The Museum of Hoaxes - From the TGIF Newsletter
A guy at work has a TGIF mailer he sends out every week. I'm not sure where he finds all this info, but I'm afraid to ask. One of his links lead to The Museum of Hoaxes. Go take their quiz and see how you do at telling real photos from fake ones.
The Museum of Hoaxes - Since Nov, 2002 the Museum of Hoaxes has existed both in virtual form (this website) and in ink-and-paper form (as a book). What's the difference between the two? For the book I took all the best stuff from the website, polished it up, and added many more hoaxes that I'd purposefully been keeping up my sleeve. I designed the book to be a definitive guide to the most amusing, outrageous, and bizarre hoaxes ever perpetrated. The website, by contrast, now serves as the repository for all the overflow that didn't fit in the book. So if you like the site, definitely try out the book. It's easier on the eyes than a computer screen, you can keep it forever, and you can read it anywhere (on the bus, at the beach, or even in the bathroom).
The Museum of Hoaxes - Since Nov, 2002 the Museum of Hoaxes has existed both in virtual form (this website) and in ink-and-paper form (as a book). What's the difference between the two? For the book I took all the best stuff from the website, polished it up, and added many more hoaxes that I'd purposefully been keeping up my sleeve. I designed the book to be a definitive guide to the most amusing, outrageous, and bizarre hoaxes ever perpetrated. The website, by contrast, now serves as the repository for all the overflow that didn't fit in the book. So if you like the site, definitely try out the book. It's easier on the eyes than a computer screen, you can keep it forever, and you can read it anywhere (on the bus, at the beach, or even in the bathroom).



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