April 1. This is the day upon which we are reminded of what we are on the other three hundred and sixty-four. ~ Mark Twain
I love an April Fool’s Day joke. There’s something thrilling about convincing other people that some piece of nonsense is true because you can say it with conviction and believability.
Mind you, the same applied during an election campaign is not quite so thrilling.
The trouble with practical jokes is that very often they get elected. ~ Will Rogers
One of the most famous April Fool’s Day jokes is the “Spaghetti Harvest” hoax. In these days of global communication, it seems ridiculous to think people could believe such a thing to be true but in the days when we were mostly only aware of things in our own backyards, who knew what went on in other parts of the world?
There has been an ‘iceberg’ towed from Antarctica into Sydney Harbour, a full page travel article about a non-existent island and last year, the airline Qantas announced it was correcting the spelling of its name to include the ‘u’.
Here cometh April again, and as far as I can see the world hath more fools in it than ever. ~ Charles Lamb
I’ve pulled a few practical jokes in my time. When I was pregnant with my first child, my 19-week ultrasound happened to fall on April 1st. After the ultrasound, I returned to work and informed my colleagues of the stunning news – we were expecting twins!
Now, the key to a good practical joke is to be sure you have answers to possible sceptical questions. For example, why was this not picked up at the 12-week ultrasound? So, before the question could be asked, I added the information that the second baby was quite small and tucked in behind the other baby and that’s why it wasn’t detected on the earlier ultrasound.
Much like playing with scam callers, it’s a matter of putting on your acting skills and answering questions in the most open and convincing way you can muster.
At noon (the traditional time, I believe, that one must confess to one’s subterfuge), two of my colleagues appeared at my desk, gave me the look and said, “Okay, tell us the truth. Are you really having twins or is this a joke?” I looked at them seriously and then grinned.
They responded with the predictable, “I knew it!”
Yeah, sure….
It is the ability to take a joke, not make one, that proves you have a sense of humour. ~ Max Eastman
Once, a work colleague was complaining about the overflowing plastics cupboard in her kitchen. She had decided that she could not possibly buy any more Tupperware.
A few days later, on April 1st, I presented her with an invitation to a Tupperware party.
She bought it. She even accepted the invitation!
I’ll admit to a twinge of guilt when I went to her later in the day to inform her that the invitation wasn’t real.
Even the gods love jokes. ~ Plato
At university, I convinced my friends that I was dropping out of my course. Sometimes it still concerns me that they thought this believable.
I don’t have a joke planned for April Fool’s Day this year. Sometimes my life feels like enough of a joke as it is. But I’ll be avidly watching out for what others have in store for the gullible.
Suppose the world were only one of God’s jokes, would you work any the less to make it a good joke instead of a bad one? ~ George Bernard Shaw
What about you? Have you ever pulled an April Fool’s Day joke? How did it go? Or have you ever been taken in by one? Are you too embarrassed to confess?
Why am I not surprised that you would love April Fool’s Day jokes? 😉
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Because you know me too well? 😁
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Maybe it’s the red hair and overly innocent-looking face 🙂
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You mean, spaghetti doesn’t grow on trees? Gosh, I sure got that wrong. I seem to be a bit naive when it comes to culinary knowledge. Now excuse me while I check Wikipedia. It has just occurred to me that I may have been wrong all these years about the origin of monkey nuts.
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Shocking, isn’t it? I’d recommend snopes.com for any other questions or doubts this post may have raised for you.
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I’ll have to check it right away!
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That is hilarious you presented a fake invitation to your colleague. Oh dear. She must have been crushed. But I am a realist and if you did that to me, I’d probably think that is too good to be true. I really like the Max Eastman quote. When we laugh at ourselves (and I am meaning laugh hahahaha verbally, out loud), it is then we can take a joke and are funny people.
Last year on April Fool’s I decided to go out and photograph the sunrise. The sky was a bright orange. I thought it was one massive joke. At night at home, I flicked through the photos and yep, the sky was bright orange 😀
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I still feel a bit bad about it. But she took it well after she got over the disappointment.
