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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/unholythree_690.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Pop quiz: is [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Unholy_three.png this flyer]] declaring the polio vaccine, water treatment, and psychiatry to be plots to destroy America a real pamphlet, or a parody of fervent 1950s "Red scare" tactics?[[labelnote:Answer]]It's real.[[/labelnote]]]]
3
4%%
5%%NOTE TO EDITORS: Please reserve "Web Original" for examples that are from major sources or occur very frequently.
6%%Examples involving Twitter, Platform/YouTube, Blogs, other social media, and comment sections (et al.) belong under "Web - Misc".
7%%
8
9->''"Satire doesn't stand a chance against reality anymore."''
10-->-- '''Jules Feiffer''' in 1959
11
12The core idea of Poe's Law is that a parody of something extreme can be mistaken for the real thing, and if a real thing sounds extreme enough, it can be mistaken for a parody (all because parodies are intrinsically extreme, in case you haven't noticed it). This can also happen to someone whose picture of the opposing position is such a grotesque caricature that it renders them unable to tell parody from reality. Reality and parody are further blended by the fact that something that started as a parody might turn into a WindmillPolitical that some people take as gospel and go to a very serious (if not literal) war.
13
14[[http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/Poe%27s_Law According to]] Rational Wiki, Poe's Law was formulated by Nathan Poe, referring to the {{Flame War}}s on Christian forums where Creationism vs. Evolution was discussed: Many users posted parody comments, which were followed by both angry and supportive replies. Poe phrased his law thus: "Without a winking smiley or other blatant display of humor, it is utterly impossible to parody a Creationist in such a way that someone won't mistake it for the genuine article." As far as we know, nothing to do with Creator/EdgarAllanPoe.
15
16While Poe's Law referred originally to [[TheFundamentalist religious fundamentalists]], it can also equally apply to [[StrawAtheist austere atheism]], [[DirtyCommies steely socialism or communism]], [[KillThePoor crazy capitalism]], [[EcoTerrorist extreme environmentalism]], [[StrawFeminist fanatic feminism]], [[PoliticalCorrectnessIsEvil crackers correctness]], or indeed, absolutely any other debate where controversy runs high and at least one position is particularly extreme, such as the infamous North Korean Twitter feed that got mistaken for the real thing.
17
18A similar notion was named "The [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Golden Harry Golden]] Rule" by Calvin Trillin: "The Harry Golden Rule, properly stated, is that in present-day America it's very difficult, when commenting on events of the day, to invent something so bizarre that it might not actually come to pass while your piece is still on the presses." See StealthParody, which this law tends to undermine.
19
20DontExplainTheJoke is one of the possible outcomes of this law. {{Parody Retcon}}s attempt to appeal to this, as does the JustJokingJustification. If a work actually becomes popular as a result of this law, that's MisaimedFandom. If you are trying to invoke this trope to get people to believe something you just made up to feign legitimacy, it's a BavarianFireDrill. Many a NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer is used to avoid this trope. TheHorseshoeEffect is closely related, as it concerns statements which are so radical and extreme, it's difficult to tell whether they're coming from the far-left or the far-right.
21
22Compare {{Doublethink}}, InsultBackfire, IsntItIronic, PropagandaPiece, SarcasmBlind, and SomeOfMyBestFriendsAreX. To ''really'' turn this trope into a brain-twister, compare it with DeathOfTheAuthor. See also TheTysonZone and AluminumChristmasTrees. See IndecisiveParody for works that can't quite decide if they're parodies or sincere and so attempt to have it both ways.
23----
24'''NOTE:''' When adding an example, please cite a specific instance or instances of the relevant work being either mistaken for a parody or being analyzed to determine whether or not it is serious. Any examples that shoehorn in a work with WeaselWords or the like but without such instances being cited (i.e. something along the lines of "this could easily be mistaken for a parody", "this might as well have been a parody", or "some people have a hard time believing this is real" with little else) will be assumed to be Administrivia/ComplainingAboutShowsYouDontLike and will be deleted as such.
25----
26[[foldercontrol]]
27!!InUniverse Examples:
28[[folder:Comic Books]]
29* In the {{crossover}} story ''ComicBook/BatmanAndCaptainAmerica'', [[Characters/BatmanTheJoker The Joker]] teams up with the [[Characters/MarvelComicsRedSkull Red Skull]], only to break off their partnership when he discovers Red Skull is a legitimate Nazi. He had mistaken his getup as merely being a Nazi-themed gimmick and [[EvenEvilHasStandards was disgusted when the truth was revealed]].
30* In one ''[[ComicBook/{{Viz}} Sid the Sexist]]'' strip, Sid managed to score a bird on Blind Date because she thought he was a comedian and only pretended to be a perverted Geordie stereotype.
31* A passage in an early issue of Creator/{{Marvel|Comics}}'s parody comic ''What The--?!'' has a hypothetical story in which the ComicBook/FantasticFour meet Franchise/{{Superman}}. The [[Creator/JohnByrne writer of the story]] comments in a footnote that it is impossible to write a parody of The Thing's dialogue [[RedundantParody that doesn't sound exactly like something he would really say]].
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
35* Leo and Max's SpringtimeForHitler gambit in ''Film/TheProducers''; they aimed to produce the biggest flop ever so they could make off with the investment money, so they took in a story glorifying UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler and made it as offensive as they could. Unfortunately, the actor playing Hitler himself was so terrible (or in the remake, so flamboyantly over-the-top) that the audience assumed that it was a parody, and the show sold out. The director deciding to throw in some catchy musical segments didn't help.
36* A significant plot point in ''Film/GlassOnion''. It takes [[GreatDetective Benoit Blanc]] longer than it should to solve the case because there are so many stupid and amateurish mistakes made in the crimes committed (murdering somebody at the most suspicious time imaginable, not immediately disposing of damning evidence, committing crimes while a detective is present, stealing ideas for crimes from things people said mere hours ago, etc.) that Blanc discounts the real culprit [[spoiler:Miles Bron]], on the basis that it doesn't make sense for a man as seemingly intelligent as [[spoiler:Bron]] be so foolish, even entertaining the possibility that someone is framing [[spoiler:Bron]] because of how thoroughly all the evidence points to him. As it turns out, no, [[spoiler:Bron]] did it. He's [[FeigningIntelligence a clueless moron who's good at sounding smarter than he actually is]]. He really did genuinely do all those monumentally stupid things while committing his crimes, because he really is just that incompetent. This is, in fact, the point behind the DoubleMeaningTitle; a Glass Onion, as observed by Blanc, is something that has many layers, yet is ultimately see-through and has an obvious answer.
37-->'''Birdie''': It's so dumb, it's brilliant.
38-->'''Blanc''': No! ''It's just dumb!''
39* In ''Film/HaroldAndKumarEscapeFromGuantanamoBay'', the main villain is a racist, paranoid DHS agent who is a parody of UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror-era jingoism and militarism. At one point he meets Creator/NeilPatrickHarris and tells him that he was inspired to join the security apparatus because of ''Film/StarshipTroopers'', not understanding that the movie was explicitly a satire of people like him. Of course if he'd read [[Literature/StarshipTroopers the book]], that would be a different story...
40[[/folder]]
41
42[[folder:Literature]]
43* In ''Author! Author!'' by Creator/IsaacAsimov, Graham Dorn wrote his first "Reginald de Meister" novel as a satire of detective fiction. The public didn't spot the satire, and now he's the bestselling author of a detective series he hates.
44* In ''Erasure'' by Literature/PercivalEverett, an intellectual black author, sick and tired of his philosophical books being passed over for publication because they're not suitably "Black," writes a way, ''way'' over the top parody of thuggish ghetto-chic blaxploitation called ''My Paffology'' and has his agent send it out as a protest. Random House accepts the book at face value as a fierce portrayal of the Black experience and pays six hundred grand for it. The book, now renamed ''Fuck'', goes on to win the National Book Award.
45* Inverted, discussed, and PlayedForLaughs in the German novel ''Literature/ErIstWiederDa'' ("Look Who's Back"). In it, UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler somehow ends up in present-day Germany and ends up becoming a media sensation because everyone mistakenly thinks he's just a hardcore method actor/comedian who refuses to break character. He repeatedly goes on massive spiels expressing his old views and is completely serious, but everyone thinks he's satirizing his own ideals by acting like a LargeHam UnsympatheticComedyProtagonist. Near the end, Hitler even ends up getting assaulted by a group of Neo-Nazis who think he's mocking the real Hitler's legacy. Hitler, however, fully plans on exploiting his newfound popularity, and at the end, he chillingly declares that he feels ready to try his hand at a comeback in politics.
46* Exploited and combined with RefugeInAudacity in the Literature/HonorHarrington book ''On Basilisk Station'' through the "big lie" theory. After the [[PeoplesRepublicOfTyranny Republic of Haven]] gets their hand caught in the cookie jar regarding their schemes with Basilisk, Honor hopes that Havenite civilians will see through their government's [[BlatantLies outrageously false]] PropagandaMachine, which paints ''themselves'' as the real victims of the debacle, just as easily as the Manticorans have. Unfortunately, as gets explained to her by experts on such matters, the fact that said propaganda is so outrageously false is also what leads the Havenites to accept it at face value; they would never believe that their governing authorities would deliberately lie to them in such an audacious manner, so they end up believing them even when they ''are'' lying.
47* In Creator/PGWodehouse's short piece "How Kid Brady Broke Training", Kid Brady, after reading a magazine, goes off meat and starts an all-fruit diet under the belief that it will make him a better fighter. He later meets the article's author, who tells him that it was meant as satire, "[b]ut so subtle and delicate is my humor that apparently the thing is misleading".
48* Darrel Bristow-Bovey's self-help satire ''Literature/IMovedYourCheese'' complains about how hard it is to write a self-help satire:
49-->When it comes to the self-help genre, the line between satire and the real thing is drawn in water with a blunt pencil.
50* In the humorist George Mikes's book about his time in Japan, ''Land of the Rising Yen'', he describes his attempts at writing haiku and claims that his Japanese friends were so complimentary, that he became uncertain who was pulling whose leg.
51* This is what got the Bill of Life, which allows parents to have their children's body parts be divided and used as transplants once they reach age thirteen, passed in ''Literature/{{Unwind}}''; it was proposed in order to make both sides in the Heartland War realize how ridiculous they were being. What wasn't expected was for both pro-choice and pro-life people to embrace it as the only way to compromise.
52[[/folder]]
53
54[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
55* On ''Series/TheGoodFight'', Diane is having a really rough time and starts to self-medicate. When she sees TV stories about some weird thing President Trump allegedly did, she has a hard time deciding whether the reports were real or whether she hallucinated them. The implication is that some of the reports were real while others were just her drugged mind making up stuff, but to her, they are all just as plausible.
56* The ''Series/LawAndOrderSpecialVictimsUnit'' episode "Raw" has Stabler and Munch trace a weapon used in a school shooting to a gun store that also turns out to be a front for a white supremacist/neo-Nazi group. The owner and his son are more subdued in their racism, being able to hold relatively polite conversations with the police, whereas the woman they hired as extra help is by far more openly and obnoxiously racist, going so far as to refuse to give her name when the group eventually gets taken to court. [[spoiler:Then the son pulls a gun in the courtroom and starts blasting, and the woman pulls a gun in return to kill him in self-defense - and it turns out she is actually an undercover FBI agent under an alias.]]
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Mythology & Religion]]
60* An Indian funny fairytale tells the story about the dogs trying to get a president. Unsurprisingly, it goes like in a kennel, every candidate was rejected, until a little cur suggested to vote for the dog who smelled good from behind. This clearly was meant sarcastically but was critically acclaimed, and [[JustSoStory since that day]] two dogs greet by [[AssShove ramming their nose into the other's ass]]. (And they still haven't found a prez...)
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Video Games]]
64* You can actually exploit Poe's Law in ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas''. During the final battle, you can [[TalkingTheMonsterToDeath convince Lanius to end the fight and withdraw]] by convincing him that he's about to run straight into a trap — would a four-star general like Lee Oliver ''really'' be so incompetent as to leave a massive gap in his defense that any enemy could use? The real answer, of course, is that [[GeneralFailure he really is that terrible at his job]], but by tricking Lanius into thinking Oliver is instead ObfuscatingStupidity, you can end the battle right there and then with no further bloodshed, as Lanius will [[PragmaticVillainy choose to withdraw rather than risk a total defeat]].
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Web Comics]]
68* In a ''Webcomic/CheckerboardNightmare'' arc, the titular character creates a children's show centered entirely around promoting himself and his merchandise. Said MerchandiseDriven nature is so transparent that the show becomes a hit amongst teenagers and young adults who mistake it for biting satire (the fact that Chex could only afford for the show to be run on a 4AM timeslot didn't help).
69* [[http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/27/its-over-its-now-impossible-to-satirise-tony-abbott?CMP=soc_567 This comic]] from the Australian version of ''The Guardian'' claims that it is no longer possible to satirise Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott.
70* Taken to something of a logical extreme in ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'', where ''Webcomic/SweetBroAndHellaJeff'', Dave's StylisticSuck webcomic, is [[https://www.homestuck.com/story/326 described as]] "a webcomic ironically maintained through a satirical cipher" with "legions of devoted fans, most of whom are totally convinced" of his sockpuppet persona's sincerity. A bit of meta irony kicks in when you consider that in real life, ''Sweet Bro and Hella Jeff'' actually ''is'' much better known than ''Homestuck'' and ''MSPA'', and genuinely ''does'' have legions of devoted fans (though most of them are well aware of its ironic StylisticSuck value).
71** Part of the reason is that ''Sweet Bro and Hella Jeff'' originated before ''Homestuck'' and was [[http://forums.penny-arcade.com/discussion/85435/higher-technology/p2 posted on]] the ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' forums by Andrew Hussie.
72* ''Webcomic/SaturdayMorningBreakfastCereal'':
73** The comic parodies this [[http://www.smbc-comics.com/?db=comics&id=1656#comic here]]. A man and a woman are in bed in their underwear, and the man is saying, "It wasn't lousy sex; it was a satire ''about'' lousy sex."
74** A weird version of this is {{exploited}} in ''WebComic/SaturdayMorningBreakfastCereal'', [[http://smbc-comics.com/comic/literally "Literally."]] Since many Biblical literalists haven't actually read the Bible, you can go ask them "Do you really believe in [crazy thing that wasn't in the Bible but sounds a bit like it might have been]?" and they'll answer "Yes."
75[[/folder]]
76
77[[folder:Web Original]]
78* ''Website/{{Cracked}}'''s [[http://www.cracked.com/article_20203_the-5-most-epic-backfires-in-history-bad-jokes.html The 5 Most Epic Backfires in the History of Bad Jokes.]] From the lead: "The problem with sarcasm is that you can do it so well (or so poorly) that people don't realize you're joking."
79* WebVideo/TheNostalgiaCritic:
80** In their review of ''Film/ScoobyDoo2002'', [[spoiler:his younger self]] defends the movie by claiming that it's making fun of the show's pointless celebrity cameos. The Critic responds that no, the movie just ''has'' pointless celebrity cameos.
81** Sometimes the Critic's opinions are mistaken for those of Creator/DougWalker's; one such misunderstanding led to a short feud between the character of the critic and Creator/MaraWilson, when Wilson had mistaken the Critic's [[AccentuateTheNegative vitriol]] for Doug Walker's honest opinion.
82* A common problem on blogs like [[http://whitewhine.com/ "White Whine"]] and other collections of FirstWorldProblems — for every entry that is a genuine example of someone engaging in over-the-top and unnecessary complaining about a trivial issue, there is another which is clearly either a parody of that type of person or someone who is perfectly aware that their current issues are trivial, but are simply exaggerating for humorous effect or to vent.
83* Discussed on ''WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation''. More than once (such as in his review of ''VideoGame/{{Deadpool}}''), Yahtzee states that video game violence is already so extreme and ridiculous that it's nearly impossible to parody.
84** Also discussed in his review of ''VideoGame/SouthParkTheStickOfTruth'' where he pointed out that his normal reviewing style isn't very effective for deliberately crass comedy games like this one.
85--->'''Yahtzee:''' ...you can't really take the piss out of something that is itself taking the piss; this isn't a fucking bucket chain! Nor can I be crass about something that is literally already crass; it's like trying to embarrass a poo by making it wear another poo as a hat.
86* Invoked in a [[http://www.theguardian.com/environment/blog/2011/oct/21/lord-monckton-sacha-baron-cohen devastating satire]] by Australian comedian Craig Reucassel, in which he said that the controversial climate-change skeptic Lord Monckton [[note]]infamous for comparing environmentalists to Hitler Youth, among other claims[[/note]] was a satirical character played by Creator/SachaBaronCohen — and proceeded to interview an unsuspecting Monckton himself about it, asking such questions as "Will we ever see Ali G or Borat come back?" Monckton was bewildered, to say the least.
87* [[http://flavorwire.com/457300/daniel-kibblesmith-the-man-behind-the-hilarious-gopteens-on-trolling-republicans-and-dming-rand-paul As its owner has pointed out]], the [[https://twitter.com/GOPTeens GOP Teens]] Twitter account is often mistaken for serious at first glance. Actual GOP Senator Rand Paul is apparently a fan.
88* Website/BabylonBee: {{Invoked|Trope}} in "[[https://babylonbee.com/news/reality-criticized-for-not-more-clearly-distinguishing-itself-from-satire Reality Criticized For Not More Clearly Distinguishing Itself From Satire]]."
89* Maddox of Website/TheBestPageInTheUniverse discussed this trope in [[http://www.thebestpageintheuniverse.net/c.cgi?u=limits_to_freedom an early 2003 article]] where he declared that political satire was made obsolete with UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush in office, going so far as to claim that it was impossible to critically analyze Bush's speeches because "the man practically satirizes himself".
90* Discussed by Creator/LindsayEllis in "Mel Brooks, The Producers And The Ethics Of N@zi Satire" under the name of "The Satire Paradox", with ''Series/TheColbertReport'' and the 80's British sitcom ''Loadsa Money'' (a satire of 80's hypercapitalism).
91* WebVideo/JonTron accuses Music/SouljaBoy of this when the man had the audacity to not only release a console that was just a DolledUpInstallment of an existing emulation box with an inflated price tag, and not only sell it loaded with [=ROMs=] of copyrighted Creator/{{Nintendo}} games, but even ''retweeted someone'' pointing out how the device would play ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosUltimate''. Jon is so blown away by the man doing something so blatantly illegal and asking for trouble (and yes, Nintendo was on Soulja Boy's ass within the month) that he's convinced the whole thing must be a joke:
92--> '''Jon:''' Is he joking?! Is he serious?! It's the best troll ever, right? It's just the best troll of all time! A troll so good it takes your money!
93* [[https://notalwaysright.com/why-do-we-even-have-that-team/199708/ One story]] in ''Website/NotAlwaysWorking'' has a bank hire a new team from India... a team ''so unbelievably bad'' at their jobs that multiple customers thought they were scammers ''impersonating'' the bank.
94* Comedian, satirist and social media personality Creator/TonyZaret, whose {{Kayfabe}} persona is of an out of touch DiscoDan trying to [[TotallyRadical relate to teenagers on social media]] [[StylisticSuck and failing]], has somehow managed to parody this concept. Or, at the very least, [[KnowNothingKnowItAll people who falsely invoke it in order to justify falling for and getting angry at obvious satire posts]] such as the ones on his Twitter and Tumblr, try and write witty retorts to show off how they're smarter than him, and [[NeverMyFault blame him for them falling for it]] because they still want to chase the high of "owning" him. On his social media accounts, he commonly makes fake posts from "Jonathan Commentar", an InternetJerk and SmugSnake who [[https://twitter.com/tonyzaret/status/1386767201219354625 invokes Poe's Law to justify BELIEVING an obvious satire post about a pig being elected president]] because [[InsaneTrollLogic "people these days (except for ME) are so stupid"]]. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqcKVY01qQ4&feature=youtu.be In this video for his [=YouTube=] page]] he jokingly explains the concept as "nobody can ever tell what is and is not a joke", using ''Film/AustinPowers'' as an explanation because he assumed it was a documentary, and eventually convincing "Poe" to ''repeal'' the law so [[TakeThat people can finally know what a joke is.]] Lately, he's taken the process a step further by [[SelfDeprecation explaining to any confused commenter that his posts are "engagement bait"]]
95[[/folder]]
96
97[[folder:Western Animation]]
98* In the ''WesternAnimation/BeavisAndButtHead'' episode "[=Buttniks=]," they wander into a coffee shop and witness a {{poetry}} slam. Butt-Head goes on stage and deliberately stinks up the joint to the annoyance of the crowd. Beavis drinks lots of cappuccino (or, as he called it, "Crappuccino") and turns into the Great Cornholio and goes off on an insane incoherent rant. The audience loves it and call it "groundbreaking stuff," instead of recognizing it as the babblings of an overcaffeinated psycho.
99* ''WesternAnimation/BojackHorseman'': Sarah Lynn's teen pop musical career was a [[TakeThatAudience long-winded critique]] of the teen-pop mindset (e.g. "My Heinie Isn't Too Tiny"). However, her demographic were supporters of that lifestyle and not wanting to lose them, she walked the line by settling on {{Indecisive|Parody}} {{Deconstructive Parod|y}}ies. This left her very disillusioned over her fans and how she was perceived and heard, which was the beginning of a long, painful burnout...
