12 Famous Hoaxes Debunked
Fakes that you thought were real!
Published 11 years ago
4
Absolute proof of the photo's lack of authenticity came when online sleuths realized that the plane in the photo had been cut-and-pasted from a photo taken by Jonathan Derden, available on airliners.net.
10
The reality is Koalas don't have wolf-like jaws.The original photo was taken in January 2009 by Flickr user Oz_drdolittle, who explained that the koala was wet because he had sprayed it with water.
13
The Ultimate Houseboat. The image originates from the site of Bolig Partner, a Norwegian home construction firm, which is urging people to "Realize your dream home in the New Year!"
14
The snow-covered images don't show THE Sphinx in Egypt covered in snow. Instead, what they show is a miniature model of the Sphinx located in the Tobu World Square theme park in Japan. The theme park has miniature models of many other famous attractions from around the world.
16
In the original photo taken at The Palms Hotel in Las Vegas on April 15, 2005, the message on her shirt reads: "Stop Being Desperate."
18
What the image really shows is a piece of driftwood with sand piled on top of it. The structure was created by "Sandcastle Matt" and posted on his Flickr photostream. He described it as "the biggest sandcastle I've ever made."
20
In 1912, Roosevelt split from the Republican Party, then ran for president as head of the newly formed Progressive Party, sometimes referred to as the "Bull Moose Party." Before the election the New York Tribune ran a set of humorous pictures showing the three main candidates astride the animals associated with their parties. All three images were fake. They had been created by the photographic firm Underwood and Underwood.
22
It was actualy a staged shot taken by photographer Abdel Aziz Al-Atibi of his nephew in Saudi Arabia as part of a conceptual art project. When he learned of how the photo was being misunderstood, he uploaded more photos showing other shots of his nephew during the photoshoot, to demonstrate that the scene was a staged art project.
24
The ship itself is a VARD Offshore Subsea Construction Vessel. The house which was digitally placed on the ship's helipad comes from an image on the site of Ultimalt, a Norwegian paint company.