So it is once again April Fool's Day.
Each year on this day, TigerBlog wants to write something that is clearly untrue to see how many people believe it. The key isn't to come up with something lame. It's to come up with something so incredibly ridiculous that people can't help but think it's true; otherwise, who would have gone out of their way to write such a thing?
Of course, no mention of April Fool's Day has any credibility unless it begins on April Fool's Day 1985. TB wrote this 12 years ago:
TigerBlog was a senior in West Philadelphia when Sidd Finch burst onto
the scene on this day. Finch was the phenom of all phenoms, and
he'd just been signed by the New York Mets. There was a big article in Sports Illustrated and everything.
Finch
wore one hiking boot when he pitched and was a big fan of Eastern
philosophy. His fastball topped out at 168 mph, and he could pitch every
day. Baseball was never going to be the same.
TigerBlog believed every word in the story. Everyone did. Why not? It was in Sports Illustrated, for crying out loud.
It
was only later – days later – that it became known that it was a hoax.
The first letter of every word in the subhead (He's a pitcher, part yogi
and part recluse. Impressively liberated from our opulent life-style,
Sidd's deciding about yoga) spelled out "Happy April Fools Day."
Now,
nearly a quarter-century later, it remains the greatest April Fools
Day prank of all-time – and a great learning lesson for TigerBlog.
And, with a little bit of 21st century perspective, it has become
something of a symbol of modern athletics and society as a whole.
Lesson
No. 1, of course, is that people believe everything they read. It
doesn't matter where they read it. It doesn't matter what it says. If
it's written someplace where others can read it, then it must be true.
All
of this brings us to today, April Fools Day. TigerBlog thought it
would be a good idea to put something up today either here or on
goprincetontigers.com in the Sidd Finch tradition. It's not an original
thought; TB has wanted to do this for years on goprincetontigers.com.
It
would have to be something so over-the-top that there's no way anyone
would believe it - except everyone would, because they read it on
goprincetontigers.com. That's what made the Sidd Finch story so great.
Seriously, who could throw 168 mph? Who would pitch with a boot on one
foot? Who could throw that hard every day? Nobody. It's impossible. Yet
an entire country believed it, simply because of where it was written,
not what it said.
So what would be the Princeton equivalent? It
would have to be good. To do it right, it would have to be something way past something small. What
could we put on our Website that would be so beyond the pale that it
would exceed any rational level of believability, but everyone who read
it would believe it anyway? Something worthy of Sidd Finch.
And
then TigerBlog realizes the answer is nothing. Today, in the world we
live in, nothing exceeds any rational level of believability. Look
around at the world. What
wouldn't you believe now? What would come up on your favorite website today that would make you say "no way. Get
out of here?" Nothing, right?
So, thanks to the 21st century for
ruining April Fools Day. And we'll just have to stick to putting up
information that's all true on the website.
Like the story coming
later today about how, after all these years, Princeton is changing its
school colors from orange and black to teal, silver and black, in hopes
of generating new marketing and merchandising opportunities.
No seriously. That's true.
Okay, it's not true. Princeton is, and almost certainly always will be, Orange and Black.
But hey, did you believe it, at least for a second?
Anyway, have a great April Fool's Day.
1 comment:
No person over the age of 10 should still be pulling April Fool's pranks. If it's clever or creative enough, it will stand on its own, 365 days a year. If it needs to be pulled specifically on April Fool's Day, it fails the test.
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