100* In the ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' episode "Brian Writes a Bestseller", Brian manages to pull this off with a hastily-written self-help book called "Wish It, Want It, Do It", which he wrote as a statement on self-help books in general. However, it winds up becoming a bestseller, and he ultimately buys into his own hype. It ultimately takes [[Series/RealTimeWithBillMaher Bill Maher]] to get Brian to admit the truth and be shooed off the set.
101* In the ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' episode "The Secret of Success", Doofenshmirtz holds a telethon to fund his evil schemes, even going so far as to perform a short song called "I Want Your Money" to make his intentions even more obvious. Lawrence, watching from a dentist's office, believes it's "a brilliant work of satire" and declares it his new favorite show.
102* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': One episode has Marge finding a copy of ''The Onion'' on her neighbor's coffee table. Upon reading it, Marge is surprised at the headlines only to be informed that it's satire. Next, Marge opens the paper and upon reading the movie reviews, laughs at what the critics say about the movies only to find out the movie reviews are real.
103* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
104** The episode "[[Recap/SouthParkS14E2TheTaleOfScrotieMcBoogerballs The Tale of Scrotie McBoogerballs]]" has this happen: After being excited to read ''Literature/TheCatcherInTheRye'' after hearing it used to be banned, and ending up disappointed when they don't find anything particularly controversial or offensive in it, the kids set out to write a deliberately offensive story that ''deserves'' to get banned. The adults find it, and despite it being so disgusting that nobody can read a single sentence without [[VomitIndiscretionShot puking their guts out]], they all believe that it's a great literary work [[EveryoneIsJesusInPurgatory full of profound symbolism]], even after the kids explicitly tell them that it is nothing more than a string of gross-out attempts on paper and that there is no actual story in it.
105** The 16th season episode "Sarcastaball" revolves around a game that Randy invents as parody, but which everyone else takes seriously.
106* ''WesternAnimation/UnderGrads'': When Nitz decides to act like a sleaze to win over Kimmy (currently running a theater to promote awareness of date rape), Kimmy thinks he's auditioning to play the date rapist in the next show.
107[[/folder]]
108
109!!RealLife Examples:
110
111[[folder:Alternate Reality Games]]
112* ''ARG/OmegaMart'': People mistook its second iteration (a temporary art installation based out of a rented space in downtown UsefulNotes/SantaFe) for an actual grocery store despite the [[SurrealHumor general]] [[SurrealHorror weirdness]] going on inside it, to the point that embarrassed members of Creator/MeowWolf (the collective behind the installation) would have to break character to explain that no, Omega Mart is not an actual grocery store. You can buy Omega Mart products from the official site, surprisingly.
113[[/folder]]
114
115[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
116* [[http://iglesianuevaera.blogspot.com/2013/08/desenmascarando-dragonball-satanismo-en.html This article in Spanish]] assures that Anime/DragonBall is a work inspired by Satanism, with evidence such as that "Dragon Ball" means "The beast is coming" - instead of, you know, a Dragon Ball - or that all the names of the characters correspond to real demons. The website is clearly a parody of Christian fundamentalists, but that very article has been cited on Christian forums as real evidence that [[UnfortunateImplications anime is demonic in nature.]]
117[[/folder]]
118
119[[folder:Comedy]]
120* [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Novello "Don Novello"]] (aka [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Father_Guido_Sarducci "Father Guido Sarducci"]]) wrote a series of letters in the 1970s and '80s to various politicians, corporations and famous people under the persona "Lazlo Toth" (named after the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laszlo_Toth "man who vandalized Michelangelo's Pieta"]]). The Toth persona was a parody of a low-information Nixon supporter: jingoistic, clueless, earnest, and maddeningly obtuse. It is the printed pre-cursor to Stephen Colbert. The targets of his correspondence often took his letters at face value and sent sincere replies. Occasionally "Toth" would string them along through several rounds. One example: Toth wrote a letter to the "Mr Bubble" corporation asking how he was supposed to use the product given the admonition on the box to "KEEP DRY". An excerpt from the lengthy reply: "It is true, we do say on our box: Free Flowing 'MR BUBBLE' must be kept dry. By this statement, we mean that the box of powder should be protected against dampness, such as moisture in the bathroom if the box is not put away. The box of 'MR. BUBBLE' should be closed and placed in a cabinet until the next use. Some people tell us they transfer the 'MR BUBBLE' powder to a plastic container, or even a large coffee can, to keep dampness out of the powder. Some have mentioned they keep a measuring scoop in the can for convenient measuring of the proper mount of powder to use in each bath. Over-use is only wasteful." If you want to read the correspondence with VP's Agnew and Ford, H.R. Haldeman, UsefulNotes/McDonalds (about jelly on the egg [=McMuffin=]), Mayor Rizzo or J. Edgar Hoover, buy the book [[https://openlibrary.org/books/OL1706423M/The_Lazlo_letters "The Lazlo Letters"]].
121* [[https://youtu.be/3m5qxZm_JqM "John Clarke and Bryan Dawe"]] were a New Zealand/Australian comedy duo that satirized politicians and other public figures. A quick glance at the comments on the Platform/YouTube page shows how many people thought they were for real. Given that each of those sketches involved John Clarke playing all of the political figures without any change in voice, costume, or makeup, anyone who watched more than one should have very quickly realized that he was not both Prime Minister Rudd and Senator Stephen Conroy, but was in fact a sketch comedian. Also, [[WholesomeCrossdresser he was not Rudd's successor, Julia Gillard]].
122* Performance artists The Yes Men made a career out of this during the Bush administration. One of their projects included passing out [[http://web.archive.org/web/20160419000959/http://theyesmen.org/petitions/pdfs/petition-terrorathome.pdf surveys under their "Yes, Bush Can!" slogan letterhead]], urging people at Republican rallies to specify the rights they were willing to waive in the name of the War on Terror. They had assumed people would be shocked but instead, the audiences filled them out and turned them back in. Before reaching unavoidable notoriety, the Yes Men had managed to pull off their satire so effectively, that serious business and economic forums were ''inviting'' them to speak, which they gleefully accepted. One such presentation of note, given at an international textile industry conference, had them deconstructing the U.S. Civil War as secretly fought because the North didn't want to lose access to cheap Southern cotton, and ended with them demonstrating a prototype employee-monitoring device that hangs off the user and resembles a giant golden penis. The audience ate it up. The Yes Men themselves expressed astonishment at just how far into the absurd they could go and still have so-called professional audiences taking them seriously.
123* Swedish humor show ''Series/{{Grotesco}}'' featured a song called ''Det är bögarnas fel'' ("It's the gay men's fault") which became a hit and can be watched [[https://youtu.be/T1lvMJ-l0_A here.]] It's a textbook example of this trope. The song is sung by a reverend who claims that gay men are to blame for every single bad thing in the world and sings that "I don't know the line and verse, chapter or part, but somewhere in [the Bible] it says that it's the gay men's fault." He and lots of other singers then go on to give gay men the blame for things that clearly aren't gay men's fault. One woman sings that "My son shot four people to death with the hunting rifle. Somehow, I feel that it's the gay men's fault." A man sings that "I once ate porridge and confused curry for cinnamon, and that wasn't carelessness; no, it was the gay men's fault." It's almost impossible to imagine how it could be more obviously satiric, and ''still,'' when it was performed live on the family show ''Allsång på Skansen,'' somebody reported the show to the police for being upsetting to homosexuals.
124* Another Swedish comedian, Ronny Eriksson, wrote a song in the late eighties that parodied racism. The song, titled "''Storswänsken''" ("the Great Swede") is sung from the point of view of a person who's opposed to every single thing that was invented outside Sweden. It contains lines such as "Don't believe for a second that the earth is round, 'cause some darkie thought that up", "Get rid of the alphabet and all damn numbers" and "down with science". About twenty years later [[IsntItIronic young Swedish racists began to sing the song as their anthem]]. Eriksson's only comment was that clearly, some people are too stupid to realize when they are being insulted.
125* Noted by Doug Stanhope in his ''No Refunds'' Tour, when he recalls performing at Edinburgh Fringe Festival. When commenting on the Creator/MelGibson antisemitism controversy, he noted that people shouldn't care what Gibson thinks and the media shouldn't give Gibson any attention. Cue Stanhope noting he actually needs the publicity, he jokingly noted he'd happily say "I hate the Jews" for a little media attention, [[ComicallyMissingThePoint only for a journalist to take it as an antisemitism admission, before quoting him saying "I hate the Jews."]]
126* Stand-up comedienne Suzi Ruffell got into trouble for a stand-up routine intended to illustrate how white British people, without intending to and with the best of intentions, can come over as being somewhat racist. Before she knew it, she was being dubbed "racist comedian Suzi Ruffell" and similar inaccurate descriptions.
127* Fred Armisen's ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nECoe4eCp_o Complicated Drumming Technique: Jens Hannemann]]'' was a parody of drumming instruction videos featuring needlessly complex and masturbatory parts with extremely large drum setups that contained components that were either largely superfluous or used to the point where the part was irreducibly complex and would not easily translate to smaller setups. Many viewers who were not aware of the video's origins, but were aware of the kind of videos that Armisen was parodying took it completely seriously.
128[[/folder]]
129
130[[folder:Comic Books]]
131* The ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'' comic "Skippy the Jedi Droid" was written by Creator/PeterDavid as a parody of how other stories tended to infuse [[SmallRoleBigImpact random and irrelevant characters with cosmic-level importance]], by taking the idea to its natural conclusion and declaring that the busted R2 unit in ''Film/ANewHope'' who explodes after being bought was actually a Force-sensitive droid (something near-impossible by the rules of the series), with his malfunction being a deliberate act of self-sacrifice to ensure the safety of the galaxy. Since then, the story's become a perennial fixture of articles and arguments discussing why ''Legends'' was full of absurd nonsense, seemingly unaware of the fact that the story was both satirical and non-canon. It doesn't particularly help that, as silly as Skippy is, it was only a notch or two more absurd than some of the actual cases of ADayInTheLimelight it was parodying (for example, ''Literature/TalesOfTheBountyHunters'' revealing that IG-88 took control of the second Death Star without anyone noticing), as well as the franchise’s rampant use of BecauseDestinySaysSo to justify any and all {{Contrived Coincidence}}s, such as that droid exploding just so that Luke can meet Artoo and Threepio.
132[[/folder]]
133
134[[folder:Fan Works]]
135* In general, this is a ''massive'' risk ascociated with the ParodySue and (to a lesser extent) the MarySueHunter. The idea is that, should you make your parody too close to the original, people simply aren't going to tell the difference and will just see them as ''another'' Mary Sue.
136* The HMS STFU copied the ''Literature/HarryPotter'' section that was on our own DarthWiki/WarpThatAesop page circa January 2011 as seen [[https://web.archive.org/web/20130330083441/http://www.journalfen.net/community/the_hms_stfu/526789.html here]]. Seeing as the HMS STFU usually deals with people who hold similar or worse positions in total seriousness — they were the ones who discovered ''The Girl Who Lived'', ''Hogwarts Exposed'', ''FanFic/TheLastWar'', ''The Real Us'' and the complete works of pstibbons and [[Fanfic/InThisWorldAndTheNext Robst]], after all — it's not ''that'' surprising that only a few of them seemed to consider that a page like that might not be entirely serious.
137* ''Fanfic/HogwartsSchoolOfPrayerAndMiracles'' ([[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/10644439/1/Hogwarts-School-of-Prayer-and-Miracles found here]]), allegedly written by a Christian mom. Some believe that the author is dead serious, while others are convinced that it's blatant satire. The final chapter [[spoiler:reveals it all to be a troll, though, with the author (through Voldemort) not-so-subtly calling out everyone who thought it was legit]].
138* There are some people who believe ''Fanfic/TheLastWar'' to be a TrollFic, noting Harry and Hermione's [[VideoGame/RobotUnicornAttack choice of theme song]] and that it's like a perfect Harmonian ClicheStorm.
139* Defied with the disclaimer at the beginning of ''[[http://www.ectozone.com/apocrypha/marysue.php The Legend of Mary Sue]]'', a ParodyFic based on ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' and starring a ParodySue. It notes explicitly that the story is just a joke, and thus the protagonist is not meant to be sympathetic and it's not in continuity with the author's other fanfics.
140* Some people think that ''FanFic/MyBravePonyStarfleetMagic'' ''must'' be written by a troll. [[SincerityMode It's not.]] The [[Creator/DakariKingMykan author]] really, really isn't kidding.
141* Nobody really knows if ''Fanfic/MyImmortal'' was written seriously or if it's just the work of a {{troll}} of legendary prowess. There's evidence both ways — on the one hand, a number of ideas seem weirdly out of place (Snape being evil, callouts to Tom Bombadil or Bela Lugosi's Dead) and the story's deterioration in spelling and grammar doesn't quite match up with the supposed loss of its editor. On the other hand, people who were around at the time of the story's publication have pointed out that its level of quality was actually pretty typical. Its publication time doesn't help, as it happened at ''just'' the point when all its common tropes were being discredited.
142* The "Pony Plot Perfection Project", a supposed fan project (which insists it's ''totally'' not sexually motivated) to edit episodes of ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' to avert AnimalsLackAttributes, which, given stereotypes about the show's fandom, would have been ''very'' potent ammunition for their detractors if true. [[https://www.deviantart.com/pppproject/journal/PPPP-April-Fools-362962878 The project lead eventually admitted to being a troll]] (the fact that their logo was a Swastika made of P's should have made this obvious), but the confession was posted on AprilFoolsDay and [[https://trixiebooru.org/forums/pony/topics/pppproject-anatimically-correct-episodes-where-to-find-them-now some fans claim to have seen actual episodes edited in this way]], so whether it's a joke, real, or a joke that some people took seriously enough to make true is still up in the air.
143* ''Fanfic/ThePrayerWarriors'' is a troll, but since it focused on common targets of EveryoneIsSatanInHell, including Harry Potter, people weren't sure if it was a troll or some actual Christian [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking who can't spell.]]
144[[/folder]]
145
146[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
147* Many people think ''WesternAnimation/BeeMovie'' is unintentionally stupid ([[FridgeBrilliance which may explain]] its {{memetic|Mutation}} status) when a stupid movie was actually what Creator/JerrySeinfeld was going for.
148* The aptly-named "Mr. Poe and Yogul" segment from ''WesternAnimation/DorbeesMakingDecisions'' is ''probably'' supposed to be StylisticSuck. However, the movie as a whole isn't very good, so its intentional jokes have been mistaken by critics for just plain bad writing.
149* The plastic soldier scene in ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory1'' was intended by the filmmakers to be funny, since it was a cliché war scene played straight with toys instead of humans. When it was shown to test audiences, they took it just as seriously as the real thing.
150[[/folder]]
151
152[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
153* ''{{Film/Airplane}}'' was actually an adaptation of a serious airplane disaster movie called ''[[Film/ZeroHour1957 Zero Hour!]]''. While obviously a lot of jokes were added, most of the script - Ted and Elaine's {{Glurge}} filled romance, the goofy premise, the fish poisoning, the sick little kid - is lifted straight from ''Zero Hour!'', where it was all played [[ClicheStorm completely unironically]]. It's actually kind of fun to [[https://youtu.be/8-v2BHNBVCs watch the two back to back]] and see how little was changed.
154* Prior to the release of Creator/JamesCameron's sci-fi epic ''Film/{{Avatar}}'', a curious blog popped up called [[https://web.archive.org/web/20111126051415/http://stopavatarmovie.blogspot.com/ "Stop Avatar Movie".]] The blog's editor claims to be a transgender woman who is offended by the "heterosexual themes" found in the movie (namely, the apparent lack of non-heterosexual, non-cisgender characters), and urges people to boycott it. She goes so far as to make ''Avatar'' the scapegoat for anything in the wider culture that is or could be remotely construed as homophobic/transphobic, regardless of whether or not the thing or incident being discussed has anything to do with the film. The political and social views expressed on the blog are so extreme that even actual gay people are divided on whether the author is just a very dedicated troll, or legitimately insane. For all we know, the blog could have been started to covertly ''help'' the film. At one point, the writer actually encourages the offended to ''buy tickets'' and then not see the movie.
155* In his review of ''Film/{{Bamboozled}}'', Creator/RogerEbert noted that most movie-going audiences wouldn't catch onto the film's satire about how black people are portrayed in modern media. People would simply get pissed off at the mere use of {{Blackface}}. Indeed, [[AudienceAlienatingPremise the film ended up a box-office bomb as a result.]]
156* ''Film/BeyondTheValleyOfTheDolls'' is an infamously [[RefugeInAudacity over-the-top parody]] of sexploitation films. However, when screenwriter and director Creator/RogerEbert and Russ Meyer later met the Music/SexPistols, they were nonplussed when Johnny Rotten expressed his admiration for the movie because it was ''so true to life''.
157* James Nguyen claims his film ''Film/{{Birdemic}}'' is a masterpiece, despite the poor editing and writing, among other flaws. Nobody can tell whether he genuinely thinks it's good or he's just trolling.
158* ''Film/{{Borat}}'' was criticized by the Anti-Defamation League and the European Center for Antiziganism Research for its depiction of Borat's racism and Antisemitism. The film is actually parodying such beliefs and attempting to expose acceptance of them in Borat's unwitting interview guests. In fact, Sacha Baron Cohen is himself a practicing Jew and was later given an award by the ADL, where he made a [[SincerityMode very]] [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness moving]] speech about the continuing threat of antisemitism.
159* ''Film/CSATheConfederateStatesOfAmerica'' is a mockumentary based on an alternate history where the Confederacy wins the Civil War. Said mockumentary details an America, with slavery as part of the modern way of life, bat-shit crazy politics dictated and decided in part by the desire and need for human chattel, and numerous fictional, parody products with extremely racist overtones. Then the mockumentary comes to its conclusion, and you find out that a lot of those ridiculous, over-the-top products that couldn't possibly exist, actually did, and were actually being sold for decades. The whole totalitarian plot to conquer the entire New World from top to bottom, that sounds like the alternate ending for ''Film/TheWildWildWest'', or possibly ''Anime/CodeGeass'': yeah, that was actually the plan all along, and something the Confederacy would have attempted had they won the Civil War. Suddenly, the mockumentary, while still a bit ham-handed in presentation, becomes a little more uncomfortable to watch...
160* Included with the DVD of ''Film/DodgeballATrueUnderdogStory'' is an "alternate ending" where the movie abruptly ends (as in, straight to the credits) when Globo Gym beats the Average Joe's (just before the judges declare a sudden death match between Peter and White), and in the director's commentary he claims that this is how the movie was ''supposed'' to end if it wasn't for ExecutiveMeddling, and that he's still bitter about it. Some people (including on this very site) actually took this seriously.
161* ''Film/DrStrangelove'' is a comedic adaptation of ''Red Alert'', a book that played the same premise straight. Other than the ending and the inclusion of Dr. Strangelove himself, the story is almost slavishly accurate to the book. Notable because Peter George, the author of ''Red Alert'', actually helped write ''Dr. Strangelove'', making it seem like even he realized how easily his book could slide into {{Narm}} territory.
162* At one point, there was a popular image macro making the rounds on Facebook which made fun of fans of ''Film/FightClub'' who supposedly contradict Tyler's "don't talk about Fight Club" mantra by... well, talking about ''Fight Club.'' In the film itself, Tyler coins that saying [[ReversePsychology specifically because he knows people will disobey it]], and thus expand his sphere of influence.
163* ''Film/ForkliftDriverKlaus'', a German BloodyHilarious parody of workplace safety films, is frequently linked by Anglophones with "look at those crazy Germans" comments suggesting that it's been mistaken for a serious workplace safety film.
164* Some audiences complained that [[YourCostumeNeedsWork "the actor playing Joseph McCarthy"]] in ''Film/GoodNightAndGoodLuck'' was "too over-the-top". The film used actual archived footage of the real [=McCarthy=].
165* ''Film/{{Heathers}}'' (of which ''Mean Girls'' is a sort of LighterAndSofter SpiritualSuccessor) was originally meant to be nothing more than a spoof of high school shooting cases, even taking place in [[FlyoverCountry suburban Ohio]] to make things all the more ridiculous. Many people, however, interpreted the film as a genuine deconstruction of high school cliques and teen movie clichés, and it was soon branded a top-tier high school movie.
166* Two movies: ''Film/JesusBro'' and ''Film/{{Let There Be Light|2017}}''. Both films are about a HollywoodAtheist who suffers a near-death experience in which he sees Heaven. This causes them to go through EasyEvangelism where they lose the respect of their original community, end up getting advice from other Christians, and reconciles with old flings. Now here’s the key; one is a satire on Christian propaganda films, while the other ''is'' a Christian propaganda film. If you decide to watch both films back-to-back, it'll be hard to tell the difference.
167* Much of ''Film/JojoRabbit''[='=]s advance publicity includes the TagLine "An Anti-Hate Satire" because times are such that it's become unclear if we're supposed to laugh ''at'' ThoseWackyNazis. This did not stop people from not recognizing Taika Waititi and thinking it was an actual pro-Nazi film ''because right-wing groups so frequently parody anti-hate language these days''. There were numerous tweets and comments to that effect when the film's trailer was released on [=YouTube=]. Once people realized that Hitler was going to be played by a Polynesian though, it became obvious this was a joke.
