
runner, Kimo Nakajimi, who entered the London Marathon. According to
the story, Timothy Bryant, an import director, who translated the
rules to him had been learning Japanese just for two years and by
mistake translated 26 miles, the distance the participants had to
run, to 26 days. Thus, the athlete mistaking the race to be one of
the very long races organized in Japan is determined to finish the
race. Many people called in to say that they had spotted Nakajimi on
the roads of England but could not flag him down. The only thing was
that there was no such participant in the first place.
- In 1998, a big party was organized at Jeff Koons's New York
studio. The party was meant to honor the memory of the late Nat Tate
(1928-60) who was a great American abstract artist. He was said to
be troubled and committed suicide by leaping to his death from the
Staten Island ferry after destroying 99% of his work. The superstar
David Bowie read aloud passages from Tate's biography written by
William Boyd that was to be released soon. Critics kept appreciating
Tate's work throughout the party, not even guessing that the work
and the person they appear to know about so well were just the
pieces of satirical fiction created by William Boyd. Only people to
know the truth were Bowie, Boyd and Boyd's publisher.
- The famous Red Herring Magazine published an article in its April
1999 issue about the invention of a new technology to compose and
send email telepathically by the company called Tidal Wave
Communications. The Estonian computer genius Yuri Maldini was said
to be the mastermind behind the technology and he claimed that he
developed it using the encrypted communications systems used in Gulf
War by the army. It was said that he even sent e-mail to the
reporter interviewing him telepathically as a demonstration. Many
readers later admitted that they were really fooled by the article.
- A semi-naked man with 'Soy Bomb' crawled on his chest shocked the
viewers, the audience and Bob Dylan by managing to reach the stage
and dancing out there during Bob's solo performance at the Grammys
that was broadcasted in February 1998. He was quickly escorted away
by security guards. Later, on April 1, Rhino Records made a
startling announcement that it had signed Soy Bomb for two-year
contract, during which he would record six albums and his very first
album would include popular classics such as 'Dancing Machine' and
'You Dropped a Bomb on Me'. Apparently, they had been moved by his
courageous and bold performance!
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