Mother Nature pulled an April Fool’s joke on you?? That’s brilliant! 😀
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I remember the spaghetti tree one. So many people in the UK believed it, my family included.
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How wonderful to have been a part of it (of sorts). 🙂 I love that even the BBC Director General was fooled!
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Your shoe is untied…
No, really…
Well, okay, I guess I’m not a good practical joker. My co-worker thought about putting blue dye in hand sanitizer for a boss who is a bit of a germophobe (we’ve all been sick around here lately), but she thought better of it. Probably would get messy and the boss would have to forever live with the nickname “Smurf”.
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Don’t you hate it when the grown up in you insists on analysing the consequences and then stops you from doing something? Being an adult is hard.
Blue Smurf hands would have been hilarious!
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I never seem to be creative enough to come up with a good practical joke. I love hearing what other crazy antics other people have come up with. Sounds like you have managed to execute of few of your own!
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An elaborate one can take some energy to sustain but sometimes you can just go with something simple. I once had a friend who was an inveterate prankster, April Fool’s or not. When we first met his wife, he pretended that my husband’s name was Roger. He warned us when we arrived and we had to play along.
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You always sound like so much fun….I’d love to see you in action with some of your shenanigans!
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Oh, I love a good shenanigans. They’re extra fun when you have a good shenanigans partner!
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I am the kind of person you would love to have around on April 1st Heather. I am as gullible as they come, trusting some might say. My brother has puled some whoppers over on me. I still shake my head. Basically come April 1 I shall hide away till the tricksters have cleared.
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Oh, if only I’d known…… So many missed opportunities…… 😀
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Oh you could have had such fun. 🙂
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I’d completely forgotten it was April Fools Day! But then again, working from home I’m not sure who I’d prank. One year when I was tutoring Stage I sociology students, April 1 coincided with the tutorial on deviance. We went out en masse and pranked people around the campus — all in the name of research!!! To the engineering students who were conned into looking for Engelbert the (imaginary) missing lab rat, erm, sorry if you were late for your lecture.
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That is an excellent prank. You know with information technology the world is at your fingertips for pranking, right? 😉
My favourite toilet paper supplier (Who Gives A Crap) posted on their Facebook page this morning that they were introducing a new luxury toilet paper – 8 ply, made from bamboo, silk and eucalyptus leaves, dyed celestial black with a gold-foil core. It’s called Who Gives A Crapé. So simple but so funny.
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🙂 I couldn’t believe you have a favourite toilet paper supplier, but I just checked out their website and now I’m sad they can’t deliver to NZ. I guess pranking is easy online, but I kinda like seeing the reaction face-to-face. Guess my pranks are fairly innocuous; I haven’t been punched yet.
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This reminds me. I need to think of something fun to do for April Fool’s Day!
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Oh, good luck with that! 😀
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I must confess to feeling quite relieved this morning that 1 April was in the middle of school holidays. I didn’t have to listen to all the children’s April Fool’s Day jokes. Bah humbug!
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In the area I teach in, I wouldn’t get it from the kids but there are definitely some suspicious types in the teaching staff. 😀
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Did you see the Aussie Open one?
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I missed that. I’ll have to go google it.
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Yes, it made me giggle!
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Found it. Good one! But I wish the Coles one that was below it in the article wasn’t a prank and they really were introducing hover trolleys. I’d never complain about supermarket shopping again.
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Hover trolleys would be fantastic!!!
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The other famous one was about the Island of Sans Seriffe (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Serriffe), but my personal favourite was one I heard in the 1960s on the very serious Radio 3 (only classical music). They had the opening of Beethoven’s Fifth being played on ship’s foghorns – it sounded wonderful!
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Yes, there’s a brief mention and link to the San Seriffe one up there. I love that one too.
I hadn’t heard of the foghorn one. That’s a classic(al)! Hur hur hur….
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