168* ''Film/JosieAndThePussycats2001'': The ProductPlacement was parodied by way of cranking it up even though the movie did not make any money off the products and the entire plot of the movie was parodying how media is used to sell products. However, about half the audience and critics got it as self-referential satire, while the other half just thought it had way too many product placements.
169* ''Film/AKnightsTale'': Upon release, some movie critics somehow mistook it for a genuine Middle Ages PeriodPiece and castigated the movie for its AnachronismStew. The movie is actually an AffectionateParody and deliberate ClicheStorm of sports stories only [[JustForFun/RecycledInSpace in the Middle Ages with knights]], so any historical errors were entirely intentional. The filmmakers joke about this on the DVD commentary, remarking that you'd think they'd have gotten the hint when the movie opens with medieval peasants singing "We Will Rock You" by {{Music/Queen}}.
170* After Creator/TinaFey made ''Film/MeanGirls'', she commented, with some surprise, "Adults find it funny. They are the ones who are laughing. Young people watch it like a reality show. It's much too close to their real experiences so they are not exactly guffawing." She apparently meant it to be parody but didn't take it far enough and it was too realistic for kids to get the joke.
171* In documentary ''Film/{{Religulous}}'', Bill Maher disguises himself and starts preaching the ''actual'' tenets of [[ChurchOfHappyology Scientology]] in a park. Most people laugh at him and call him crazy, unaware that those were Scientologists' real beliefs.
172* ''Film/RockItsYourDecision'' is supposed to be a Christian propaganda film, but the way it plays out, it feels like the writer is as mentally unhinged as the protagonist or the writer trolled the Christians who hired him to write their film and they never caught on. The main character starts out as a decent person, but after being convinced to give up rock music, becomes a raving judgmental maniac.
173* Some ''Franchise/StarWars'' fans have come up with the "[[http://biggerluke.wikidot.com/ Bigger Luke Hypothesis]]", according to which in some scenes of the first three ''Star Wars'' movies, Luke Skywalker appears to be slightly taller, which is either proof that he has an unmentioned (but still canon) ability to replace himself with a larger doppelganger or change his size at will, or a sign that Creator/MarkHamill couldn't appear in certain scenes and had to be portrayed by a body double. Or maybe they're just making fun of fans who [[EpilepticTrees believe too strongly in nonsensical theories]].
174* {{Creator/Tommy Wiseau}} has asserted that ''Film/TheRoom2003'' was [[ParodyRetcon meant to be]] a BlackComedy after its widespread derision as a misfired drama.
175* ''Film/{{Solo}}'' includes the female droid L3-37, who is obsessed with "droid rights." Fans are divided as to whether this was an ''endorsement'' or a ''parody'' of social justice advocates, or both. It doesn't help that the series' notoriously inconsistent portrayal of droids had many viewers thinking StrawmanHasAPoint.
176* When it was released in 1997 ''Film/StarshipTroopers'' was very easy to mistake as a genuine attempt at making an ultra-patriotic action movie that turned out rather poorly. A decade later its actual nature as a pure and unrestrained satire became painfully obvious as the entire plot of the movie turned out to be [[HarsherInHindsight frighteningly prophetic]]. [[note]]When a hopelessly outclassed enemy did attack a major American city with a very low-tech but devastating surprise attack, the reaction turned out almost identical to the movie, including all the delusional mistakes and propaganda.[[/note]] Meanwhile, the director of the film in question (who wasn't American and had an entirely different cultural background) still nods politely at interviewers who "discover" the parody in the movie. The original novel by Robert Heinlein was completely serious about the political messages of the story.
177[[/folder]]
178
179[[folder:Literature]]
180* OlderThanPrint: The entire story of Myth/{{Lilith}} has its origins in a satirical book called the ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alphabet_of_Sirach Alphabet of Sirach]]'', which was filled with all kind of raunchy jokes. Yet medieval Jewish and later modern Christian authors really liked the idea of Eve not being the first woman. Lilith has been present in occult works (ranging from UsefulNotes/{{Kabbalah}} to UsefulNotes/{{Wicca}} to UsefulNotes/{{Satanism}}) ever since then.
181* ''Do You Want to Play with My Balls?'' is a [[SubvertedKidsShow parody of kids' books]] that involves two boys named Louie and Chuck playing with toy balls and [[BallsGag making comments that sound suggestive]]. Some people have mistaken it for a real children's book.
182* Reviewers of Steven Grasse's ''The Evil Empire: 101 Ways That England Ruined the World'' are [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-439544/Cruel-Britannia.html unsure]] if Grasse truly believes the book's premise that the United Kingdom [[{{Demonization}} is responsible for all the world's problems since the eighteenth century]] or if he is just pointing out the hypocrisy of the scapegoating of the United States that was so common when the book was written, by satirically applying the same attitude to a different country which has also had a history of intervention in foreign affairs. The book's article on [[Website/{{Wikipedia}} The Other Wiki]] explicitly calls it a comic portrayal, however, which is circumstantial evidence for the "it's a joke" interpretation, despite the author appearing serious in interviews, and despite him getting a sincere [[BoomerangBigot British]] anarchist to write the preface.
183* Bernard de Mandeville, a Dutch physician in the 18th century, wrote a poem named ''[[http://maartens.home.xs4all.nl/philosophy/mandeville/fable_of_bees.html The Fable of Bees]]'', which was a satire to the moralist campaigns of the time. The poem caused public commotion at the time because he wrote that the vices of the people can be useful to the society, but today is regarded as a serious economic tract and many economists complain that it's hard to interpret him. It's hard because Mandeville wrote it as a satire; he didn't have any pretension to make a scientific tract.
184* In his short story collection ''Famous Monsters'', Creator/KimNewman mentions that Penguin Books asked him to tone down the politics of his story "Pitbull Brittan", a savage satire on Conservatism based on the question "What would it look like if everything the [[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers Daily Mail]] said was ''true''?" To his bafflement, their objection was on the assumption that he was saying the world ''was'' like this.
185* ''Literature/{{Flatland}}'' is part geometric fantasy and part satire of Victorian classism and sexism. Unfortunately, it can be hard for modern readers to tell that the author was being ''satirical.'' And apparently for some readers at the time, since in the second edition Abbot added an author's note that spelt out the opinions of A. Square were not his own.
186* What exactly Kurt Vonnegut's ''Literature/HarrisonBergeron'' is a satire of continues to be argued over to this day. Those on the right claim it's a satire of egalitarianism. Those on the left claim it's a satire of the right's views of egalitarianism.
187* There are ''still'' people who have to have it pointed out to them that ''Literature/AModestProposal'' is ''not'' intended literally. ''A Modest Proposal'' was Creator/JonathanSwift's satirical essay that suggested solving the problem of working-class children in Ireland being a drag on their parents by selling them as food to rich people. Most interpretations read it as a satire of British attitudes towards the working class of Ireland. It created a scandal because some people didn't get the joke (Swift intended a scandal, but not like that). Modern readers who take it seriously justify their stance with Swift's misanthropy and deteriorating mental condition later in his life. At the time of the writing, however, he had no such attitudes or problems.
188* Creator/NiccoloMachiavelli's most well-known piece, ''Literature/ThePrince'', has been [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prince#Interpretation_of_The_Prince_as_political_satire_or_as_deceit argued to be]] a satirical TakeThat at the Medici who had recently had him brutally beaten--all his other writings advocate almost the exact opposite viewpoint.
189* The ''Literature/ViridianSaga'' is a parody of ParanormalRomance novels based on the Franchise/CthulhuMythos. It was written by WebVideo/TheNostalgiaChick and her friends, crowdsourced in a series of online videos, and aided by ghostwriters. It was self-published under the alias "Serra Elinsen," who also serves as a sock-puppet for the authors to create [[DearNegativeReader online drama]]. Part of the point of the experiment is to see how people would react to it, and the authors were quite pleased when the novel caused some kerfluffle among Lovecraft fans and got some serious literary reviews.
190** It also works the other way: fans often play the part of a straightforward {{Fandom}} or {{Hatedom}}, meaning that it's almost impossible to tell if someone's in on the joke or not.
191* The [[StrawVulcan Houyhnhnm's]] way of life in the final voyage of ''Literature/GulliversTravels'' was meant to satirize the Age of Enlightenment of the 1700s. A few centuries later, scholars would misinterpret it as Jonathon Swift's idea of a perfect society.
192* ''Literature/HarryPotter'' writer Creator/JKRowling has had problem with WordOfGod on the matter. You see, she made the mistake of giving a random extra in the first book the same family name as Harry Potter's very own mother. The boy in question was called Mark Evans. Once Harry's mother's name was revealed (this was before ''The Half-Blood Prince'' was released), fans began speculating that Mark would become very, very relevant to the plot and asked Rowling if that was the case. Amused by how far the rumor had gotten, she joked that he was indeed a major character and that he was, in fact, the mysterious Half-Blood Prince the upcoming book was named after. ''Everybody took it dead seriously'', to the point that someone went and created a page for Mark Evans on [[Website/{{Wikipedia}} The Other Wiki]].
193** When British satirical site The Daily Mash published an article claiming that the ''Harry Potter'' series took place entirely in Harry's head, someone on the Harry Potter Wiki took this seriously and edited accordingly.
194** A [[Creator/DropOut CollegeHumor]] [[https://web.archive.org/web/20150517195134/http://www.collegehumor.com/post/7020700/jk-rowling-knows-way-too-much-about-her-characters article]] detailing fake WordOfGod claims from Rowling got widely accepted as real on a lot of sites, including such facts as Dumbledore being a top, Lupin having "exceedingly large genitals", Cho Chang taking "monster shits", and the Hufflepuff dorm being known for "group masturbation sessions." It doesn't help that it started with the real claim that Anthony Goldstein is Jewish.
195** Rowling [[https://www.theguardian.com/books/interactive/2013/may/18/jk-rowling-harry-potter-philosophers-stone-annotations has stated]] that many aspects of the fictional sport ''Quidditch'' are meant to poke fun of British Sports Culture; as such, she deliberately made the game broken by having the GoldenSnitch so disproportionately valuable (along with making Harry the hero who wins the game). Unfortunately, this feature has made the game one of the most criticized aspects of the ''Harry Potter'' series, even among fans, and frequently serves as a textbook example of poor game design.
196* At least two of A.P. Herbert's ''Literature/MisleadingCasesInTheCommonLaw'' were reported elsewhere as real court cases. The most famous is "The Negotiable Cow", in which Albert Haddock writes a check to the Inland Revenue on the side of a cow. There was also "Is It a Free Country?" which shocked one American legal commentator who believed a British judge had actually said "It cannot be too clearly understood that this is ''not'' a free country, and it will be an evil day for the legal profession when it is."
197* Frederick Crews wrote two satirical essays-''The Pooh Perplex'' and ''Postmodern Pooh''-mocking [[WhatDoYouMeanItsNotDidactic obsessive over-analyzing]] and FauxSymbolism in literary circles by applying that same analysis style to ''Literature/WinnieThePooh'' and playing it with a straight face. Not only were both mistaken as being serious, but the second essay includes citations to '''actual major academics''' who unironically proposed the exact same EpilepticTrees Crews was pulling out of his ass as a joke.
198* ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Report_from_Iron_Mountain The Report from Iron Mountain]]'' was a [[TheSixties Sixties]] counterculture book written by Leonard Lewin as a StealthParody of [[UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar Vietnam-era]] military think tanks, and was convincing enough that, until it was revealed to be a hoax in 1972, even UsefulNotes/LyndonJohnson thought it was an authentic document written by a secret government panel (he reportedly "hit the roof" when he read it). Given that it fooled the President, it stands to reason that there remain people who believe that it ''was'' authentic and that it was [[SarcasticConfession only claimed to be satirical]] as [[ParodyRetcon a means of damage control]]. It stated that war was a necessary part of the economy and served to divert collective aggression and that society would collapse without it. Therefore, in the event of peace, they recommended that new bodies be created to emulate the economic activities of war, including {{Blood Sport}}s, the creation of new enemies to scare the people (including [[AlienInvasion alien invaders]] and environmental destruction), and [[RefugeInAudacity the reinstatement of slavery]].
199* Throughout the Dr. Seuss book ''Literature/ThidwickTheBigHeartedMoose'', the phrase [[SacredHospitality "a host, above all, must be nice to his guests"]] is repeated. It is used ironically, as Thidwick's guests (animals who live in his antlers) are quite ungrateful and almost cause him to starve to [[NeverSayDie death.]] At the end, Thidwick's problems are solved when he kicks out his guests. There's a small group of people who took the repeated phrase seriously and left thinking the book contained a BrokenAesop.
200* Plato's ''Literature/{{Symposium}}'' contains a sequence where the playwright Creator/{{Aristophanes}} gives a JustSoStory explaining his idea of what love is, about how everyone was once a four-legged four-armed intersex person, but the gods cut them in half for their egotism and they're now searching for their missing halves. It's not uncommon to find versions of this story on myth-focused websites as an example of an actual Greek creation story, as it doesn't seem that much more absurd (and many even consider it one of the first examples of the OneTrueLove). In context, though, it's meant as a mockery of creation myths, between the absurd imagery and the fact that Aristophanes is drunk off his ass.
201* Paleontology enthusiasts tend to enjoy mocking the many low-quality dinosaur books out there, with their questionable anatomy and information decades outdated at release. A perennial favorite of such groups is an image from a kids' book of "''Aeolosaurus''", supposedly an ankylosaur that could glide like a flying squirrel. The image in question is indeed from a real kid's book--that being, ''Be a Dinosaur Detective'', an activity book featuring a section that challenges the reader to pick out real dinosaurs from fake ones. Unsurprisingly, ''Aeolosaurus'' is the latter. Underlining it further, right next to it is a dinosaur supposedly named ''[[Film/TheBeastFromTwentyThousandFathoms Rhedosaurus]]''.
202* Because of the way Norman Boutin responds to his detractors for ''Literature/EmpressTheresa'', it is inevitable that he will respond to almost any criticism in a highly dismissive fashion. Due to this, it is almost impossible to tell who is Norman and who is just pretending to be Norman on the [[https://empress-theresa.fandom.com/wiki/Empress_Theresa_Wiki Empress Theresa Wiki]], as the comments are filled with mass numbers of accounts all using similar names with ever-increasing numbers on the end. It's at the point where a trolling attempt may go entirely over the head of any user on the site and they just assume it ''has'' to be Norman.
203* According to the introduction when it was printed in ''Across the Wall'' when Creator/GarthNix posted "My New Really Epic Fantasy Series" on his website he received a few emails from people who took it as a serious outline despite all the signs that it was a joke (such as the book titles that were parodies of other famous fantasy works).
204* ''Maypoles, Martyrs and Mayhem'', a light-hearted book about British customs and traditions, has an entry on Shrovetide that mocks "one Puritan writer" who seemed to think pancakes were literally satanic, comparing the hissing of the oil to the hydra, and describing the ingredients as "tragical, magical enchantments", with the modern writers concluding that the combination of food and fun was just too much for some people. This is actually a quote from ''Jack a Lent'' by John Taylor, a poet and satirist who probably wasn't a Puritan, since his day job was ferrying people to the South Bank entertainments the Puritans were trying to shut down, and whose over-the-top denouncement of Shrovetide traditions is considered by most readers to be at least partly tongue-in-cheek.
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
208* ''Series/Batman1966'' was a very popular comedy show in its day, but a surprisingly large number of modern-day viewers assume that it was meant to be a serious adventure show. This included Neil Hamilton, the portrayer of Commissioner Gordon, who would get annoyed if he saw other actors cracking up on set. Part of the reason is the show's extremely heavy use of TheComicallySerious; for all the nuttiness surrounding Batman, he always treated the events of the series with utter straight-laced professionalism, even if it was declaring that the answer to a riddle was [[BatDeduction "A sparrow with a machinegun!"]]
209* This [[https://www.polygon.com/star-wars/22929592/book-of-boba-fett-hero-vs-villain article]] by Tasha Robinson argues that Boba Fett in ''Series/TheBookOfBobaFett'' is supposed to be an incompetent villain protagonist who only succeeds by being insanely lucky and surrounded by far more competent people who can actually do all the muscle work he cannot, or will not, do himself. This explains why he is so passive and doesn't seem to have any reasons for doing the things he does, including actually wanting to be a crime lord. She also claims that Boba is not in any way a virtuous person and doesn't have any clear desire to help the people of Tatooine, only doing so because it benefits him in the moment with his greed in having the people work for or with him result in an escalation of violence. The number of comments debating this as an actual review for the series and those who believe that this is a troll post are pretty evenly divided.
210* ''Series/BrassEye'', which hoodwinked British celebrities into participating in fictional public information films, culminating in a Member of the British Parliament raising a question in the House of Commons about the ludicrous made-up drug "cake".
211* The cancellation of ''Series/ChappellesShow'' and Chappelle's subsequent CreatorBacklash response was due to a growing MisaimedFandom of racist white viewers.
212* One [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IAmuZHsD70s recurring]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SBzuG_-O2o segment]] of ''Series/TheChasersWarOnEverything'' played subtitled clips from more extreme Middle-Eastern television shows which decried the west in the most ridiculous ways possible, including ''Series/TomorrowsPioneers'', a Palestinian childrens' show ripping off Mickey Mouse but encouraging hatred of the west in children. Given what the ''War on Everything'' is normally like, one would expect the subtitling to be a GagSub, an exaggeration for comedic purposes. It turns out it's legit -- they had to put in a NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer establishing that [[Creator/AustralianBroadcastingCorporation The ABC]] had independently confirmed the legitimacy and accuracy of the subtitles.
213* ''Series/TheColbertReport'': Colbert plays a parody of a right-wing pundit. Many conservatives were convinced that Colbert was a real neoconservative and that the show was a ''[[StealthParody parody of the way the left views the right]]''. In March 2014, Colbert drew the ire of social justice online advocate, Suey Park, who started the Website/{{Twitter}} hashtag #[=CancelColbert=], over a tweet Colbert made that was ''parodying'' the issue of Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder and [[UnfortunateImplications his launch of the Washington Redskins Original Americans Foundation]]. (The tweet in question consisted entirely of the punchline and none of the setup or context). Colbert answers back [[https://youtu.be/MBPgXjkfBXM here]].
214* Whenever a country sends an act to the Series/EurovisionSongContest that's obviously intended as a parody of the kind of novelty songs that show up at the contest, they inevitably just transform into the exact kind of song they're trying to mock.
215** Three notable examples are the 2008 trio of Ireland's Dustin the Turkey with "Irlande Douze Points"[[note]]A song by Dustin, a puppet turkey on Irish children's television, lamenting Ireland's lack of recent success at the contest and begging for points to a techno beat[[/note]], Estonia's Kreisisradio with "Leto svet"[[note]]A bizarre song by three Estonian comedians sung in pidgin Serbian, Finnish, and German as a parody of countries singing in random languages to score points. One bit, involving two of them [[{{Squick}} humping a piano]], was supposedly a metaphor for what these novelty acts do to music[[/note]], and Spain's Rodolfo Chikilacuatre with "Baile el Chiki-Chiki."[[note]]A parody of dance crazes performed by a Spanish comedian purposefully intending to create, in his own words, "the most ridiculous song it is possible to play." The performance played up StylisticSuck to the nth degree, particularly by having one of the female backing dancers being out-of-step and falling over trying to keep up with the rest[[/note]] While all were deliberate StylisticSuck when they were put in the same context as actual wacky Eurovision acts with more earnest intents (such as France, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Latvia the same year), they just fell into the same traps and are often treated the same way, making appearances on "Worst Eurovision Songs" lists and usually being ranked as the worst of their year by fans, regardless of whether or not they know they're satirical.
216** 2006 saw two similar acts, Iceland's Silvia Night with "Congratulations"[[note]]Silvia being a creation of an Icelandic comedian and musician mocking vain celebrities, with a purposefully over-the-top stage show and braggadocios lyrics proclaiming she was obviously going to win[[/note]] and Lithuania's [=LT=] United with "We Are the Winners" [[note]]A group, mostly made up of local news and sportscasters as opposed to musicians, proudly declaring that they were the winners of Eurovision and that people should vote for them, styled after a football chant[[/note]]. Both acts were greeted with loud jeers following their performances in the semi-final round, as fans took their attitudes at face value. It backfired for Iceland since the song wasn't funny enough to escape Silvia's annoyingness (topped off with her actress staying in character the whole time, to the point of yelling at the Greek stage crew) and they didn't qualify. However, the viewers at home caught on to Lithuania's gag quicker than the fans in the arena: not only did Lithuania secure their first-ever qualification (to the loud consternation of the crowd), but they managed their best finish ''to date'', taking sixth place in the grand final, with Ireland even awarding the song twelve points. Even Finland's Music/{{Lordi}}, the eventual winners, sang the song's chorus when they entered the winner's press conference afterwards.
217* Considering Creator/GordonRamsay's creative insults in ''Series/HellsKitchen'' and ''Series/KitchenNightmares'', a lot of people thought the "Idiot Sandwich" line was from an actual show. It actually came from a parody of Hell's Kitchen called "Hell's Cafeteria", wherein two talk show hosts play the role of contestants.
