View Full Version : The Best April Fools Pranks ever
Math Is Hard
Apr1-04, 04:09 PM
There are some real classics here:
http://www.museumofhoaxes.com/aprilfool2.html
The spaghetti harvest was my favorite:
#1: The Swiss Spaghetti Harvest
In 1957 the respected BBC news show Panorama announced that thanks to a very mild winter and the virtual elimination of the dreaded spaghetti weevil, Swiss farmers were enjoying a bumper spaghetti crop. It accompanied this announcement with footage of Swiss peasants pulling strands of spaghetti down from trees. Huge numbers of viewers were taken in, and many called up wanting to know how they could grow their own spaghetti trees.
This morning here in L.A., one of the stations was "reminding" people to "be sure to set your clocks back 1 hour tonight".
Anyone else play any good practical jokes? I would think physicists would come up with the best pranks!
I don't get it, but my mom said the worst prank ever happened exactly 9 months before I was born. I asked her to tell me about it since I wasn't around to see it, but just as she was getting ready to the bell rang and I didn't have $20 for another 15 minutes, so she left without telling me.
cookiemonster
Apr1-04, 06:45 PM
The sneaky eye doctor convincing me to put that thing in my eye so that I'd have to gouge it out 5 hours later. I hadn't thought somebody could convince me to gouge out my own eye.
cookiemonster
Imparcticle
Apr1-04, 06:55 PM
In our school newspaper last year, the publications club made a really funny joke.
Background info first: Our principal always wears VESTS!! He dresses up pretty professionally, but vests are always his characteristic.
Anyway, they said that our principal was getting so obsessed with his vests that he went to the point of buying a bulk supply of RARE vests through the black market!!
This year, they said that the teachers were going on secret shopping sprees and vacations. With money raised for a Leukemia and Lypmhoma organization.
I found this funny this year:
http://politechbot.com/pipermail/politech/2004-April/000573.html
Macgyver
Apr1-04, 07:27 PM
I tried setting one of my roommate’s clocks ahead to make him think he was late for his meeting, but in a rather a anticlimactic end he slept right through the alarm. I’m sure it would have been funny if he had woken up.
I read somewhere online that a way to fool people is to superglue a penny (or quarter, etc.) to the pavement and watch the people struggle to grab it.
I remember the Sports Illustrated baseball hoax very well.
The 26-day marathon hoax reminds me of true news stories when I was a kid, about Japanese soldiers found hiding in Pacific island jungles and thinking that the Second World war was still going on decades after it had actually ended.
wasteofo2
Apr1-04, 08:54 PM
I convinced some people in the bio forum I'd been accidentally sodomized with a pole and had a swollen prostate. However it really didn't do much besides make me look weird...
http://physicsforums.com/showthread.php?p=175119#post175119
wasteofo2's prank in the above thread. One of the better ones I've fallen for. The weird thing is, I've been down with the flu the past couple of days so I've been reading this funky murder mystery about these cops... well, never mind. :eek: But the connection was very odd. :biggrin:
Ivan Seeking
Apr2-04, 01:56 AM
I convinced some people in the bio forum I'd been accidentally sodomized with a pole and had a swollen prostate. However it really didn't do much besides make me look weird...
I didn't even think about it being April Fools day. You had my interest as well...I was thinking that it was odd that you were just talking about your track activities. That was good. :biggrin:
Just to mess with me, for something like ten years Tsunami insisted that she saw orange as red. No kidding! For the first ten years that we knew each other she kept it up. I don't know why...I guess it was some form of pay back for so many things...
My dad claims the best April fools joke that ever got me. I was visiting down in California, and because of my trip down I didn't even think about it being April Fools day. While I was in the shower he poked his hand in through the curtain and handed me a small, professionally packaged envelope marked "RATTLESNAKE EGGS". It also had a very menacing picture of a rattlesnake with explicit instruction to "Keep in a cool place to prevent hatching". With a very excited tone of voice he was saying "look at this...you have got to see this" Of course this was an immediate non-compute...rattlesnake eggs? Still, due to his obvious excitement, without even thinking I started to open the envelope. Inside was a rubber band powered vibrator that at the time felt like the rear end of a rattlesnake that would have to be about the same size as a Buick! I was probably standing on the edge of the tub before the envelope hit the shower floor. Of course my dad was having a great time with all of this.
Later, when he took a shower, I turned off the water at the main.
cookiemonster
Apr2-04, 02:09 AM
Yeah, I said I was going to school. Haha, I sure fooled them.
cookiemonster
i was on the bed......missed
I read somewhere online that a way to fool people is to superglue a penny (or quarter, etc.) to the pavement and watch the people struggle to grab it.
Oooo! this is almost scary. I had a nightmare once, and I'm going to turn it into a short story, in my nightmare someone was going around and placing drops of superglue on the hand rails of escalators. When you put your hand there you got stuck and either had to rip the skin from your hand or be dragged through the floor.
Imparcticle
Apr3-04, 01:22 PM
If you're going to turn it into a short story, be sure it post it here or something. :biggrin:
Ivan Seeking
Apr3-04, 10:47 PM
I just saw that a morning radio team in LA - Mark and Brian - announced on Thursday that California, or maybe just LA, had passed a law that all dogs must wear seat belts while traveling in a car. Apparently so many people ran out and bought doggy seat belts that they had to issue a formal aplology.
Edited because I thought Mark and Brian were in Portland. So much for my knowledge of morning radio.
If you're going to turn it into a short story, be sure it post it here or something. :biggrin:
I did, that post was it. Don't tell me you didn't like it. Too short? Too long? What? lol April fools
Ivan Seeking
Apr4-04, 09:49 PM
Worthy of mention...
I once worked with a guy...Dave I think,...that caught his neighbor stealing his power. The neighbor had run an extension cord over and plugged into some remote outlet that usually went unnoticed. To get some payback Dave [or whatever] rigs the outlet for 220 instead of the standard 110 VAC. This of course would probably fry most appliances almost immediately. Not realizing that his neighbor had left town for the weekend, Dave waits and waits with no sign of his neighbor. After getting tired of standing gaurd he finally sat down at his computer and turned it on. He heard a loud electric snap as the computer shut off.
Math Is Hard
Apr5-04, 12:24 AM
Worthy of mention...
He heard a loud electric snap as the computer shut off.
Doh! That had to hurt!
Years ago, a chemist friend of mind at UCLA noticed that the soap dispensers in the engineering building's men's rooms were always filled with a neon-green-looking liquid soap. One day he replaced this with STP engine treatment (same color and consistency) and laughed hysterically as the victims tried, without much luck, to wash this off their hands!
The late Isaac Asimov told of how in his college days, his "friends" diverted his attention from his cafeteria food so that they could slip a pellet of some chemical into it. Hours later, he found that his urine was some color other than the usual cheerful amber. He says he didn't come up with a reason for the color change before they told him about it the next day, but he didn't panic and go to the hospital either.
Ivan Seeking
Apr5-04, 02:53 PM
and laughed hysterically as the victims tried, without much luck, to wash this off their hands!
ROTFLMAO! I wish I had thought of doing that. :frown:
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2012, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.