Everyone is writing articles about celebrity death hoaxes
July 2nd, 2009Posted by Judith Townend in Editors' pick, Online Journalism
Will the next hoo-hah be: ‘papers miss out obit because no-one believed he/she had really died’?
Countless articles about celebrity death hoaxes to choose from over the last day or so. Among them:
- This round-up from MSN Entertainment ends with: “The old adage rings true: don’t believe everything you read! Unless you see it on MSN, of course..”
- John Skelton on how he created the Goldblum hoax. There’s mixed reaction in the comments so far.
- CNN: “Despite what you may have read, Jeff Goldblum, Natalie Portman, George Clooney, Britney Spears, Harrison Ford and Rick Astley are alive.”
- Guardian.co.uk: “[F]or those wishing to check the latest online gossip, there are websites dedicated to debunking false reports. Snopes and the Museumofhoaxes have an archive of urban legends and how these rumours come about.”
Similar posts:
- The Inquisitr: ‘Arrington on journalism is like Britney Spears on parenting’, says Swisher
- TMZ streams live celebrity video from streetcams
- Monbiot, the Spectator and the ’spiked’ debate
- MediaShift Idea Lab: Interview with Alive in Baghdad’s Brian Conley
- Die Zeit newspaper opens free archive of 250,000 articles