218* ''{{Series/Housos}}'' is a BlackComedy of Australia's working-class bludgers (i.e. the working-class who don't work). Two current affairs programs aired hard-hitting 'exposés' on this offensive new RealityShow. Interestingly, when they realized the show was fake they tried a new angle, complaining about tax-payers money being used to subsidize filth. The show's home channel, Creator/{{SBS}}, raised all the funds itself. All in all, the ''Housos'' creator was happy at the hilarious free publicity, [[http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/tv-and-radio/nines-current-affair-to-forget-20110217-1ay72.html while the current affairs shows got publicity of the wrong kind altogether]].
219* A ''Series/TheWhitestKidsUKnow'' sketch "Kitty History" parodied many historical conspiracy theories. As seen [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=faOUDoRmK_E in the comments of this upload]], many people thought the sketch was seriously supporting those theories.
220* From the 24/3/14 episode of ''Series/MediaWatch'': Two of the following headlines about the missing Malaysia Airlines jet are from genuine newspapers, while one is from a spoof - "Pastor Predicted Disappearance of Jet", "Missing Jet in North Korea", "Plane Stolen by Aliens". Which one is the spoof? [[spoiler: The correct answer is "Missing Jet in North Korea"]]
221* ''Series/PennAndTellerBullshit'' does this often to ridicule the topic they are covering in a particular episode; for example, polling hippies on banning water (identified as the scary sounding [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihydrogen_monoxide_hoax Dihydrogen Monoxide]]) or asking for donations to fight global warming with no proof the funds will be used legitimately. They were often shocked at how [[GoneHorriblyRight horribly right]] their "bullshit experiments" went.
222* The ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' franchise works by taking action sequences from the ''Franchise/SuperSentai'' series, dubbing them, and inserting their own footage with at least two Sentai: ''Series/GekisouSentaiCarranger'' (''Series/PowerRangersTurbo'') and ''Series/BakuryuuSentaiAbaranger'' (''Series/PowerRangersDinoThunder'') were total or partial parodies of the Sentai genre respectively, and made into completely serious ''Franchise/PowerRangers'' series.
223* ''Series/{{Sherlock}}'' had a large faction of fans claiming that the fourth series would actually have four episodes rather than just three, a theory that became increasingly popular in the fanbase after the third episode and apparent series finale aired. Many argued that the episode was so laughably implausible, answered so few questions, and featured so many bizarre events that it couldn't be real, and was intended to seem like an impossible and nonsensical story to clue in the audience, and therefore the fourth episode would [[DelusionConclusion explain it to all be some kind of dream or hoax or false reality]] and provide a "proper" conclusion. A week later, that faction of the fanbase discovered that ''Series/AppleTreeYard'' (which replaced ''Sherlock'' in its timeslot) was a real show, and the episode was not, in fact, written poorly on purpose.
224* Various [[PointAndLaughShow Point-and-Laugh Shows]] (both {{Talk Show}}s and RealityTV) occasionally feature (dis)honored guests that are ''so'' over-the-top that no one in the audience can be certain whether they're for real, actors, or some combination thereof.
225[[/folder]]
226
227[[folder:Music]]
228* Music/{{Vocaloid}} fans can’t seem to agree whether HACHI’s song, ''[[https://youtu.be/HOz-9FzIDf0?si=h2OgQ8hXOttJs5Tk Matryoshka]]'', is secretly hiding an extremely complex message about mental health, or is just nonsense.
229* People taking Music/AnalCunt's songs literally. Or for that matter, anything fronted by Billy Milano (S.O.D. and M.O.D. most notably). Flame wars have been fought over whether songs like "Speak English or Die" are satire or serious.
230* Music/BeastieBoys claim that their "You Gotta Fight for Your Right to Party" song is actually meant to mock party-goers and the whole 1980s party scene, but it's universally appreciated as a party song. This applies to much of Music/LicensedToIll,'' their debut album, in general; it was a frat boy classic at the time, but the band became pretty embarrassed about the content in later years. [=MCA=] openly denounced their previous treatment of women in their 1994 single "Sure Shot."
231* Music/BizMarkie's "Just a Friend" made two VH-1 Top 100 lists (one specifically for SoBadItsGood songs) and was praised for its "sincerity" even though Biz was not only a rapper but also a comedian, and the song's StylisticSuck is played for humor.
232* Music/TheBlackEyedPeas decided to parody the misogyny and materialism of modern crunk rap by putting out the most ridiculous song they could come up with: "My Humps". Since it's still done in the same style as the genre it's parodying, most people didn't realize it was supposed to be a parody until Music/AlanisMorissette covered it in ''her'' SignatureStyle and the Peas showed their approval of it.
233* Music/{{Blur}}'s "Song 2" was just a late-in-the-game parody of {{Grunge}}, that the band threw together in the studio. It is one of the most beloved grunge songs ever released, and their breakthrough single in America.
234* Music/BruceSpringsteen's "Born in the USA" is a bitterly sarcastic song about an emotionally scarred Vietnam veteran who can't find work and is pissed at Uncle Sam for screwing him over. People who don't listen to anything beyond the chorus, however, assume that it's a patriotic song. More than one WarHawk politician (most infamously, UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan) has tried to use it for their campaigning.
235* Jimmy Cross' "I Want My Baby Back" was meant to be a mockery of those morbid TeenageDeathSongs from the '50s and '60s, but was voted one of the worst songs of all time by listeners who didn't realize this and mistook it for a [[{{Pun}} dead]]-serious necrophiliac love ballad.
236* In one of the darker examples of this trope, Music/DeadKennedys started getting neo-Nazis at their shows after they wrote a sarcastic song entitled "KillThePoor" (and another entitled "California über Alles"). They wrote the song "Nazi Punks Fuck Off" in response. Music/NapalmDeath later covered it for the same reason: because neo-Nazis and boneheads started appearing at their shows as well and they wanted them to know in no uncertain terms that they were not welcome.
237* DJ Pøssycat's infamous [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russ_music russ music]] track "Duracell 2019" features crass lyrics including the lines "rape is good/yes, it makes me happy", a celebration of heroin and the narrator telling the listener to kill themself. While the artist claimed it was meant as dark satire, the russ music genre is no stranger to harsh disses, [[OdeToIntoxication glorification of drugs]] and [[MisogynySong unflattering portrayals of women]], so it ended up coming off as just an extreme version of that. This contributed to the song attracting [[https://www.dagbladet.no/nyheter/trekker-russelat-voldtekt-er-bra-ja-det-gjor-meg-glad/70979976 negative attention in the media]] and eventually being withdrawn.
238* The ''disco polo'' genre of music was created in {{UsefulNotes/Poland}} as a parody of disco music in the 80s and remains popular to this day (especially at parties). Not many people get the joke anymore, but it doesn't stop millions of people around the world from enjoying it.
239* Music/{{Eminem}}'s act relies on a lot of CrossesTheLineTwice shock comedy, as part of him playing the character of his evil KayfabeMusic alter-ego, Slim Shady. Even now, his lyrics continue to be mistaken as a sincere expression of Eminem's desire to murder homosexuals, rape women, and so on despite him extensively saying both in interviews and ''within the songs themselves'' that he's [[TheGadfly just saying this stuff to annoy people]]. This started right from when he became famous in 1999 and still is enough to force public JustJokingJustification statements out of him when, for instance, a 2009 song leaks where Slim states he sides with Music/ChrisBrown over Music/{{Rihanna}}, or he comes out with a 2018 song in which he compares his rage to bombing an Music/ArianaGrande concert.
240* Music/TheEscapeClub infamously featured mirror images to make dancers' arms and legs look disembodied in their video for "Wild Wild West". The point was to make fun of how certain other music videos of the late '80s were objectifying women; however, the BBC still banned the video, calling it "sexist and offensive".
241* German "Neue Deutsche Welle" band Geier Sturzflug and their greatest hit "Bruttosozialprodukt". It was meant as a scathing critic of capitalist work ethos. Promptly it got played at a party convention of the CDU (who thought it was a hymn to capitalist work ethos).
242* In a combination of this and StealthParody, Music/JethroTull recorded the album ''Music/ThickAsABrick'' as a deliberately over-the-top ''parody'' of [[ConceptAlbum concept albums]] and the ProgressiveRock genre, after the previous album ''Music/{{Aqualung}}'' was mistakenly called a concept album by the music press. It is widely considered one of the best progressive rock albums ever made, by music fans and journalists likely unaware that the work was a parody. Bandleader Ian Anderson still gets remarks from fans about how much older the fictitious child prodigy poet (Gerald Bostock) depicted in the cover art and album credits who "wrote" the lyrics to the album must be now in the present day. The follow-up album ''A Passion Play'' is apparently straightforward, despite having the same structure.
243** Years later, Anderson also claimed that it was a parody of the concept albums by Music/{{Yes}} and Music/EmersonLakeAndPalmer; however at the time ''Thick as a Brick'' was released, neither Yes nor ELP had even released one (Yes' would come two years later with "Tales From Topographic Oceans" and ELP would never release a concept album in their history) so it is quite possible that Anderson is being a bit of an UnreliableNarrator. He would finally embrace the concept in June 2012 when he released ''Thick as a Brick 2.'' Though ELP had the album ''Tarkus'' and King Crimson made ''Lizard'' (both of them having sidelong epics) and Yes and Genesis had a penchant for long songs since the beginning. Maybe the success of ''Thick as a Brick'' helped bring it further into the mainstream, essentially encouraging the trend of concept albums.
244
245* WebVideo/TheRapCritic states this as the problem with Music/{{Kesha}}: She's supposedly a parody of current music, but when "serious" artists are making songs that are just as ridiculous, it's hard to tell.
246* When {{Music/Kid Rock}}'s 2021 collaboration with Monster Truck "Don't Tell Me How to Live" was released, its anti-left lyrics were so pronounced and seemingly exaggerated that, coupled with its rap-rock sound that was more reminiscent of his earlier works and its video that was so amateurish that it seemed like it had to be StylisticSuck, people began to seriously wonder if it wasn't a Music/{{Weird Al|Yankovic}} parody of him. [[https://uproxx.com/indie/weird-al-yankovic-kid-rock-dont-tell-me-how-to-live/ Weird Al himself quickly clarified that no, this wasn't one of his, Kid Rock really did make this song.]]
247* Music/TobyKeith:
248** The song "Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue." Is it a genuine (if a little overheated) expression of PatrioticFervor, or an ironic glorification of the {{Eagleland}} (Flavor 2) mentality? It's really hard to tell. The song starts off sincere and heartfelt enough, but [[MoodWhiplash the abrupt shift from "melancholy" to "kickass"]] is bizarre enough to inspire at least a few self-aware chuckles. It gets even more confusing if you watch the music video, which backs up the lyrics with an intense montage of various U.S. military bombs, missiles, and fighter jets, looking almost like a Technicolor ''Film/DrStrangelove''. On balance: since most country songs don't feature so much violent or militaristic imagery, it's easy to see this as a spoof; however, the song's SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic and throat-grabbing finale make you ''want'' to take it at face value. So, all things being equal, it's all probably being played straight. According to Keith himself, he originally wasn't going to record the song ''at all''; it was intended to be used only in live shows for military personnel until he was talked into recording it when they loved it. So it's almost certainly dead straight, but the context changes it. Glorifying America's military wrath ''to the military itself'' isn't quite the same as just shouting it in the street (especially when one factors in the military's distinct penchant for BlackComedy).
249** There's also his more overtly satirical "American Ride" from 2009, which got him considerable heat from both the political right and left for its political barbs. But as several music critics and Keith himself pointed out, the song pokes fun at ''both'' sides of the political spectrum. (It's also one of the only singles in his career that he didn't write.)
250* In TheEighties, when the music world was flooded with kitschy soft-pop love songs, often with [[PhraseSaladLyrics mushy lyrics that don't seem to make much sense]], The Korgis decided to mock the entire genre and made one of these as a parody, "Everybody's Got To Learn Sometime". Now, they probably made it [[StealthParody too stealthy a parody]]. Everyone and their dog took it for an ''actual'' pop ballad, and it was therefore that it became [[MisaimedFandom their only big hit]].
251* Music/JohnLegend did a cover of "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DlMP7FGYJmk Baby it's Cold Outside]]", while [[TheCoverChangesTheMeaning changing some lyrics]] to make the man call a taxi so that the woman can go home. The commenters can't decide on whether it was an attempt to "clean up" the original song (which is commonly mistaken for being about DateRape when actually the woman was portrayed as wanting to stay with the man but feeling pressured to leave), or a parody of the people who thought the original song was about rape. Some of the people who thought it was a parody point out the awkward rhyme of "scurry" with "Murray", who's apparently the name of the driver.
252* Music/{{Liturgy}} had always been a polarizing band, but by the time of the release of their third album ''The Ark Work'', even the relatively positive reviews of the album said they couldn't tell if the album was intended completely seriously, or if the band were trolling their listeners.
253* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ffZgq3yvB0 "#BetaAsFuck | with Peter Coffin | Song A Day #2160"]] by Music/JonathanMann had several commenters confused on whether the song was a parody or thinking that it is. It seems like a parody based on the several negative comments shown at the beginning and the duo singing about how they're proud to be beta males, a label typically considered negative, but the song is ultimately genuine.
254* Music/RandyNewman wrote "Short People" as a parody of bigotry, working on the assumption that the idea of somebody being consumed with hate for... well, short people would be so ridiculous that nobody could fail to get the joke. Cue a large amount of hostile criticism accusing him of cruelly mocking those lacking in height.
255* One look at [=SongMeanings.net=] should give you a pretty good idea of how an over-the-top spoof can be mistaken for reality. Music/TheOffspring song "Cool To Hate," for example, is very clearly meant to be a parody of over-the-top teen angst. Yet, many commenters take it at face value and interpret it as a literal "call to arms." Whether or not ''those'' are real or just [[{{Troll}} trolling]] is another matter entirely...
256** Really, a lot of The Offspring's material is open to this. They write a lot of satirical songs, though without listening carefully to the lyrics, it can be hard to tell what's meant to be taken seriously and what isn't. For another example, there's "Mota", which is sometimes taken for an OdeToIntoxication instead of [[OdeToSobriety just the opposite]], despite the fact that the lyrics paint the narrator as a drug-addled loser.
257* As is tradition with Music/OingoBoingo music being {{satire}}, "Little Girls" is meant to call out pedophiles for their predatory behavior, being from the perspective of a pedophile who is clearly shown to be demented. ...Come the advent of the internet and the growing rise of predators on the prowl, and actual pedophiles would take the song and [[GoneHorriblyRight make it their anthem]]. What doesn't help is the song's association with [[MemeticMolester Pedobear]], or YouTubePoop videos aligning the song with [[BlackComedyRape child rape scenes]].
258* The infamous Paul Is Dead conspiracy started as (probably drug-addled) WildMassGuessing by American college students, but most of the "clues" originated from a satirical student newspaper article by Fred [=LaBour=] (aka Too Slim of Music/RidersInTheSky) which soon spread like wildfire. Despite this though the theory won't die as long as there's nuts around though.
259* Music/PCMusic is... complicated. The label/art collective is infamous for its uniquely post-ironic, avant-garde, and 2000s commercial pop-era-inspired aesthetic with exaggeratedly and [[StylisticSuck borderline parodical music]], believed to make a comment on pop music, consumerism, and internet culture, but critics have a hard time deciding whether they're [[AffectionateParody an affectionate celebration]] or [[DeconstructiveParody a cynical deconstruction]] of those concepts. The fact [[ReclusiveArtist most of its acts tend to be private or straight-up anonymous]] and thus silent regarding the matter doesn't help to bring answers. Things get even muddier when taking into account actual individual acts:
260** [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GFOTY GFOTY]] is one of the biggest examples of this, with a persona [[HardDrinkingPartyGirl so comically bizarre and trashy]] that it's extremely difficult to tell how much of it is an act, especially since she tends to maintain "character" in every appearance she makes outside the music.
261** On the opposite side of the spectrum, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hannah_Diamond Hannah Diamond]] has such a hyper-polished and synthetic feel to her popstar image, with a penchant for borderline-saccharine lyrics to boot. Off the mic, however, [[http://www.thebeatjuice.com/2017/11/01/read-interview-pc-musics-girl-next-door-hannah-diamond/ she's repeatedly]] [[https://www.thefader.com/2016/02/29/hannah-diamond-interview shown to be]] [[LampshadeHanging rather candid about both the synthetic and sincere elements to her persona]], lending a ton of credence that [[SincerityMode it's all meant to be taken at honest face value]].
262---> ''"I’ve personally had a lot of criticism for being ‘fake’ and things like that. All of the ways it’s been presented do allude to that but although PC music is a lot of different people, I very much consider myself my own self within that. I only contribute to one part of it. People are getting more used to who I am now and realizing I am real or what my idea and my vision are for my project."''
263* Music/KatyPerry did an over-the-top spoof of HollywoodSatanism at the 2014 Grammy Awards. Unfortunately, many people missed the joke and assumed she was a real-life Satanist[[note]]nevermind that it's called "Hollywood Satanism" [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin for a reason]][[/note]]. It probably didn't help that, around this same time, her "turbulent" relationship with her fundamentalist Christian parents was being extensively covered by the media.
264* [[https://youtu.be/zNEqNxwQGDo?si=-sRm1jrCjwH_Yn4s “Corazones Rojos”]] by Music/LosPrisioneros is a very ironic song that criticizes the misogynistic mindset. However, lyrics such as “If you complain, The door is there, You are not allowed to give your opinion”, “We want to see you at home, Doing laundry, thinking about him, With gnarly hands, And a very juicy crotch” and “This story will continue, This order will continue, Because God wanted it that way, Because God is a man too” tend to be proudly quoted by people who didn’t detect the sarcasm.
265* This trope can be inferred to be the main cause of [[Music/{{Psy}} "Gangnam Style"]] achieving the kind of popularity it received in the west. The song was written as a satire of the culture of affluence surrounding the Gangnam district in Seoul, South Korea, and the people who haplessly try to imitate it; its music video compounds this mockery by featuring Psy portraying a man pretending to be a part of the Gangnam lifestyle, among other things acting like a sandbox in a kid's playground is a luxurious beach and floundering around in another man's hot tub as if it were a private swimming pool. The infamous horse-riding dance, when put in this context, is also intended to be a jab at the association between being wealthy and owning many prized steeds. Once the video reached the west, however, the low amount of Korean speakers there and the lack of a good translation from the get-go caused most viewers to take the bizarre imagery at face value, giving Gangnam Style a reputation as a wacky K-Pop video.
266* Outside of Germany, everyone agrees that Music/{{Rammstein}} is a far left wing act. Newspapers inside Germany however, will still criticize them for Nazism utilizing a hefty dose of InsaneTrollLogic and invoking TheHorseshoeEffect. One of the oft-cited reasons for this is the lead singer's use of an affected Prussian accent--forgetting, apparently, that the person who most frequently used this accent wasn't a Nazi at all, but Communist singer Music/ErnstBusch, who played The Narrator in the original production of Theatre/TheThreePennyOpera. Now, it is true that Rammstein has a tradition of writing songs from the perspective of mentally unhinged people, and that they heavily utilize CrossesTheLineTwice. However, they have a HumorMode: if there is English anywhere in the song, it's a parody. The most frequently criticized songs are the ones that have English refrains, and their most heavily criticized song is ''entirely'' in English.
267* [[https://youtu.be/EmhfdQlOiy0 "Text Me Merry Christmas"]] by StraightNoChaser is either a sincere song about lovers texting each other at Christmas because they can't be together or a satire about how vapid people who text each other constantly on their phones [[NewTechnologyIsEvil instead of interacting in more human ways]] are. The lyrics never directly wink at the audience, but both of the singers are depicted as being alone on Christmas rather than being with family which would keep them apart, and there are a few lines that are difficult to stomach. The audience is split between those who think it is satire, those who believe that it ''must'' be satire because the alternative is too depressing, and those who think that it is a sweet modern-day Christmas song about being apart at the holidays.
268* A lot of Music/TheyMightBeGiants fans like to deeply analyze their songs, despite the Johns stating multiple times that usually, there ''is'' no deeper meaning. A humorous example comes from the 2003 documentary “Gigantic: A Tale Of Two Johns”. Right after John Linnell talking about how a lot of people look for a hidden layer to their songs that isn’t there, a high school debate team is shown discussing the song “Particle Man” (a song purely meant to be an AffectionateParody of comic book superheroes). Their interpretations of the song range from being about physics to the different perspectives of life.
269---> “Is the glass half empty, or is it half full? Does water get him, or does he get water?”
270* Sylvan Esso's "Radio" is satirizing what artists will do to get airplay on radio or make click-bait videos, but the [[https://youtu.be/effZUjig794 music video]] is itself a super-hyped up "sexy" video that without context of the song is exactly the kind of video the song is parodying, and hearing the song on a pop-radio station would be like reading a news article on a site known for fake news about how news articles are faked.
271* Music/{{U2}}'s Zoo TV tour was intended to be an overt parody of mass media, but ironic content was so subtle that many fans believed their appreciation to be genuine. Their subsequent Pop Mart Tour upheld the theme of parody. This time, the target was consumer culture; and fans were just as baffled as they had been by Zoo TV.
272* Italian Britpop/indie rock band Velvet wrote a song titled "Boyband", which gently mocked the BoyBand phenomenon that was at the height of its popularity at the time (2001). The lyrics and video clip made clear the satirical intent of the song, but most listeners took them seriously, and the song being more pop than rock didn't help. They never managed to disassociate themselves from the stigma of being "another vapid boy band" despite being active to this day and releasing several critically acclaimed albums. To the general public, they're just a forgotten boy band buried among dozens of similar acts.
