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10 Craziest Media Hoaxes

As authorities say young Falcon Heene’s would-be balloon flight has proved to be an orchestrated hoax, we look back at other instances of stories the media flubbed.

Falcon Never Took Off

The world seemed to grind to a halt Thursday afternoon as cable news stations ran live footage of a large, flying saucer-like object floating across the Colorado sky, with alarming reports that a six-year-old named Falcon Heene was trapped inside. When the balloon landed, it was revealed to be empty. Authorities later announced that the little boy was hiding in an attic crawl space throughout the entire saga. Now that authorities have decided the incident was a hoax, charges may be filed against Falcon’s parents.

Geraldo's Empty Vault

In 1996, Geraldo Rivera hosted a special called The Mystery of Al Capone's Vault, in which the contents of a vault once owned by the infamous mobster would be revealed on live television. Thirty million people tuned in hoping to see money, valuables, maybe bodies of Capone’s enemies. Instead they got nothing but a lot of dust and debris, making Geraldo a national punchline for years to come.

Susan Smith, Child Killer

One of the biggest media hoaxes of the 1990s was also one of the saddest. In 1994, South Carolina mother Susan Smith filed a report saying an African-American man had stolen her car with her two sons still inside. A nationwide manhunt for the carjacker ensued, followed aggressively by the press, but a week later Smith confessed she had rolled her car into a lake, leaving her two young sons to drown.

Mark Sanford's Trip to Argentina

Last June, South Carolina Governor Mark Sanford concerned the nation when he mysteriously disappeared for six days, spanning Father’s Day weekend. Eventually, his staff announced he’d been “hiking in the Appalachians” to clear his mind. But shortly thereafter, Sanford revealed he'd actually been in South America with his Argentinean lover. He would later describe María Belén Chapur as his “soulmate.”

The Runaway Bride

In the spring of 2005, wide-eyed Jennifer Wilbanks—aka, the “runaway bride”—captivated the country when she disappeared from her hometown of Duluth, Georgia, days before she was supposed to get married. After a nationwide manhunt, Wilbanks called her fiancé from New Mexico, claiming she’d been kidnapped and sexually assaulted by a Hispanic man and a white woman, a story she later repeated to the cops. Turns out she’d simply skipped town on a bus, thanks to a case of cold feet. In this clip, Georgia residents pay homage their hometown antihero.

Aliens Invade New Jersey

He might not have intended it to be a hoax, but Orson Welles’ famed War of the Worlds radio broadcast successfully deceived—and terrified—the nation. On October 30, 1938, in a special Halloween episode, the well-known host read from H.G. Wells’ novel about a Martian invasion on the CBS radio drama Mercury Theatre on the Air, convincing listeners that New Jersey was being attacked by aliens. Mass hysteria ensued.

The Roswell Surgery

In 1995—better known as the dark days before YouTube—Londoner Ray Santilli distributed a video that he claimed was footage from an alien autopsy near Roswell, New Mexico, in 1947. Even without help from the Internet, the video went viral, but alas, it was soon proven to be little more than movie magic, complete with a latex dummy.

The Frozen Bigfoot

Many have claimed to have spotted the great American mythical beast, Bigfoot, but a pair of men took it a step further in 2008 when they claimed to have Bigfoot’s corpse stashed in their freezer. Much to the dismay of cryptozoologists everywhere, it turned out to be nothing more than a gorilla suit.

The Backward B

Right before the 2008 presidential election, a young campaign volunteer for John McCain named Ashley Todd claimed that she was mugged at an ATM by an Obama supporter who assaulted her and carved a backward B into her cheek. The hoax was quickly uncovered and Todd admitted to carving up her own face (in the mirror, hence the backward B). The whole incident was a PR nightmare for McCain, rivaled only by the shenanigans of his own running mate.

The Real JT LeRoy

James Frey gets a lot of flack for embellishing his "memoir," A Million Little Pieces, but what do you do when an author turns out not to exist at all? That’s what happened with JT LeRoy, a supposed transgendered addict/prostitute-turned-author, turned out to be the imaginary brainchild of Laura Albert, who sent her boyfriend’s half-sister, Savannah Knoop, to public events to pose as LeRoy. The literary elite who’d admired LeRoy’s grit eventually turned their back on him. (Her. Them. Whatever.) In this video, legendary club kid James St. James weighs in on the debacle.

