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Fishing – “April Fooling”
April 01, 2008 Every April since 1997, Bonnier Corp.'s Sport Fishing has been doing its best to fool readers and give them something not often found in fishing magazines — some serious belly laughs. Past April Fools' issues have contained news, destinations, rigging tips, fishing facts, new boats and tournaments all designed with one thing in mind — fooling the readers. "It gets harder and harder each year to fool readers," says Sport Fishing's editor-in-chief, Doug Olander. "It has become quite a tradition as more and more readers look for this specifically as soon as they get the April issue." This year's hoax, more than most, grew "legs" in a hurry, turning up on forums all over the Internet as people expressed outrage or disbelief. And for good reason. This year, Olander turned the annual spoof into a two-page advertisement for Lone Star Bluewater Fishing Ranch — the world's first big-game fishing ranch, supposedly off the Texas coast. With the motto "Give Us a Day and We'll Give You the Catch of a Lifetime!" the ad shows an aerial view of large net pens on a blue ocean with offshore fishing yachts inside them, images of men fighting fish and more. According to the ad, the pens are filled with various big-game species, hungry and waiting to take a baited hook — hence its boast that, for rates starting as low as $3,800, you'll get "the best day of action for trophy big-game fish you'll ever have. We guarantee it!" Olander always gives readers the truth about the April Fools' gag but has always tried to disassociate it from the gag itself — usually forcing readers via a "continued on page XX" notice to go to the back of the magazine for the disclaimer. This year, Olander sent readers to the Internet, where a website told them the truth. He thinks the 2008 hoax may rival the April 2000 "news report" of college kids getting high by licking catfish slime. "That became a genuine urban legend," says Olander. "Years later, I found that a surprising number of people out there had the notion — with no idea where it might have come from — that marine-catfish slime is a hallucinogen!" |
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