273* "The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?)" by Music/{{Ylvis}} was made by a pair of talk show hosts and was supposed to be a parody of runaway formulaic pop hits that became... a runaway formulaic pop hit.
274
275[[/folder]]
276
277[[folder:News and Columns]]
278* ''Website/TheOnion'' and its sister site ''[=ClickHole=]'' are the embodiment of this trope, their satirical articles often being mistaken for real ones, while real extremist articles are often suspected of being Onion articles. This has led to an expression for when someone takes an article from a well-known parody site seriously: "eat The Onion".
279** An article called "''Literature/HarryPotter'' Sparks Rise In Satanism Among Children", in which six-year-old girls claim that "Jesus died because he was weak and stupid", was copied into a furious chain letter and circulated about the web. Commentators noted that many of the article's more obviously parodic passages were excised from the letter, suggesting that the poster may not have believed it him/herself. Regardless, it worked, triggering a panicked reaction among fundamentalists, in spite of (or perhaps because of) it ending with [[RefugeInAudacity J.K. Rowling praising Satan.]] The very same article led to a concerned parent sending mail to ''Reader's Digest'', criticizing them about interviewing Rowling. After a bit of back-and-forth, the reader mentioned reading about it on ''The Onion'' whereupon ''Reader's Digest'' [[http://web.archive.org/web/20160806051105/http://robinabrahams.com/2010/04/01/april-fools/ pointed out that it's a humor paper, and Rowling is not really a Satan worshiper.]]
280** Their videos have also undergone this trope, one of the most infamous cases being the video "Martial Law Plans Revealed?" [[http://idle.slashdot.org/story/10/07/21/1529256/Onion-Story-Gets-Blown-Out-of-Proportion taken seriously by some conspiracy sites.]]
281** The AV Club posted an article about how [[http://web.archive.org/web/20110217071044/http://www.avclub.com:80/articles/glenn-beck-restores-honor-to-spiderman-turn-off-th%2C50001/ Glenn Beck loved the Spider-Man musical.]] Since both Radio/GlennBeck and ''Theatre/SpiderManTurnOffTheDark'' are polarizing topics that often spark fierce discussions, a lot of people thought this was just ''The Onion'' making stuff up, even though the AV Club is the non-satire section. It's not a joke. He really did enjoy the musical.
282** The blog [[https://web.archive.org/web/20110531174118/http://literallyunbelievable.org/ Literally Unbelievable]] chronicles people taking ''Onion'' and ''[=ClickHole=]'' articles at face value and posting about them on Facebook. It is as hilariously depressing as it sounds. Poe's Law applies recursively here, as it's impossible to tell whether the Facebookers are just playing along with the joke.
283** The most controversial ''Onion'' example is their "Kelly" political cartoons, which still have people arguing about whether they're expressing or parodying conservative ideas. The real focus of the cartoons is less ideological, and more parodying the artistic clichés of bad, lazy political cartoons, independent of any specific viewpoint.
284** A high-profile victim of ''The Onion'' is US Congressman John Fleming (R-LA), who posted a link to the [[http://www.theonion.com/articles/planned-parenthood-opens-8-billion-abortionplex,20476/ "Planned Parenthood Opens $8 Billion Abortionplex" story]] [[https://web.archive.org/web/20120207063457/http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national/2012/02/congressman-falls-months-old-onion-story-about-planned-parenthood-abortionplex/48344/ on his Facebook page.]]
285** "'98 Homosexual-Recruitment Drive Nearing Goal": In 1998, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westboro_Baptist_Church Westboro Baptist Church]] leader Fred Phelps posted this article (which was, ironically, meant to mock organizations like his) on his website as apparent "proof" that homosexuals were indeed actively trying to "recruit" others to be gay.
286** Iran's FARS news agency fell for an Onion article that said more Americans would prefer Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to be president than Obama. This is somewhat understandable from a country that believes Hollywood is controlled by Washington.
287** China's ''People's Daily Online'' reported as straight news the ''Onion'' story declaring North Korean leader Kim Jong Un the "sexiest man alive for 2012."
288** The British newspaper ''The Independent'' [[http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/content/indy-voices-falls-onions-fake-miley-cyrus-editorial printed]] a "CNN statement" on their saturation coverage of a "shocking" dance routine by Music/MileyCyrus that was actually a satirical ''Onion'' column speculating on their motivation.
289** [[http://www.theonion.com/articles/42-million-dead-in-bloodiest-black-friday-weekend,30517/ 42 Million Dead In Bloodiest Black Friday On Record]]. Given that such a massive death toll would easily dwarf not only 9/11 but all US wartime deaths combined, and would result in a significant change in our way of life, one would think that no one could believe such a ridiculous story. Cue readers e-mailing {{Website/Snopes}} and other sites, wondering if this story was true. It raises the question, which was a victim of Poe's Law, the original article, or the people wondering if it was true?
290** When [[{{Scandalgate}} FIFAgate]] happened, one of the fourteen FIFA executives indicted tried to reject those charges and claimed they were part of a U.S. conspiracy against FIFA. How? By citing an ''Onion'' article headlined "[[http://www.theonion.com/article/fifa-frantically-announces-2015-summer-world-cup-u-50525 FIFA Frantically Announces 2015 Summer World Cup In United States]]".
291* While ''The Onion'' is perhaps the most famous satire newspaper on this list, other satire newsletters and satire news sites like ''The Daily Currant'' and ''Magazine/WeeklyWorldNews'' can also fall victim to this. One famous example from the ''Daily Currant'' happened when marijuana was legalized in Colorado on January 1, 2014. They published a story titled "[[https://web.archive.org/web/20140103195802/https://dailycurrant.com/2014/01/02/marijuana-overdoses-kill-37-in-colorado-on-first-day-of-legalization/ Marijuana Overdoses Kill 37 in Colorado On First Day of Legalization]]", which naturally got well circulated on social media and elsewhere. Apparently, it was so convincing that Annapolis, Maryland Police Chief Michael Pristoop [[http://reason.com/blog/2014/02/25/citing-joke-annapolis-police-chief-testi cited it]] [[http://rt.com/usa/marijuana-legal-maryland-satire-927/ when testifying in front of the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee]] about the legalization, having overlooked the three clues that it was a satire:
292** The article was published in 2014, but it cited ''The Rocky Mountain News'' as a source, which went out of business in February 2009.
293** The article also cites an interview with a Dr. Jack Shepard. That's the name of a character on ''Series/{{LOST}}''.
294** One of the supposed 37 victims was a guy named Jesse Bruce Pinkman. Jesse Pinkman is the supporting lead on ''Series/BreakingBad''.
295* Website/{{Snopes}} has numerous examples of rumors that were sparked by articles from these and more.
296* [[http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/borowitzreport The Borowitz Report]] is a satirical [[CurrentEventsBlog news blog]] hosted on ''{{Magazine/The New Yorker}}'s'' website, which frequently confuses people (especially their right-wing US satire).
297* ''The Mirror'' released an article in 2011 listing [[http://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/why-one-direction-are-better-than-the-beatles-156810 ten reasons why One Direction was better than the Beatles]]. Several months later the same writer wrote an article titled "[[http://www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/one-direction-better-than-the-beatles-column-846895 Hey dude, get a sense of humour:]] How I got death threats for joking that One Direction are better than The Beatles"
298* Syndicated columnist Jack Kilpatrick once wrote a column purporting to be an interview with an ACLU leader named Eton "Si" Eritas. Eritas claimed he was determined to remove all traces of religion from America, going so far as to change the names of any cities with religious connotations, such as San Francisco and St. Paul. This column shocked many people and sparked countless columns and letters to the editor flaming the ACLU. The only problem? Eritas didn't exist. Eton "Si" Eritas, spelled backwards, is "Note: Is Satire."
299* When ''Magazine/PrivateEye'' ran a mock-up ''Daily Telegraph'' cover, parodying the MP Expenses Scandal the paper broke by targeting its proprietors, the reclusive Barcley Brothers, they received a letter threatening them with libel action. Their response was that it was in the "joke" section of the magazine, it clearly wasn't a real news story, and they didn't think there was a case to answer.
300** ''Private Eye'' gets this from many newcomers who don't know where the cut-off points between the 'investigative journalism' pages and the 'parody' pages are. There are a lot of otherwise intelligent people who think ''From the Message Boards'' (a parody of Internet arguments which [[InternetJerk contains]] [[{{Emoticon}} everything]] [[TheFundamentalist you'd]] [[PatrioticFervor encounter]] in a real Internet debate) is genuine.
301* [[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers The Guardian]]:
302** The newspaper finally pokes fun at the long-standing leftist idea that promoting human rights in totalitarian hellholes is the modern definition of "imperialism". [[http://www.zombietime.com/zomblog/?p=1689 Doesn't it?]]
303** They parodied social justice warriors in a column about how ''WesternAnimation/ThomasAndFriends'' is racist, sexist, and transphobic, [[http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jul/22/thomas-the-tank-engine-children-parents right?]]
304* Michael Savage debates a pro-amnesty liberal over the Arizona immigration laws, and outright {{lampshade|Hanging}}s this.
305-->--"Of course you're pulling my leg."
306* Right-wing British paper "The Daily Mail" printed an article about a study that demonstrated that, on average, ''right-wing voters are less intelligent and more racist'' than left-wing voters. While many chose to believe that the article was satire ([[RefugeInAudacity as no paper would be stupid enough to flat out insult their readers]]), a number of upset readers were very upset by the article, which prompted Guardian writer Creator/CharlieBrooker to deconstruct it.
307-->In what has to be a deliberate act of "{{troll}}ing", last Friday it carried a story headlined [[http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/feb/05/daily-mail-calls-rightwingers-stupid "Rightwingers are less intelligent than left wingers, says study"]]. In terms of enraging your core readership, this is the equivalent of Nuts magazine suddenly claiming only gay men masturbate to ''Series/{{Hollyoaks}}'' babes.
308::Many people mocked the intelligence of those who believed that the article was real, believing that they were [[TooCleverByHalf clever enough to see that it was satire]]. [[DoubleSubversion They were wrong]]. The study is real and [[http://www.livescience.com/18132-intelligence-social-conservatism-racism.html was reported on by other news sources]], and the result is not surprising to social scientists - a number of studies over the years have indicated the same thing. As was noted by the study, it is not that being conservative makes you stupid and racist, but that people who are stupid and racist are more likely to become conservative. This does ''not'' mean that those on the left are necessarily smart and unprejudiced, as the effect is relatively small and there are plenty of stupid people to go around. The authors of the study noted it may also be an artifact of ''extremist'' views appealing to the stupid, with extremist views being more often associated with the right than the left in the US and UK.
309* In an Onion-like newspaper in Mexico named El Deforma, there was a note about Samsung [[PayingInCoins paying 1 billion dollars to Apple in coins of 5 cents]]. The note spread among [[http://www.noticierodigital.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=897185 other]] [[http://eldeforma.com/2012/08/27/samsung-paga-multa-de-1-billon-de-dolares-a-apple-en-monedas-de-5-centavos/ newspapers]], one of them, from Yahoo News (already deleted). There was another [[http://eldeforma.com/2012/08/28/el-deforma-gana-demanda-a-yahoo-por-plagiar-su-nota-de-samsung-y-las-monedas-de-5-centavos/ article]] making further fun about it.
310* [[http://www.theworld.org/2012/11/satirical-serbs-go-global/ This story]] from Creator/{{NPR}}'s ''The World''. The Serbian satire website [[http://www.njuz.net/ NJUZ]] (pronounced "nyews", and self-admittedly ''The Onion'' [-[[JustForFun/RecycledInSpace IN THE BALKANS!]]-]) ran a fake story about a Serbian man who got drunk and jumped in the ocean, and landed on a shark, killing it. Macedonia's official news agency got hold of it and ran it as a real story, and things went downhill from there.
311* Iranian news saw an image by satire site The People's Cube showing Iran Hearts Jews, [[http://thepeoplescube.com/current-truth/the-people-s-cube-pwns-iranian-propaganda-t1657.html and took it for realz]]
312* [[http://www.duffelblog.com/ The Duffel Blog]] is essentially a military version of ''Website/TheOnion'', and as like ''The Onion'' some of the satirical articles on the site have been mistaken for real news stories. One of the more notable examples, given the "victim", is [[http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/02/mcconnell-duffel-blog/ US Senator Mitch McConnell, the Minority Leader in the Senate, took seriously an article about GI Bill benefits being given to prisoners being held at Guantanamo Bay.]]
313* Douglas G. [=McGrath=] had a regular humor column in ''The Nation'' which was supposed to be the fictionalized diary of a high-ranking bureaucrat in the UsefulNotes/GeorgeHWBush White House. In one column, he had then-Vice President UsefulNotes/DanQuayle giving a speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars where he said, "[[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar The Civil War]] was the best war we ever had because when you're fighting with yourself you're always going to win." In Paul Slansky and Steve Radlauer's 1992 book ''Dan Quayle: Airhead Apparent,'' he claimed that the newsletter ''The Quayle Quarterly,'' dedicated to his mistakes, had contacted him because people had been contacting ''them'' to find out if the quote was real or not. [=McGrath=] said that if you were to put that fake quote on a page of real Quayle quotes, "you wouldn't even blink. It's the most interesting thing I know about Quayle: you can make up any quote, the more ridiculous the better, and it'll sound real." In other words, Quayle, much like his SpiritualSuccessor UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, was ''made'' of this trope. In fact, if you Website/{{Google}} the quote, you will find it [[CowboyBebopAtHisComputer listed on pages of actual political quotes]].
314** UsefulNotes/CalvinCoolidge was his era's version of Dubya or Quayle, and when he worked for the Paris edition of the ''Chicago Tribune'', Creator/JamesThurber had a little game where he would similarly make up really idiotic quotes, stick them in the newspaper, attribute them to Coolidge, and no one ever questioned them. The most famous one was [[ShapedLikeItself "A man who does not pray is not a praying man]]."
315* In July 2013, a Spanish website known as ''Ciencia Seminal'' (''Seminal Science'') claimed that Creator/ShigeruMiyamoto leaked during an interview about ''VideoGame/Pikmin3'' hints about [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario and Luigi]] being, instead of brothers, a gay couple (you can read it [[http://cienciaseminal.com/2013/07/19/super-mario-bros-es-un-juego-gay-revela-miyamoto/ here]]). The way the news was written was so realistic that a large number of Spanish-speaking sites and radio programs had echoed it as something real. As it turns out, the offending website is satirical. [[http://kotaku.com/a-bunch-of-people-got-tricked-into-thinking-mario-lui-912857972 Kotaku has more info on here.]]
316* A lurid story alleging that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un had executed his uncle by having him eaten alive by dogs was printed as potentially true by many English-language news outlets but [[http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jan/06/story-kim-jong-un-uncle-fed-dogs-made-up turned out]] to derive from a Chinese-language comedy blog. Given that Kim has had members of his family publicly executed via [[LudicrousGibs antiaircraft guns]] and [[TheresNoKillLikeOverkill heavy artillery]], the dog story seems oddly mundane in comparison.
317* A February 18, 2014 [[http://www.thecrimson.com/column/the-red-line/article/2014/2/18/academic-freedom-justice/?page=single# opinion piece]] in ''The Harvard Crimson'' called "The Doctrine of Academic Freedom – Let’s Give Up On Academic Freedom in Favor of Justice" has the author argue that, instead of allowing academic freedom, universities should instead enact a policy of "academic justice" that actively bans and impedes any research that might be deemed offensive. "It is tempting to decry frustrating restrictions on academic research as violations of academic freedom. Yet I would encourage student and worker organizers to instead use a framework of justice. After all, if we give up our obsessive reliance on the doctrine of academic freedom, we can consider more thoughtfully what is just." The almost entirely negative responses in the comments include numerous accusations that the author is a {{troll}} or a satirist, with one guy saying "Was this cross-posted on ''The Onion?''" while another person says "There's something grimly admirable about an article that manages to be its own parody."
318* Brazilian philosopher Luiz Felipe Pondé published [[http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/colunas/luizfelipeponde/2014/04/1443306-por-uma-direita-festiva.shtml an article]] in one of the most-read Brazilian newspapers claiming that the reason why the Brazilian right wing isn't relevant is because it doesn't know how to seduce women. Lots of people misinterpreted the satire: on the left, people thought it was misogynistic and a misrepresentation of their political views, and on the right, people thought it was a ridiculous reason for their lack of relevance.
319* The NationalReport is a political Onion-like satirical newspaper, whose articles sometimes have been picked by the American religious right as legit:
320** Renew America's far-right pundit, Austin Miles, [[http://www.renewamerica.com/columns/miles/140709 reported in a column]] that Obama spent his 4th of July of 2014 at a Mosque and invited Muslims to be with him at the White House, as well as saying that Michelle Obama is a transgender woman originally named "Michael [=LaVaughn=] Robinson", his sources turned out to be a satirical [[https://web.archive.org/web/20140709010718/https://nationalreport.net/obama-visit-mosque-host-muslim-leaders-july-4th/ article]] of NationalReport and this [[https://web.archive.org/web/20130503174330/https://www.knowthelies.com/node/8893 joke website]].
321** An [[http://nationalreport.net/9-year-old-suspended-saying-merry-christmas-teacher/ article]] about a San Francisco school suspending a nine-year-old student for wishing a "Merry Christmas" to an atheist teacher caused a similar-named school to be [[http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/S-F-school-bears-brunt-of-merry-Christmas-hoax-5073194.php inundated by intimidating calls and violent threats]].
322** [[http://nationalreport.net/colorado-pot-shop-accept-food-stamps-taxpayer-funded-marijuana/ This article]] about a Colorado pot shop accepting food stamps, was taken seriously by [[http://www.snopes.com/politics/satire/potfoodstamps.asp many people]].
323* A woman was arrested in 2015 for using a counterfeit $5 bill; she claimed she thought [[http://theskunk.org/2009/02/obama-wants-citizens-to-print-their-own-money/ this story]] from ''The Skunk'' was true. ([[https://www.findlaw.com/legalblogs/legally-weird/satire-site-convinces-woman-thinks-obama-made-it-legal-to-print-money/ This story may be a warning for what occurs when Poe's Law is implied.)]]
324* Since the end of 2013, there has been a lot of debate in the Netherlands regarding the jolly helpers of their depiction of Saint Nicholas, since these helpers [[https://web.archive.org/web/20131129022729/http://www.vrijalmelo.nl/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/intocht_zwarte_pieten.jpg look like a toned down blackface]]. In early September 2014, the manufacturers of Playmobil dropped the production of figures that depict this helper. In response to this, a newspaper columnist proceeded to write a faux news article claiming that some people managed to ban a chocolate spread from a Dutch supermarket chain because they found it to symbolize Apartheid [[InsaneTrollLogic by having brown and white spread divided in 6ths in one jar, rather than being one uniform blend.]] The article states that the fictitious protesters argued that the higher-ups of the store chain "wouldn't argue that it was a harmless kids spread [[GodwinsLaw if Hitler would have]] [[HitlerAteSugar had it on his sandwiches]]" and were actually taken seriously. Many people have already taken this seriously, likely by taking the article's header and its presence in a newspaper at face value without noticing it was a column.
325* Tends to happen often with Venezuela's NewsParody website ''[[Blog/ElChiguireBipolar El Chigüire Bipolar]]'', but one example that stands out is the article "Chávez is Venezuela's salvation" says 1992's opposition, whose fake newspaper page was used on state television and in textbooks.
326* [[https://www.aol.com/article/news/2017/05/08/malia-obama-arrested-with-gang-thugs-chicago-fake-news-site-claims/22076204/ A story about Malia Obama]] being arrested along with a "gang of thugs" in Chicago was first posted by a satirical website called The Last Line of Defense. While the website has a disclaimer (in small print) saying "All articles should be considered satirical and any and all quotes attributed to actual people complete and total baloney", many of Obama's detractors cited it as legitimate news. (And this is not even the first time this has been the case with The Last Line of Defense.)
327* Believe it or not, the Dominican newspaper [[http://rare.us/rare-humor/a-dominican-republic-newspaper-made-the-one-mistake-reporting-on-donald-trump-that-we-all-saw-coming/?utm_source=AOL&utm_medium=Web&utm_campaign=Partnership seen here]] mistook an Creator/AlecBaldwin skit for an actual statement by President UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump.
328* In 2007 a certain Connie Meskimen decided to troll the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette by sending them an editorial that blamed GlobalWarming on Daylight Savings Time, as obviously [[ComicallyMissingThePoint having the sun out for an extra hour would add more heat to the planet.]] The newspaper took it seriously and printed it as if it were a real editorial. Meskimen did reveal the truth eventually, but before that, the newspaper was lambasted by many for printing such a dumb editorial in its pages.
329* [[https://www.19fortyfive.com/2021/06/a-yale-conference-was-tricked-into-thinking-china-claimed-the-pacific-ocean/ A Yale conference on international relations]] fell for a ''Website/MinistryOfHarmony'' story about [[https://web.archive.org/web/20140902045323/http://www.miniharm.com/2014/08/27/chinas-world-map-claims-hawaii-micronesia/ China claiming Hawaii and Micronesia]].