The Daily Beast Video curates the most essential and entertaining video, and brings you original and exclusive productions from our talented contributors.

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October 17, 2009 | 12:02pm
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KarenF444

Whats wrong with the police in Colorado? They didn't do a good job searching that house. What were they doing calling out the National Guard rather than search every square inch of that house? Hearkens back to Jon Benet's body not being found by a police search and then they wanted to use it against the father that he later, after the police "search," found his daughter's body and OF COURSE he carried her upstairs. Ridiculously, the people who wanted to convict John Ramsey said he did it to destroy evidence! That was Colorado, too.

Columbine was Colorado, too, and the police stayed outside the school with all their fancy equipment rather than go in and save lives. But here, on the trail of a balloon that quite obviously could not have lifted that boy off the ground, they probably spent several hundred thousand dollars using their fancy equipment.

Sure, the same incompetence goes on every where but doesn't make as much news. (For example, Chandra Levy's body being found by a dog walker a year later, in a park that the police had supposedly searched grid-by-grid.) Just can't help butnotice the Colorado police angle in these stories.

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12:50 pm, Oct 17, 2009

Twisted

What the hell fun can you have doing physical leg work and hard standard police work when instead you can play with your hi- tec toys you got from a bogus homeland security grant.

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9:21 pm, Oct 17, 2009

caliandy

these are good ones...and milli vanilli was a good hoax too

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3:22 pm, Oct 17, 2009

magicman

No crop circles? You've got to love a good crop circle story. These stories have been going on for centuries, dating back to the 1700's. In the old days, they blamed it all on Satan.

Thankfully, the new renditions have finally cracked the case as visits from aliens from outer space. A sure fire sign that there is intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe....just not here on earth.

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8:23 pm, Oct 17, 2009

Maezeppa

And remember the cattle mutilations and sacrifice? Done by the farmers themselves because you can't collect insurance on a dead cow but you can collect insurance on a "murdered" cow.

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9:18 pm, Oct 17, 2009

Maezeppa

As debate rages? There's no debate. We all know what time it is.

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9:16 pm, Oct 17, 2009

ChanRobt

What possible debate is there now, or ought there to have been from the first moment?

Anybody with the slightest knowledge of physics knew almost instantly in observing the balloon that it was incapable of lifting a 40 lb child. The media are lemmings and morons. That is what was once more exposed, and the worst of it

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2:08 pm, Oct 18, 2009

Shoeguy

I kept reading, expecting to find the Tawana Brawley featured prominently. Al Sharpton's reputation was never lower than when the hoax was blown, and that took some effort.

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3:29 pm, Oct 18, 2009

nathanwands

What about the Iraq having WMD's?. Now that was a media hoax if I ever saw one!

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3:31 pm, Oct 18, 2009

opedanderson

Excuse me, TDB?

Hitler's diary? Babies in incubators being left on the floor of maternity wards in Kuwait? Pat Tillman killed fighting the enemy? Jessica Lynch? WMD in Iraq? Fuck, Hiroshima was described as a military base in the first news reports after the atom bomb was dropped.

There have been a slew of media hoaxes that journalists have swallowed hook, line and sinker over the years. The ones you mention are mild ones. Jounalists and the consumers who listen to them are either dimwitted or so career drunk that almost any lie can pass without scrutiny. Yeah, this man should get in trouble for the hoax but he wouldnt have been able to get the lie off the ground (no pun intended) without the absolute co-operation of an overzealous media machine.

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7:55 pm, Oct 18, 2009

sungod23

When I first read the balloon story it immediately reminded me of the boy who pretended to be stuck in a well back in the 80s. Turned out he was hiding in a nearby barn (which no one bothered to search).

That whole thing was literally a circus, with a monkey being lowered down the well holding a sandwich!

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9:04 pm, Oct 18, 2009

electodude

Reality much? This was a subplot in the movie 12 Monkeys.

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3:40 pm, Oct 19, 2009

sungod23

Double hoax! ;>}

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6:39 pm, Oct 19, 2009
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10 Craziest Media Hoaxes

by The Daily Beast Video

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