330* In early 2022, the website Hard Drive (gaming's answer to Website/TheOnion, from the same people behind Website/TheHardTimes) made a report that [[https://hard-drive.net/hd/video-games/nintendo-announces-all-still-functioning-wiis-will-self-destruct-in-2023/ all functioning Wiis would self-destruct in 2023.]] Despite the ludicrousness of the statement, enough people believed it that Snopes and even Nintendo Life were [[https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/nintendo-wii-2023-self-destruct/ forced to point out that]] [[https://www.nintendolife.com/news/2022/03/random-no-your-wii-isnt-going-to-self-destruct it was a satirical article]].
331[[/folder]]
332
333[[folder:Pro Wrestling]]
334* [[Wrestling/{{Melina}} Kyra]] was able to convince many other wrestlers who didn't know just ''how'' outlandish her [[TheGimmick gimmick]] really was that she must have been supremely arrogant and merciless in real life. Even fans couldn't decide amongst themselves if Empire Wrestling and Ultimate Pro were presenting her as a parody of the ActionHero or a straight-as-an-arrow example of one. Ditto for Melina's AlphaBitch role in Wrestling/{{WWE}}, though Wrestling/GailKim didn't like when Melina admitted they didn't really have a feud, how legit her spat with Wrestling/CandiceMichelle was remains a mystery.
335[[/folder]]
336
337[[folder:Radio]]
338* [[Website/{{Wikipedia}} The Other Wiki]] mentions [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_propaganda Black propaganda]] as propaganda that presents a deliberate negative exaggeration of opposing ideological viewpoints. In order to work people have to mistake the real ideology for the negative exaggeration.
339* Radio host Phil Hendrie makes a ''living'' on this trope. His radio show consists of a stable of guests that he regularly interviews (the president of a home-owners association, the owner of a restaurant that supposedly sponsors the show, the head of a local activist group, etc.) discussing a current event of some sort, with the guest having some wild, ridiculous, and sometimes offensive opinion on the matter. This prompts listeners to call the show and incredulously berate the guest, whose rhetoric becomes more and more ludicrous as the segment goes on. The joke? All of the guests are voiced by Hendrie, who essentially is having a conversation with himself using a phone handset in the studio.
340** Hendrie is ''very very good'' at doing two distinct voices, keeping them straight, and "interrupting" himself realistically, so those who tune in to the program in the middle without ever having heard of Hendrie before can be excused for not realizing he's performing both the host and guest parts. However, there's also a meta-level to this; it's sometimes difficult to discern whether the callers actually believe the guests are real or whether they're just playing along (given Hendrie's vocal talents, it wouldn't be impossible that he plays some of the more ridiculous callers himself).
341* The final 2017 episode of Series/DeadRingers was themed around the premise that UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump had just set off a nuclear war and the world was doomed. The responses to this news portrayed by the episode were deliberately silly (eg Jeremy Corbyn calling for "urgent negotiations" with the ''missiles''), but after the episode aired, the {{continuity announce|ment}}r reassured "the concerned woman who phoned" that Trump hadn't really started nuclear war.
342* ''Radio/LoZooDi105'': After having informations that the catering at the Music Festival of Sanremo offered food with a horrible taste, it spreaded a RunningGag about the Festival host Gianni Morandi being a coprophague. He probably haven't liked it, since now they have to bleep his surname every time they make a joke about it.
343[[/folder]]
344
345[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
346* ''TabletopGame/PrincessTheHopeful'' began as a parody, the original authors assuming that nobody would take an attempt to cross a magical girl anime with the TabletopGame/ChroniclesOfDarkness seriously. To their surprise, the concept proved surprisingly popular and, after a CerebusRetcon or two and some fleshing out, blossomed into one of the setting's most popular fangames.
347[[/folder]]
348
349[[folder:Video Games]]
350* The now defunct blog [=AntiSpore=] (a parody blog from supposedly a Christian Creationist taking issue with the themes ''VideoGame/{{Spore}}'' had on Evolution) fooled many gamers and websites like [[http://kotaku.com/5047410/bizarre-anti+spore-website-takes-issue-with-stance-on-creationism Kotaku]] and [[http://www.joystiq.com/2008/09/10/we-hope-christian-anti-spore-website-is-a-joke/ Joystiq]], at least until some ''very'' obvious notes on the blog's "Real About Page" were added, like the following:
351-->But the Bible teaches us that God was not done with man. For we were His creation and He then spoke to Noah in Genesis 8:21-27 after the flood.\
352"21. The LORD smelled the pleasing aroma and said in his heart: "Never again will I curse the ground because of man, even though every inclination of his heart is evil from childhood. And [[JustForFun/{{Rickroll}} never gonna give you up. 22. Never gonna let you down. 23. Never gonna run around and desert you. 24. Never gonna make you cry. 25. Never gonna say goodbye. 26. Never gonna tell a lie and hurt you.]] 27. Never truly believe anything you read on the Internet. There will always be cases of Poe's Law."
353** Even after this, people kept up arguing against him for ''over a thousand comments''; there are over 2500 total, and the balance slowly shifts to people actually getting the joke, but toward the end there are ''still'' one or two condemning him as a bigot. Most of them apparently didn't even read the entry, and some of them who did read it, and [[ComicallyMissingThePoint pointed out he'd gotten the Bible verses wrong]].
354* When G4 held their 2011 [=VideoGame=] Deathmatch and pitted ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim'' against ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaSkywardSword'', the Zelda Universe fansite posted an [[http://www.zeldauniverse.net/zelda-news/skyrim-needs-your-help/# article]] sarcastically imploring their readers to help ''Skyrim'', "our favorite game," help win the vote. So many people in the comments took it at face value that ZU had to post [[http://www.zeldauniverse.net/zelda-news/on-skyrim-vs-skyward-sword/ another article]] explaining that it was meant to be a joke. Incidentally, the comments themselves exhibit this trope as well; site members who got the joke tried to partake of the sarcasm in their own comments and got said comments voted down to as low as ''-20''.
355* The "Laughing scene" in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'' was ''intentionally'' made to sound fake and over-the-top, which [[ItMakesSenseInContext is very obvious in context]]. Despite this, it is frequently posted in isolation and held up as an example of poor English voice acting.
356* ''VideoGame/BioShockInfinite'' is filled with in-universe propaganda posters. It's pretty clear these are all intended as satire. This didn't stop a [[http://kotaku.com/tea-party-facebook-group-posts-bioshock-image-satirizin-1483821325 Florida Tea Party group from posting one of the posters on their Facebook page.]]
357* A Facebook page impersonating Satoshi Tajiri posted the following: "You all think you have great ideas for ''Franchise/{{Pokemon}}'' games, but if I actually listened to all of you and we combined all of your ideas into a game, it would be an unplayable monstrous game. You want a game with all the regions, but only the first generation Pokémons, yet all the legendary ones and such silly things. Whenever I receive one of these rants, I go to the development floor and read it out loud to all the Creator/GameFreak employees in a mocking voice, and we all laugh at you." [[FanDisillusionment Fans were shocked]] that the creator of something they loved so much was such a dick - those who didn't realize that even if Tajiri spoke English this well, he'd darn well know that the plural of "Pokémon" is just "Pokémon."
358* ''VideoGame/GrabbedByTheGhoulies'' was released as a parody of the HauntedHouse trope. However, a lot of people criticized the game for taking tropes it ''parodied'' completely straight. IGN even listed it as one of the worst "SurvivalHorror" titles ever. Yes, they put a ''parody'' of many SurvivalHorror games as a straight example of a bad one. (Even if it ''is'' IGN.)
359* In late 1998, an [=AOL=] message board called [[MediaNotes/TheFifthGenerationOfConsoleVideoGames N64 vs. Others]] had a "writer" from Magazine/ElectronicGamingMonthly under the name of [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "[=EGM=] Editor"]] visit the board, claiming to be famed RealLife editor Dan Hsu. His first post was a poll asking what posters believed would be the top-selling game of 1998, claiming that the results would be published in the next issue of [=EGM=]. It was believable enough that many were fooled into thinking it was the real "Shoe." A couple weeks (and a few more posts) later, he revealed himself to be a fake. Yet the joke succeeded enough that, a couple months later, the ''real'' Magazine/ElectronicGamingMonthly printed a letter from the imposter in their "Login" section and responded by commending him for the prank.
360* Every year, the April issue of Magazine/GameInformer prints several pages of "Game Infarcer", with PARODY clearly stated at the bottom of these pages, that include ludicrous articles and reviews. Without exception, the next month's issue's letters columns are always full of letters from either people who didn't get the joke, or who did and are playing along. It's impossible to tell the difference between the two.
361* When ''VideoGame/HeyPikmin'' was first announced through ''WebVideo/NintendoDirect'', a person decided to make a satirical [[https://www.change.org/p/all-pikmin-fans-around-the-globe-petition-for-nintendo-to-cancel-pikmin-3ds change.org]] petition about trying to get the game (a spin-off released during [[VideoGame/{{Pikmin}} the franchise]]'s ten-year SequelGap between the [[VideoGame/Pikmin3 third]] and [[VideoGame/Pikmin4 fourth]] core games) canceled, in response to legitimate petitions on the site over more hot topic games at the time. Despite the writer going out of his way to take potshots at how pathetic these kinds of petitions are and the people who make them (even characterizing the supposed creator of the petition as a troubled schoolkid who bears grudges against people in his life who "wronged" him and rejects the localization of the ''Pikmin'' series in favor of the Japanese version), and while a major part of the fanbase instantly managed to peg it as a satire, ''unfortunately'', there were still a few out there who thought the petition was legitimate, either raging over how stupid it was or legitimately signing it.
362* While it certainly has moments of sincerity, it is hard to count the number of people that think ''VisualNovel/HatofulBoyfriend'' is a dead serious OtomeGame and not an AffectionateParody of them. Bonus points if it's used to show "how weird [[UsefulNotes/MisplacedNationalism Japan]] is".
363* The "Sanic" meme -- a [[StylisticSuck deliberately poor]] drawing of Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog -- is often mistaken for an actual piece of Sonic fanart. While you'll see a lot of genuine Sonic fanart that's of... ''questionable'' quality, the "Sanic" drawing was very much done for laughs -- it originated from [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eo_gJwXxshQ a parody art tutorial video]] titled "HOW 2 DRAW SANIC HEGEHOG". Apparently Sega loved it enough that [[AscendedMeme a shirt with its design]] made its way into ''VideoGame/SonicForces'', and later [[Film/SonicTheHedgehog2020 the movie]].
364* In 2014, [[https://www.deviantart.com/tanktaur/art/Pro-Demoman-Propaganda-Poster-146973630 this]] ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'' fanart from 2009 made the news when [[https://www.pcgamer.com/team-fortress-2-poster-mistaken-for-us-propaganda-on-russian-state-television/ a Russian television program about American WWI propaganda mistook it as an actual American propaganda poster]]. Evidently the ones that picked it out didn't know a word of English, and if they did, the words "Join Team Demoman" eluded them. It's not just non-English speakers who didn't get the joke, as reportedly several inattentive history teachers also used that poster in their lectures.
365* ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'' is very fond of SelfParody, but it often falls into this because it is very hard to come up with a "parody" Servant that is more ridiculous than canon ''Fate'' characters that are meant to be taken completely seriously. For instance, Okita Souji is a character with an inexplicable HistoricalGenderFlip, a silly catchphrase, tons of fanservice, and a ReusedCharacterDesign, and is meant to be a joke, while Nero Claudius is a character with an inexplicable HistoricalGenderFlip, a silly catchphrase, tons of fanservice, and a ReusedCharacterDesign, and is meant to be taken seriously - the only difference is where they originated (Souji from a parody side-manga, Nero from [[VideoGame/FateExtra a main-line game]]).
366* In a case of reverse Poe's Law, in 2009 the [=CEO=] of Creator/ActivisionBlizzard, Bobby Kotick, stated at a conference: "We have a real culture of thrift. The goal that I had in bringing a lot of the packaged goods folks into Creator/{{Activision}} about 10 years ago was to take all the fun out of making video games." (Kotick was also the [=CEO=] of Activision before it merged with [[Creator/VivendiUniversalGames Vivendi Games]] to become Activision Blizzard.) At the time, his statement was generally written off as a joke, [[DudeNotFunny albeit one in very poor taste]]. Following numerous controversies from Activision Blizzard including but not limited to: firing Infinity Ward founders Vince Zampella and Jason West for "insubordination" not too long after they had asked for creative control over ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty'' and having added a clause to their contract that would give ''Call of Duty'' rights back to Activision should Zampella and West be fired, implementing predatory {{Microtransactions}} and LootBoxes in premium-priced games, mounting pressure on [[Creator/BlizzardEntertainment Blizzard]] to produce more games but to cut costs, and firing approximately 800 of their total employees at the end of 2018's fiscal year while simultaneously announcing record financial results because the company "didn't realise its full potential" i.e. executives had set the financial goals so high that said record revenue still wasn't enough money for them -- Kotick's "joke" has become HarsherInHindsight and a noticable group of fans of the games under Activision Blizzard's belt have brought it up in online discussions, now believing that Kotick was being deadly serious all along.
367* On April 1, 2003, back when the [[AllYourBaseAreBelongToUs All Your Base]] [[MemeticMutation meme]] from ''VideoGame/ZeroWing'' was still somewhat fresh, a group of seven young men living in Sturgis, Michigan thought it would be a good idea to place signs all over the city reading, "All your base are belong to us. [[YouHaveNoChanceToSurvive You have no chance to survive make your time.]]", as an [[AprilFoolsDay April Fool's joke]]. Unfortunately for them, they greatly miscalculated the equation between the popularity of "All Your Base" in online culture with that of the real world; the majority of residents were unfamiliar with ''Zero Wing'' or its TranslationTrainWreck of an opening, and so didn't get the joke. [[FromBadToWorse To make matters worse]], the U.S. was at war with Iraq at the time, so the residential majority interpreted the joke as a legitimate terrorist threat, leading to mass panic and the arrests of all seven men.
368* A 1993 Creator/{{Nintendo}} character guide says that [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario]]'s species name is ''homo nintendonus'' and that [[VideoGame/SuperMarioWorld Yoshi]]'s full name is T. Yoshisaur Munchakoopas. The character guide was published only by Nintendo of America, [[WordOfDante was written by somebody unaffiliated]] with Nintendo of Japan, and uses a whimsical sense of humour throughout; so it's safe to say that it is not meant to be taken seriously. However, judging from the FandomEnragingMisconception page [[FandomEnragingMisconception/VideoGames for video games]], to this day there are people who believe that ''homo nintendonus'' and "T. Yoshisaur Munchakoopas" are {{Canon}}.
369* The "DK Rap" from ''VideoGame/DonkeyKong64'' was supposed to be a bit of silly fun -- an intentionally cheesy song that composer Grant Kirkhope described as "monkeys rapping about bananas and grapes." Unfortunately, because the game was released during a period when many other series were adopting {{Theme Tune Rap}}s in an attempt to [[TotallyRadical stay hip with the kids]], most players at the time took it at face value.
370* Because ''VideoGame/WarThunder'' is notorious for ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Thunder#Documents_leaks numerous]]'' leaks of classified or otherwise restricted documents, someone posted a [[https://web.archive.org/web/20230124234141/https://old.reddit.com/r/Warthunder/comments/10j1hqr/congrats_guys_we_did_it/ joke]] about a prospective Raytheon (a large American defense contractor) employee being asked if they played ''War Thunder''. As a result, many people ''truly'' believed that playing ''VideoGame/WarThunder'' was a genuine impediment to obtaining a security clearance or working as a defense contractor. However, Raytheon has [[https://web.archive.org/web/20230124193915/https://videogames.si.com/news/war-thunder-national-security-risk denied]] asking asking such questions, stating, "We only look at a person’s education, employment and criminal history when hiring. We’ve never looked into a person’s video game habits and I can’t imagine a case in which we’d have a concern with any game."
371[[/folder]]
372
373[[folder:Web Animation]]
374* ''WebAnimation/DarkMatter2525'': "If Hitler Never Existed" was about how people are so fond of demonizing anyone they disagree with that a {{Utopia}} where Hitler never existed would be seen as horrific because you wouldn't be able to call someone a Nazi in the middle of an argument. However, the video had so many comments insisting that erasing Hitler from existence wouldn't result in a utopia that [=DarkMatter2525=] had to clarify that the video was meant to be a commentary on the present, not on the past.
375* The infamous ''WebAnimation/TheLightOfCourage'' trilogy has an interesting case of something being both incorrectly mistaken for a parody and something fully serious at the same time. Aside from the few who know the story behind the trilogy, most people can't seem to figure out whether it's real or not. The animation and voice acting in the videos is intentionally bad, but the dialogue, grammatical errors, and storyline all come from a script for a ''[[Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda Legend of Zelda]]'' movie that its creator took completely seriously and was ridiculed for its poor quality. A group mainly consisting of three members of the IGN Boards posed as the director of [[WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfZelda1989 the franchise's cartoon adaptation]] to prank the script's creator and then made the parody trilogy by adding purposefully badly-done animation and voice acting. Also the case for the infamous ''Fanfic/HalfLifeFullLifeConsequences'' series, though this one is more universally recognized as a TrollFic.
376* WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation naming ''Fantasy World VideoGame/{{Dizzy}}'' to be the greatest game ever made was intended to be a joke about the NostalgiaFilter and people upholding incredibly dated and simplistic games from their childhoods as all-time greats, regardless of whether they hold up or were ever good at all. Given Yahtzee's somewhat weird tastes and just how common the very thing he was parodying was, a lot of people took it seriously, to the point of giving ''Dizzy'' something of a ColbertBump. Chances are, if you find a mention of ''Fantasy World Dizzy'', it'll mention that Zero Punctuation named it the greatest game ever made.
377[[/folder]]
378
379[[folder:Web Comics]]
380* ''Webcomic/NattyComics'' is about a woman who unleashes violent retribution upon sexist men, who then declare that they deserve it. It's not surprising that many people believe it was secretly made by an anti-feminist to make feminists look worse, but the author has expressed left-wing, pro-feminism views on social media, making this extremely unlikely.
381* ''Webcomic/{{Xkcd}}'':
382** The AltText of one comic [[http://xkcd.com/301/ suggests]] trying this on a noted pit of stupidity and prejudice:
383-->"Fun game: try to post a Platform/YouTube comment so stupid that people realize you must be joking. (Hint: [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption this is impossible.]])"
384** The punch line for [[https://xkcd.com/451/ another]] is that it's impossible to tell if someone's an expert on literary criticism or mocking them with gibberish.
385** This [[http://xkcd.com/97/ comic]] mocks Music/SimplePlan, by having the listening assume their lyrics are jokes.
386[[/folder]]
387
388[[folder:Web Original]]
389* Popehat's [[http://www.popehat.com/2014/12/20/the-curious-case-of-the-t-v-attorney-and-twitter/ North Korean Twitter news hoax]] was reactivated five years after the revelation it was a hoax--and proved it could still take in American television talking heads. And Buzzfeed. And Newsweek. And the Washington Post.
390* ''Series/WheelOfFortune'' Host Pat Sajak tweeted "I now believe global warming alarmists are unpatriotic racists knowingly misleading for their own ends." after outrage Sajak claimed it was parodying climate change deniers and was hyperbole. The original tweet in question was so close to what some of the crazier climate change deniers are saying telling the difference between sincerity and parody is almost impossible.
391* Endemic at Conservapedia, a site created by right-wingers as the MoralSubstitute [[http://www.conservapedia.com/Examples_of_Bias_in_Wikipedia for Wikipedia]]. As soon as it was founded, people descended on it writing completely over-the-top articles (to the point it's now considered a FlockOfWolves), which some people took seriously. Their ''serious'' projects include [[http://www.conservapedia.com/Bible_Retranslation_Project a translation of the Bible to make it friendlier to conservative political positions.]] For instance, the whole "easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven" thing is apparently socialist, and "blessed are the meek" should really be "blessed are the God-fearing".
392** [[http://www.boingboing.net/2007/02/26/conservapedias-entry.html Here's]] a particularly funny example of (apparent) stealth-parody vandalism.
393** Or read their page on UsefulNotes/BarackObama or any Democratic president. But especially Obama.
394--->- ''Religion: Claims to be Christian''
395---->- As of May 25, 2012, says ''Religion: probably Muslim''
396--->- ''On April 27, 2011, Obama officially released his long-form birth certificate, which many experts have determined to be a fake and no legal body has determined its authenticity.''
397** See also [[http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/User%3ACs1987/Examples_of_Bias_in_Conservapedia the second iteration]].
398** The Conservapedia article on UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush once said that he was "one of the greatest presidents in American history," that he was "successfully able to salvage the Hurricane Katrina rescue effort after it was sabotaged by a Democratic/Islamo-Fascist conspiracy", and that his unpopularity is entirely due to him being forced by the Democratic Congress to push through bank bailout packages.
399** The root of the issue is that the site's proprietor, Andy Schlafly, keeps the site under tight control... but measures people's sincerity by how willing they are to lick his boots, which the parodists have no problem doing but the true believers are too proud for. The number of satirists has led him to become ever more paranoid and ban-happy... [[https://rationalwiki.org/w/images/5/56/Wigo1053_5.png the result being that only the parodists remain]], driving him ever-deeper into his mad spiral of paranoid banning.
400** Rational Wiki speculates that this is the first living example of a "Poe Paradox" -- that in any given fundamentalist group, any new person/idea sufficiently fundamentalist to be accepted by the group will come off as being so ridiculous as to risk being called a parodist or a parody.
401** This evolved into meta-humor once [[http://www.conservapedia.com/Poe%27s_law this entry]] made its way on there -- particularly with this laughable assertion:
402-->"Clearly, the cause of the mistake is not that the genuine article is no better than a mockery; rather, the cause of the mistake is that some people lack the critical thinking skills and/or experience to differentiate the two."
403** The caption below the picture of the Black Cat and number 13 on that page is even more hilarious. It quotes a ''Wall Street Journal'' article to claim that Christianity reduces belief in superstitions, yet the "unlucky 13" pictured is a superstition ''that has its origins in Christianity''.
404* This is the basic premise of Rick Mercer's Talking to Americans where he travels around the US asking people about fake Canadian news stories. The show even got the better of some soon-to-be well-known American politicians [[https://youtu.be/BhTZ_tgMUdo here]].
405* Website/{{Cracked}}.com:
406** The site has two articles about "Satirists Attacked by People Who Totally Missed the Point," [[http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-satirists-attacked-by-people-who-totally-missed-point/ here]] and [[http://www.cracked.com/blog/4-more-satirists-attacked-by-people-who-missed-point/ here.]]
407** Also, see [[http://www.cracked.com/article_19036_too-stupid-satire-how-media-branded-me-as-racist.html this article]] about how the blogger meant to come off as so ridiculous that nobody could take it seriously... ''and the media thought he was being literal.''
408** [[https://www.cracked.com/article_19419_6-parodies-that-succeeded-because-nobody-got-joke.html This article]] takes the other way, of which some certain parodies became successful because people didn't realize that they were satires.
409** [[http://www.cracked.com/blog/i-cant-tell-if-movies-are-being-serious-anymore This article]] is about movie trailers for 2011 summer movies - a romcom, a comedy, and an action movie - that can be interpreted as parodies of their respective genres. They aren't.
410** It shouldn't take long to realize that [[http://www.cracked.com/article_15739_50-reasons-lord-rings-sucks.html this article]] about ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' is a parody. But according to the comments, some people still didn't get it.
411** Cracked.com has also [[http://www.cracked.com/article_18812_5-reasons-red-dawn-secretly-subversive-anti-war-film.html argued]] that the Reaganite fantasy ''Film/RedDawn1984'' is actually a parody of resurgent UsefulNotes/ColdWar paranoia, claiming that the film is actually highly critical of the United States.
412** Yet another article from the site was about a woman who had created a fake online dating profile to see if the rumor that men on that site would overlook personality flaws and mismatched tastes if the woman in the picture was "hot." Even though the profile depicted someone who was very rude and immature, she got [[http://www.cracked.com/blog/4-things-i-learned-from-worst-online-dating-profile-ever/ a lot of replies]]. There was also a woman on Craigslist who pretended to be a cow to see how many men wanted to date her anyway. [[http://tgeller.livejournal.com/50714.html About 20 sent in serious responses without reading the ad.]]
413* During Archive/TheSecondGoogleIncident, several works were cutlisted in protest to say "This zero-tolerance policy will likely cut this". While obvious ultrafamous works like ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet''[[labelnote:*]]Which has [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ashcroft_v._Free_Speech_Coalition#Majority_opinion a history]] of being used this way[[/labelnote]] had little risk, ''Manga/BlackBird2006'' ended up being cut for real (it was restored afterwards).
414* Website/NotAlwaysRight and other such "true story of human idiocy" collections are ''just'' plausible enough that it's impossible to know for certain how many of their submissions are genuine, though [[https://web.archive.org/web/20160418140027/https://notalwaysright.com/busted-pipes/2368 at least one]] is a known {{Urban Legend|s}}.
415* The government of Malaysia took issue with [[http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/Malaysian_government_warns_citizens_about_Uncyclopedia Uncyclopedia's entry on the country]]. It's not certain if they were displeased with the site while thinking it was a for-real or a parody.
416* There is a widespread rumor found around the web that says that TV Tropes features works pages for at least one anime series that are completely fraudulent.[[note]]There actually ''were'' some cases of people, who are either trolls or delusional, creating pages for fake works and treating them as if they were actually real, although these pages are deleted as soon as they are found out[[/note]] The "series" in question contain so many of the stereotypical anime tropes and they are described in such a fanboyish way that its impossible to actually tell these pages from the ones featuring real anime series. Presumably, this is meant as tropers engaging in SelfDeprecation. Ironically, it's also possible that this rumor is another example of this trope. This may be based on ''JustForFun/IchibanNoTempura'', a fake anime mentioned in the "Just for Fun" section, which at one point was mistaken for real, and a troper added it to the (now-defunct) Sliding Scale of Anime Obscurity page.[[note]]Or possibly the troper knew it wasn't real and just added it as a joke.[[/note]] Or possibly it could be inspired by ''JustForFun/TVTropesTheWebcomic'', a "webcomic" purportedly starring JustForFun/TropeTan and being highly {{Troperiffic}}, with all the references to its nonexistence being concealed in spoiler tags. Regardless, it means that this example actually has some basis in fact.
417** There is now a page for ''WebOriginal/{{Goncharov}}'', which is a fake film.
418* The now-defunct website marryourdaughter.com was a website purporting to sell teenage girls (some as young as 13) to prospective husbands (provided they submitted a "suitable" proposal). It was presented as a way for parents to earn some money, get rid of {{Bratty Teenage Daughter}}s, and as a way for [[TheFundamentalist fundamentalists]] to [[ArrangedMarriage marry daughters off]] [[Literature/TheBible Biblically]]. The website was all [[http://snopes.com/inboxer/hoaxes/marryourdaughter.asp a hoax]], intended to point out inconsistencies in US marriage laws regarding the age of consent and such.
419* [[https://web.archive.org/web/20130607162047/http://dailycurrant.com/2013/05/16/ann-coulter-walks-out-of-star-trek-claims-too-many-minorities/ This article]] from the satirical newspaper ''The Daily Currant'' claiming that Ann Coulter stormed out of a showing of ''Film/StarTrekIntoDarkness'' yelling that ''Franchise/StarTrek'' had "too many minorities". At least half the comment section missed the joke, although a possible explanation is that after some of the stuff Coulter really ''has'' said, it's easy to believe.
420* ''Website/SFDebris'' is fond of creating exaggerated parodies of ''Franchise/StarTrek'' characters, particularly the captains. Two notable aspects are that Picard loathes children, and Janeway is an insane, capricious tyrant. Both of them managed to exceed his parody versions of them in the show; Picard when he praises Riker for letting a little girl die (rather than save her with [[NoManShouldHaveThisPower his Q-granted powers]]), and Janeway when she [[{{Unperson}} wipes all records of a crewmember]] and bans the crew from ever speaking of her again (to resolve an issue with the Doctor's programming).
421* After the public backlash against celebrities like the King of Spain and several other people who posted pictures of themselves posing with dead animals they killed on hunting trips, Jay Branscomb posted a picture of Creator/StevenSpielberg posing with the sick Triceratops model from his film ''Film/JurassicPark'', adding the caption: "Disgraceful photo of recreational hunter happily posing next to a Triceratops he just slaughtered. Please share so the world can name and shame this despicable man". Despite the fact that dinosaurs have been extinct for over 65 million years, [[http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2688463/Steven-Spielberg-Im-disappointed-Online-uproar-photo-famous-movie-director-posing-triceratops-just-slaughtered.html many people took the post seriously]].
422* The popular short fan film ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power/Rangers Power/Rangers]]'' is a StealthParody mocking the idea of TrueArtIsAngsty by showing that applying DarkerAndEdgier to something doesn't automatically make it any less goofy or dumb (in this case applied to, obviously, ''Franchise/PowerRangers''; with the insane grittiness and ridiculously serious tone, all the stupid stuff just stands out even more). However due to the high quality of the film's presentation (it looks like something you'd see on primetime TV), some people didn't catch onto the joke, thinking that the creators were actually serious about making a full-length movie like this. Even Saban themselves mistook it as being serious and tried to have the movie taken down for copyright infringement (thankfully it was put back up later). WordOfGod says that this was the intention of the project, and the irony was how people ''enjoyed'' the entire thing genuinely.
423* There's a [[https://web.archive.org/web/20150326214220/http://fronda.megiteam.com.pl/blogi/fokus-xx-wieku/reksio-dzielem-szatana,41144.html satirical article by a Polish blogger]] which claims that the popular Polish cartoon for children ''Animation/{{Reksio}}'' is actually [[EveryoneIsSatanInHell a Satanic propaganda piece]]. Despite the fact that the article is clearly not serious (the claims are deliberately as over-the-top and absurd as possible) and meant as a parody, plenty of readers took it at face value and most comments around the Polish internet are along the lines of "man, the fundamentalist Christians who wrote this must be insane!"
424* There is a loose group of German Web sites collectively known as "Die Redlichen" ("the upright ones"), who are MoralGuardians. Decrying ''VideoGame/DiabloII'' as satanic or relating how they caught their grandchild playing ''VideoGame/CallOfDuty'' and gave them CorporalPunishment, they successfully provoke angry guestbook entries and irritated discussions on other forums over whether they're serious or not. They also tend to translate each and every foreign word by hook or by crook, such as "online" becoming the [[TranslationTrainWreck nonsensical]] word "anschnur"; this even extends to the titles of the works they are discussing (they may add the original untranslated term/title in parentheses to avoid confusion but will call it "unredlich" rather than "englisch"). Such habits, as well as egregious individual posts such as somebody ranting that [[MamasBabyPapasMaybe he didn't need to get dirty with his wife for them to have children]] make it rather obvious that these people are not being serious, but they will never admit it, so a few of them might just be actual kooks, and there is a rumor that a child protection group actually filed charges against one webmaster.
425* In light of the controversy surrounding the ''Film/Ghostbusters2016'' reboot, [[https://www.reddit.com/r/ghostbusters/comments/4s829p/ok_so_obviously_the_reviews_arent_as_bad_as_we/ this Reddit post]] from r/ghostbusters, where one user asks how to best "filter out" positive reviews of the movie, caught a lot of attention from the media (including outlets such as BBC.) It was widely circulated as proof of how misogynistic haters are seeking to censor all positive reviews of the movie. However, it was a sarcastic troll post, and the user who posted it [[https://www.reddit.com/r/KotakuInAction/comments/4sduxx/ethics_list_of_writers_and_publications_that_were/d58qwqf admitted as much]] (and mentioned he was dismayed by how many people took it seriously.)
426* Part of [[WebVideo/TheSpoonyExperiment Spoony's]] review of ''Film/HighlanderTheSource'' featured him reacting with horror at a bizarrely out-of-place montage sequence that was accompanied by a terrible cover version of Music/{{Queen}}'s "Princes of the Universe," leading to him angrily accusing the film's producers of ruining not just ''Franchise/{{Highlander}}'', but Queen as well. In his commentary for the episode, Spoony revealed that his fellow Website/ChannelAwesome producers subsequently assumed that the actual scene used the Queen original and that Spoony had found some crappy cover version and dubbed it over to make the scene look even worse, forcing him to clarify that the scene ''did'' use the cover.
427* In an episode of the ''Podcast/CoxNCrendor'' podcast, Jesse Cox discusses an epiphany he had watching next episode trailers for ''Series/HellsKitchen''. He explains that he realized that they were so blatantly false compared to the episodes themselves that he's not entirely certain whether they're serious and lying or meant to spoof trailers of that nature.
428* In 2017, a [[http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/to-be-fair-you-have-to-have-a-very-high-iq-to-understand-rick-and-morty Reddit comment]] mocking the attitude of ''WesternAnimation/RickAndMorty'' fans went viral, with a lot of the show's {{Hatedom}} taking it at face value, despite the obviously parodic intent of the comment. (For one thing, it ends by saying [[Memes/SonicTheHedgehog "Nothing Personnel, Kid."]])
429** There's also the infamous [[https://youtu.be/-GC5rAX0xHg "Pickle Ree"]] video of an allegedly upset ''Rick and Morty'' fanboy freaking out at a [=McDonald's=] because they didn't have szechuan sauce. The video was actually scripted and created as a satirical response to the [[SeriousBusiness actual szechuan sauce protests]] by the fandom that happened shortly before. Most people assumed the freak-out was real and became viral and continued to be used by the hatedom as a poster child for the show's FanDumb. The [[https://youtu.be/oUk2ksue48I creator of the video]] himself regrets making it after the infamy and backlash he's received for it.
430* The organization D.A.R.E. (the leading DrugsAreBad, [[WesternAnimation/SouthPark m'kay?]] organization in the United States) was actually caught [[https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2015/05/04/d-a-r-e-gets-duped-by-anti-pot-satire/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.681457768873 using a satirical article about marijuana on their website]] that made such outrageous claims such how smoking pot (which they refer to as a "third world drug") can get teenagers pregnant, the eponymous claim that people can overdose on edible marijuana candy, and that it's thanks to having a "liberal president" (D.A.R.E. is supposed to be a non-partisan organization). Unsurprisingly, they took it down without comment after the public called them out on it.
431* The original WebOriginal/{{Creamsicle}} picture was a parody of the concept of NotLikeOtherGirls. It was misunderstood as being in earnest by a large crowd, which led to people shipping them in defiance and starting the whole fandom.
432* [[https://prokopetz.tumblr.com/post/139767733802/prokopetz-kazorus-prokopetz-every-time One Tumblr user]] made a post about how ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' was like "redneck ''Anime/DragonBallZ''", since both shows [[SerialEscalation seem to be addicted to making]] every new BigBad even ''more'' powerful than the last no matter how inexplicable it might be -- for example, after defeating Satan himself, the main characters now have to fight Satan's cousin Phil, who was [[RememberTheNewGuy previously unmentioned]] [[SortingAlgorithmOfEvil but twice as evil]]. Fans of ''Supernatural'' immediately responded by telling the poster that his name was Metatron, not Phil.
433-->'''prokopetz:''' I can't even make fun of this show.
434* [[https://metro.co.uk/2015/12/15/woman-hilariously-takes-the-piss-out-of-sexy-videos-by-getting-really-really-weird-5567158/ Showry]] is an infamous Korean web-star who became known with her clips and Youtube videos parodying the [[ASMRVideo mukbang]] phenomenon, where people and especially attractive girls eat food live while talking to their fans. Since Showry made the rounds of the web before the immense explosion of K-Pop and Korean popular culture in general, most people did not know what she was parodying. Not knowing that she was intentionally being bizarre and repulsive, people just assumed that she was another random Asian weirdo.
435* [[InvokedTrope Invoked]] in Website/SomethingAwful [[https://www.somethingawful.com/truth-media-reviews/ Truth Media Reviews]], which are specifically written with no knowledge of the thing being reviewed and explicitly identified as such, just to see how many people get upset and write in anyway.
436* ''FanFic/IHateYou'' was a {{creepypasta}} detailing a supposed hidden level in ''VideoGame/SuperMarioWorld'' with tons of gore, creepy imagery, and a big twist ending. The original upload featured a comment from its author Creator/{{Slimebeast}} where he mentioned that [[TrollFic he wrote the whole thing as a joke]], but since it [[StealthParody didn't include any obvious tip-offs that it was supposed to be a parody]] and [[IndecisiveParody didn't do anything more ridiculous than a standard gaming creepypasta would]], once it was mirrored on other sites without its original context it was taken at face value as a serious attempt at horror writing. The result was that fans of gaming creepypastas [[MisaimedFandom ate it up]] as it was a story by a prolific author with some obvious effort put into it, while more critical readers such as WebVideo/{{Retsupurae}} mocked it for being a {{narm}}-ridden ClicheStorm.
437** Slimebeast's [[http://slimebeast.com/forum/stories/mario-is-a-monster/ second attempt]] at a ''Mario'' pasta, ''FanFic/MarioIsAMonster'' did a better job of highlighting its parodic intent by having a clear punchline: [[spoiler: The narrator is so dead-set on [[RonTheDeathEater making Mario out to be the true villain of the series]] that he ends up glossing over the nastier parts of the "spooky lost game" he's talking about [[TheoryTunnelVision because they don't fit his narrative]]]]. Even so, that didn't stop a member of the Lost Media Archive from [[https://youtu.be/lcyFUeQFA_o?t=793 contacting Nintendo of America]] to find out whether or not ''"Mario Nights"'' was a real game.[[note]]The fact the reply letter he got was dated [[AprilFoolsDay April 1st]] suggests he may have been in on the joke.[[/note]]
438* Landover Baptist Church (on [[https://www.landoverbaptist.org/ landoverbaptist.org]] and [[https://www.landoverbaptist.net/ landoverbaptist.net]]) is a parody website of American fundamentalist Evangelicals - but you could be forgiven for thinking otherwise. The website is ''absurdly'' detailed, having a [[https://www.landoverbaptist.net/forumindex.php forum]] (for roleplay), a [[https://www.landoverbaptist.net/index.php/news-bulletin/ news bulletin]], a [[https://www.landoverbaptist.org/quizlist.html quiz section]], and a [[https://www.landoverbaptist.org/subjectarchive/kids.html kids corner]] (if [[FunWithAcronyms "Kristian Kids Korner" ]] doesn't give it away, nothing will).
439* This [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SP5cXaILDP0 video]] by Knowledge Hub describes what he deems "The Worst Possible Take on ''Franchise/StarWars''". He goes on to explain that the series works best when it is dumb fun that doesn't take itself too seriously. He criticizes ''Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack'' for trying to take the series in a serious direction when all this does is spell doom for the rest of the series, citing ''Film/ANewHope'' and ''Film/ReturnOfTheJedi'' as films that he can enjoy because they are silly fun with only occasional serious moments without being the DarkerAndEdgier movie like Empire. He isn't going so far as to claim the prequels are legitimately good films but he does claim that Jar Jar is the best aspect of ''Film/ThePhantomMenace'' as just listening to him is CrossingTheLineTwice. He criticizes Disney for being corporate and cynical, especially Abrams, while defending Rian Johnson for making a silly, fun, and dumb movie in the form of ''Film/TheLastJedi''. However, the crowning achievement is when he says that the infamous "Holiday Special" is his favorite aspect of wider Star Wars. The commenters on the video are equally divided in citing this as brutal satire, an elaborate shitpost, or an unfiltered cynical evaluation of how Star Wars is overhyped and really nothing more than a wacky adventure series for kids.
440* [[https://twitter.com/etikapunks EtikaPunks]] is a Twitter account that claimed to have [=NFTs=][[note]]Non-Fungible Tokens, a type of Cryptocurrency where every unit is tied to a unique item, usually an image.[[/note]] based on the late WebVideo/{{Etika}}, a very popular streamer who took his own life after a struggle with mental illness. Despite some very unusual comments from the Twitter account hinting that the whole thing was the work of a troll, the sheer audacity of trying to profit off of a deceased beloved figure, combined with various controversies around [=NFTs=] in general and some very questionable details about the [=NFTs'=] images (one of them depicted the bridge where Etika jumped from, while another depicted him holding a banana with the title "Simian Species"[[note]]which would be extremely racist since Etika was African-American[[/note]]) led to [[https://www.ginx.tv/en/youtube/etika-nft-enrage-fans-as-people-profit-from-dead-content-creator many people getting outraged]] at the whole thing.
441* [[https://www.dailydot.com/irl/conservatives-fake-nintendo-incest-picture-mario-luigi/ Conservative politicians were disgusted]] at Creator/{{Nintendo}} for promoting incest after they saw a 2019 Pride Month Tweet containing a picture of [[Franchise/SuperMarioBros Mario and Luigi]] as a gay couple kissing. They missed that the account that made the post was ''not'' the official Nintendo account, but rather a parody account.
442[[/folder]]
443
444[[folder:Websites]]
445* Popehat closed their [[https://web.archive.org/web/20090725063831/http://www.popehat.com/2009/07/22/north-korean-twitter-account-not-genuine/ fake Twitter account]] for North Korea's propaganda ministry after legitimate news agencies started picking up stories from it.
446* When Internet Infidels Discussion Board decided to start a contest of making parodies of the creationist organization [[http://www.answersingenesis.org/ Answers in Genesis]] cartoons, they received a cease and desist letter from the latter claiming that the parodies "clearly (are) likely to cause confusion as to the affiliation between your client and my client..." Here's [[http://web.archive.org/web/20021001201944/http://answersingenesis.org/CreationWise/Cartoons/July98CW2.gif an example]] and [[http://web.archive.org/web/20120220011128/http://www.animecritic.com/_temp/parody-July98CW2.gif a parody]].
447* A viral marketing ploy for the movie ''Hell's Half Acre'' created the [[https://youtu.be/YXG_XaORJbE WUCP]], an organization that represents the WhatDoYouMeanItsNotForKids mentality to the most logical extreme by acting shocked when they see the movie trailer and are appalled that this is being passed off as children entertainment and call for it to be banned. It's so over the top that no one would believe it was real, right? Well, as a look at the comments will point out, many people took it seriously. On the plus side, the movie producers did get quite a bit of free publicity.
448* The Bonsai Kitten website, which admittedly was a very sick joke, was a joke nevertheless (close inspection of several of the photographs revealed that they were obviously posed, such as a kitten supposedly "in" a bottle being actually behind it). Still, the site drew tons of protests, including several chain letters, from those who failed to grasp the parody.
449** Even for those who accept it's parody, the argument goes that those who take it for real might try and do that to actual kittens.
450* The [=ManBeef=] website garnered similar reaction. The joke was the site claimed to sell human meat and provide recipes for cooking human meat. The site had nowhere to actually begin human meat transactions, just in case someone was crazy enough to try (and there were a few).
451* Tech parody site [=BBspot=] ran an [[http://www.bbspot.com/news/2006/11/home-theater-regulations.html article]] claiming that the MPAA was lobbying Congress to pass a law requiring anyone who owns a home theater setup to purchase a home theater license, and additionally, that they would require people to install surveillance devices to make sure there were no unauthorized home screenings. Even though the site only runs parodies and not actual news, they had to run a second article explaining this fact to all the people who read it and thought it was real.
452* A group parodying the Tea Party released videos advocating a boycott of Disney's ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}'' on the grounds that it was Islamic propaganda. Many were confused as to whether the videos were serious or not, but in this case, the fact that it was believable as a Tea Party position ''was'' part of the point of the parody.
453* [=PolitiChicks=], a right-wing "answer" to ''Series/TheView'', has led to endless discussion in the comment section (as well as on [[http://www.gay.net/politics/2011/11/16/antigay-talk-show-launched-victoria-jackson a]] [[http://www.goodasyou.org/good_as_you/2011/11/video-anti-islam-anti-gay-pro-watching-toonces-drive-a-car.html number]] of [[http://joemygod.blogspot.com/2011/11/teabagger-politichicks.html other]] [[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/16/victoria-jackson-politichicks-web-show_n_1097796.html sites]]) about whether it's serious or a parody.
454* The Radical Feminist blog "[[http://factcheckme.wordpress.com/ Femonade]]" is widely regarded as an inspired parody of {{straw feminist}}s due to its relentless use of feminist tropes ('all heterosexual sex is coerced', '[[TheInternetIsForPorn all of the internet is porn]]', 'all men are bad', 'all transsexuals are men subverting women') taken to an unsustainable extreme. Comments against the blog consist of trolls trying to outdo each other, although including the occasional poster who is not in on the joke and would seem to believe it to be real.
455* Regretsy, a website that makes fun of ridiculous Etsy products (its tagline is "Where DIY Meets WTF") has a column called "Etsy or Regretsy?", where they intersperse actual bizarre Etsy listings with parodies created by the Regretsy staff, and have the readers guess which are real and which are fake.
456* Yahoo! Answers has [[https://answers.yahoo.com/activity/questions?show=4LEJKQO5TGMDD23437DIB3R5EI&t=g Colonel Jack Fessender (Ret.)]], a longtime poe who has achieved some degree of infamy with way too many people thinking that [[http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100809080048AAcPSIu he]] [[http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20120502083348AAadkOT is]] [[http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20120320064538AAewgT5 for]] [[http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20111029083608AADUcpd real]]. He is also [[http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20111011053849AAEC9oE running for President]] so he can redesign the letter C so it doesn't so much like an Islamic crescent among other insane things. Another indication of his satirical nature is that he named himself after a hoax from a chain email, obviously as a TakeThat towards the group he's parodying.
457* The "Amanda Bieber" Twitter account (more info [[http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/events/amanda-biebers-tweets here]]) is notorious for criticizing other musicians in praise of Music/JustinBieber. Her(?) comments are so full of ignorance (e.g. Music/KurtCobain is inferior to Bieber because he never got big on Twitter, France is an Islamic country) and hateful vitriol (nonwhite people need to leave America, gays shouldn't have rights) that she must be a {{Troll}}. Maybe.
458* The [[http://ifyoulikeitsomuchwhydontyougolivethere.com/the-twat-o-tron/ Twat-O-Tron]] was created as a parody of many semi-coherent and angry commenters in the BBC website's "Have Your Say" section. It produces randomly generated rants formed from careful analysis of the HYS comments, and the results are not unlike the "From the messages boards" section in Private Eye: often sadly indistinguishable from the real thing. The source database has sadly not been kept up to date.
459* [[http://projectfreeamerica.com/ Project: Free America]] is a website that advocates for the legalization of homicide [[ImAHumanitarian and cannibalism]]. They do, however, {{think of the children}} by saying that those under the age of 18 would not be able to legally kill or be killed.
460* Conservative former Virginia state senator Steve Martin (not [[Creator/SteveMartin that one]]) made a Facebook post that opposed abortion, calling it wrong even if "the child's host (some refer to them as mothers) wants to kill it". This caused outrage for apparently dehumanizing pregnant women as mere "hosts" rather than human beings in their own right. His actual intention was to sarcastically use the same language that a few pro-choicers have used, whereby an embryo/fetus should be considered a parasite and the mother the host. But this line of pro-choice argument is sufficiently obscure, and Martin's wording sufficiently awkward (the tone switches mid-sentence from "what I really believe" to "what the other side believes"), that it came across differently.
461* This regularly happens to [[MemeticMutation Internet memes]], particularly anything based around parody of a certain subculture. For instance, "le monkey face" was originally created as a parody of derivative and formulaic "rage comics," but it didn't take long for it to be unironically adopted. And then there's the phenomenon of MLG montages, which were designed to mock overproduced and obnoxious gameplay videos, but quickly developed a fanbase of people who viewed it as simply being the same as those videos, but with more of the stuff they liked (namely, lots of editing and effects combined with loud and unpleasant music).
462** The "nation" of Kekistan was [[http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/kekistan originally created to mock identity politics.]] Later on, it became a legitimate symbol of the alt-right, which is just the other side of the identity politics coin.
463* There's a Twitter account belonging to Steven Smith, Tea Party member and Representative of Georgia's 15th Congressional district, who's been known for making outlandish remarks such as calling UsefulNotes/BarackObama "UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush in blackface". He's also completely made up[[note]]as is Georgia's 15th district; the state only has 14[[/note]]. That hasn't stopped people up to and including Senator Claire [=McCaskill=] from believing that he's real and completely serious; when called on it, most people who fall for it claim some variant of this trope, saying it's impossible to tell facetious versions of conservatives from the real thing.
464* [[http://jmantime-is-here.deviantart.com/ Jmantime]] (some images and language NSFW) is most certainly a parody of bad Deviantart "artists", what with the insane pairings of anime characters/Western characters/mascots and celebrities, the use of topical and/or controversial themes (including ISIS-chan and Hetalia {{O|riginalCharacter}}Cs), the poor spellings (including the forced catchphrase "Oh Fuck Muffin's") and the use of an edgy Sonic recolor as an avatar. On his Tumblr, he states to be half-serious and half-parody, for what it's worth.
465* After a French police dog was killed in a raid on a terrorist safehouse in Paris, believed to be linked to the November 13, 2015 terrorist attacks in the city, a Twitter user with the handle [=SupaSchweppes=] [[http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-34861540 created the hashtag #jesuischien]] ("#iamdog") as a parody of sentimental hashtag slacktivism in response to terrorism. It was then taken up by many Twitter users who thought that it was sincere.
466* [[http://michaelkelly.artofeurope.com/karl.htm Ulli's Roy Orbison In Cling-film Website]] began as a deadpan parody of self-published online erotic fiction expressing very niche fetishes. There was confusion for years about whether it was real before the webmaster finally unmasked and admitted that it was a parody.
467* [[https://medusamagazine.com/ Medusa Magazine]], another StrawFeminist satire site, eventually [[https://medusamagazine.com/i-created-medusa-magazine-and-i-am-shutting-it-down-because-feminist-stupidity-has-surpassed-satire threw in the towel because they couldn't out-crazy the real thing]]. It even seemed to them at one point like [[GoneHorriblyRight real-life feminists were actually getting ideas from the site]].
468* In a review for ''Film/JawsTheRevenge'', the reviewer at [[http://jabootu.net/?p=589 Jabootu]] wrote that "Apparently the studio wanted the ending changed, but wasn’t willing to authorize more than $75 to film the new sequence," in reference to the fact that the film's original ending was reshot to show the shark suddenly exploding for no reason after being impaled. The fact that the shark's new death scene was put together with [[SpecialEffectFailure a toy shark and a crude wooden boat]] led to many people taking this literally and assuming for years that $75 ''really was'' how much the studio had been willing to shell out for the new ending. It wasn't until others clarified that the new ending also included an extra scene with the four lead actors (the cost of hiring whom would have been ''way'' in excess of $75) that this myth got dispelled.
469* Website/{{Reddit}}:
470** The site has an [[https://www.reddit.com/r/AteTheOnion/ entire subreddit]] devoted to people believing satirical articles, and [[https://www.reddit.com/r/nottheonion/ another one]] devoted to true news stories that could just as easily come from places like ''Website/TheOnion''.
471** The r/pyongyang subreddit is either an English-language mouthpiece for North Korean propaganda or an ''extremely'' dedicated parody of one. Nobody is sure which.
472** [[https://www.reddit.com/r/MURICA/ r/MURICA]] started out as a satire of over-the-top PatrioticFervor. It slowly morphed into a sub dedicated to ''genuine'' patriotic fervor, albeit still very self-aware. [[ForgotFlandersCouldDoThat Sometimes the original ridicule pops up now and then though]].
473* Anime-themed satirical website ''Anime Maru'' gets hit with this every now and then, often when an article is promoted on Google News, which leads to several people commenting on the article seriously before someone points out it's not real (example [[https://www.animemaru.com/anime-studio-mistakenly-licenses-same-isekai-light-novel-twice-pretends-it-is-two-different-series/ here]]). One time [[https://www.animemaru.com/haruhi-suzumiya-fan-wakes-up-from-eight-year-coma/ an article]] on a ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' fan waking up after an 8-year coma found its way to 2ch and started spreading on the Japanese internet; understandably it took some time before they worked out it was satirical.
474* The right-wing Christian satire site ''Website/BabylonBee'' has been taken seriously by figures such as then-president UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump and ''[[UsefulNotes/BritishNewspapers The Guardian]]''. They have faced accusations of deliberate deception, and the ''Bee'' in turn has responded with claims of their content being misrepresented and wrongly censored. The "[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Babylon_Bee#Mistaken_for_factual_reporting Mistaken for factual reporting]]" section on Website/{{Wikipedia}} takes up the majority of the ''Bee's'' coverage.
475* From satirical news site Creator/TheChaser:
476** In April 2021, following a string of outraged reactions from conservative media to various "cancel-culture" issues, a group of Chaser interns [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7EaTNuqwQW4 created a petition]] to have [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_bread fairy bread]] banned or at least renamed. Several media outlets picked it up and took it seriously, using it as an excuse to mock cancel culture, though notably at least one conservative commentator did not, spotting the (rather poorly-hidden) connection to The Chaser and exposing it right before interviewing the person supposedly responsible for the petition. A lot of the mocking reactions came ''after'' Ben Fordham had already exposed the hoax, however.
477** In The Chaser's 2022 annual, one page consisted of actual news headlines from that year which could have come from them: for example, "[[UsefulNotes/PrimeMinistersOfAustralia Australian prime minister]] Scott Morrison says renters should buy a house if they want rent relief", "China gives 'Film/FightClub' new ending where authorities win", and "Tucker Carlson Widely Mocked After Criticizing 'Less Sexy' New Advertising/MAndMs".
478[[/folder]]
479
480[[folder:[=YouTube=] ]]
481* ''WebVideo/FrenchBaguetteIntelligence'': [[WordOfGod According to Fuck Cares himself]], ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OvXFHPmBjaQ Apology Video Gets Me Cancelled]]'' is a parody of [=YouTube=] parody videos and isn't supposed to be taken seriously. This hasn't stopped many commenters [[SarcasmBlind from asking why he is apologising]].
482* Although the American creator Mike Diva intended [[https://youtu.be/EhkPE6rRlaw his "Japanese Donald Trump Commercial"]] to be a ''parody'', many people who saw the video swore it was an actual Japanese commercial. Japanese commenters noted that no such ad ever aired in Japan, but applauded Mike for his efforts anyway.
483* A Platform/YouTube user named Tamtampamela had a channel on which she posed as a satire of fundamentalist Christians, but when she put up a video thanking God for the Japanese earthquake, saying that he had caused it to punish Japan's atheist population, it immediately went viral and she started receiving death threats, causing her to eventually come clean that it was a parody.
484* Just as [=YouTube=] user potholer54 was about to nominate a creationist for his 2008 Golden Crocoduck Award (given to the creationists who knowingly and most effectively lied to support their arguments), the creationist outed himself as a satirist. Despite this, potholer explained that one of his arguments (the rings of Saturn prove a young solar system) is actually used by some creationists. [[https://youtu.be/ztejNZIZdsU Watch for yourself here.]]
485* Matt Harding did a [[https://youtu.be/ogcqFaNbah4 joke video]] claiming that his WebVideo/WhereTheHellIsMatt videos were just an elaborate hoax, involving robot backup dancers and other such absurdities. Soon news articles around the Internet were lambasting Matt for this terrible deception, to the point where he had to make a [[https://youtu.be/CVAg6YTgTn4 public announcement that the hoax was a hoax]].
486* Several videos, such as the famous "WebVideo/AngryGermanKid" video were originally made to ''satirize'' how German politicians saw gamers. Unfortunately, if you ask around today, most people won't actually know it's faked because of how easy it is to put on a show for the camera. It even got featured in German media about gaming.
487* Another famous video, the Greatest Freakout Ever: At least 3/5 of the comments were "Boy, this is what ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' does to people?!?", ignoring that you can replace "VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft" with "Xbox Live" or "VideoGame/EverQuest" and it'd ''still'' make sense... or that. The internet still seems to be divided between those who think it was fake and those who think it was real, without any conclusive proof one way or the other.
488** Detractors often point to the over-the-top reactions of Steven (the freakout kid) as clearly being acted.
489** Some cite the interview of Steven by Creator/DanielTosh on his TV show Series/{{Tosh0}} as definitive proof that the video was fake. The episode involves Tosh [[PerpSweating interrogating]] Steven, with the help of Creator/MichaelWinslow (You know, [[AdamWesting that guy who makes the funny noises]]), eventually using a [[LieDetector polygraph machine]], and finally resorting to a threat to [[LaserGuidedKarma shove a remote up his butt if he doesn't tell the truth]]. This is a [[RuleOfFunny comedy show]], and it's not known what occurred backstage.
490* P.Z. Myers fell victim of this in [[http://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2013/09/20/this-is-our-opposition/#comments this blog post]] where he rants about an anti-feminism [=YouTube=] video while labeling it as "Our Opposition". Some of the commentators of his blog [[GenreSavvy started invoking this law]], pointing out that it was so over-the-top it had to be a parody, only to be dismissed by the rest of the commentators and P.Z. himself. Then the original poster of the video made a [[https://youtu.be/3thZ135aPhE response video]] {{MST}}ing and mocking P.Z. and his commentators for taking it at face value.
491* The maker of [[https://youtu.be/BF3jvD_hNFc this]] "Cinema Trailer Sins" video criticizing the teaser for ''Film/Godzilla2014'' had to post a comment stating that his extreme nitpicking and InsaneTrollLogic were never meant to be taken seriously after Franchise/{{Godzilla}} fans lashed out at him and got the video downvoted really low. (It should also be noted, however, that this channel is also a parody of the (massively) more popular and (slightly) more professional WebVideo/CinemaSins channel, thus accounting for many of the downvotes.)
492* ''WebVideo/ThirdRateGamer'', a StylisticSuck parody of {{Caustic Critic}}s (''WebVideo/TheIrateGamer'' in particular) is often mistaken for a legitimate, awful reviewer. His Platform/NintendoDS "review" begins with a disclaimer that says that the show is a parody, but if you read the comments to some of his other videos, you can still find people confusing him with an actual reviewer.
493* A few days before the 2014 Isla Vista Massacre, the perpetrator, Elliot Rodger, posted a video espousing his beliefs and plans for "revenge." The video ended up being posted to Reddit's r/cringe subreddit, where commenters had a hard time telling whether he genuinely wanted to kill people or was just a massive troll.
494* [=YouTube=] user 1stkirbyever ran into this while simultaneously [[https://youtu.be/bLb25V5lqaE demonstrating a glitch]] in the ''VideoGame/SonicGenerations'' demo and parodying Sonic's infamously UnpleasableFanbase. After seeing that some people missed the joke, he added a disclaimer to [[https://youtu.be/0jGSrNbM2Wc the sequel]] stating, in large, bold letters, "I AM NOT SERIOUS." ''There were still people who missed the joke, even with the disclaimer.'' You can tell he's given up on the parody part with [[https://youtu.be/hZ_QHoELNVU the third installment]].
495* Islamic State of Donbass and Lugant, a parody of jihad videos by pro-Russian insurgents in eastern Ukraine, complete with ''nasheed'' (Islamic acapella chants) & their flag modified to include Islamist symbolism. Ukrainian & other commenters mistake them as actual Islamist terrorists, while the Russians are joking about their [[UsefulNotes/OrthodoxChristianity Orthodox]] [[ChurchMilitant "jihad"]]. There are Muslim volunteers fighting on the pro-Russian side, but '''NONE''' of them are radical Islamists related with the jihadist movements.
496* During the CausticCritic boom of 2007, when [[FollowTheLeader everyone with a camcorder was jumping on the]] ''WebVideo/AngryVideoGameNerd'' bandwagon, one particular user named {{Creator/Armake21}} chimed in. According to himself he was supposed to be riffing on reviewers who wanted to be the AVGN but had no idea how to write jokes beyond "swear at the TV". In terms of viewership, he was moderately successful. In terms of the parody... not so much: after a review of ''Shinobi'' for the NES he had to post a follow-up video demonstrating his previously-poor skill was actually StylisticSuck.
497* Averted intentionally by Creator/JimSterling when they ditched their "egomaniacal dictator" outfit for a more "circus ringmaster" look. After the election of Donald Trump in 2016, Sterling felt that it was [[DudeNotFunny not funny]] anymore because some people would take Sterling's dictator persona seriously and ''praise'' Sterling for it.
498* The [[https://youtu.be/UXodRLLkth4 video shown here]] was posted by a user who intended (he claimed) to make a political satire. The video consists of a real Arabic newscast with phony subtitles. President Obama's detractors quickly took the video as fact and posted it on several conservative blogs, until the poster, -- who admits to being conservative but quotes the Trope Name directly (as shown) -- cleared it up.
499* ''WebVideo/McJuggerNuggets'' falls into this a lot -- one of the major questions fans and haters have is "Is this real or not?". The depiction of a [[DysfunctionJunction dysfunctional family]], [[SanitySlippage an abuser losing people to dominate and becoming less rational as time goes on]], multiple abusive relationships, [[ApatheticCitizens nobody thinking to help]] (especially not the [[PoliceAreUseless police]]), as well as the fact that the main character Jesse regularly moves back to a house where he's clearly abused brings up a ''lot'' of people to suspect both.
500** After uploading a video of Jesse shooting his father dead, and a follow-up video showing him moving out of the country in a desperate attempt to escape his crime, he cries on camera admitting that he made a mistake that can never be forgiven. Immediately after he finishes, he gets up, walks out of the room, and points the camera at the door, showing that his dad is alive and well, his mom is nearby, and he is in his parents' bedroom and ''not'' a hotel room like the video leads you to believe. Following this, Jesse came forth admitting that the entire Psycho series was indeed fake, and proceeded to upload bloopers and discussions about the show, even showing him giving his parents multi-thousand dollar checks for their help in the series. Jesse would also admit that, due to the lines of the show blurring from reality, he had actually been swatted before, and had the police called on his home multiple times by concerned or enraged fans. At one point, the police had even told him that he had to stop uploading the videos, which he responded that the show was nearing completion shortly. He continues uploading as he has before with new videos and series.
501* One of Steven Crowder's earliest videos in the mid-2000s was a sequence of celebrity impressions with his brother. Crowder claims it was [[BadBadActing intentionally bad]] to lampoon a wave of bad impression videos going around on [=YouTube=] at that time, but most commenters didn't get the joke.
502* The [[NonIndicativeName exceedingly ironically named]] [=YouTube=] channel No Bullshit tends to put out videos that are so stupid, repugnant, and/or downright ''ridiculous'' (in one, he insults someone by calling them a [[BigStupidDooDooHead cuckoo wack-a-do]]) people often think he is a parody. As far as anyone can tell, he's serious.
503* "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kppx4bzfAaE Rappin' for Jesus]]" is supposedly an old video (presumably from the early 2000s, 90s, or earlier) in which a (white) pastor and his wife rap about Jesus, repeatedly using the N-word to describe Him (as a term of endearment, but that's still a risky thing to do for someone without NWordPrivileges). The description implies that [[TotallyRadical this was a serious attempt at bringing religion to the youth]], and at a glance one might believe it, but [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kF9u4nCnZn8 in-depth research]] shows that the video is definitely satire. One of the main clues (ironically not mentioned in the analysis video) is that the word "swag" is used as a synonym for "coolness" in the song's lyrics, even though that particular meaning didn't exist when the video was supposedly made. The church shown at the start of the video shows no trace of ever existing, and its website only has one message, claiming the church shut its doors in 2004, even though the site's domain was registered in 2013 (around the same time as the creation of the account that uploaded the video). Also, trying to find even the tiniest scrap of information about Pastor Jim Colerick or Mary-Sue Colerick (the name of the pastor and his wife given at the start of the video) from Iowa [[ReclusiveArtist is impossible, meaning the performers were using fake names]].
504* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iKcWu0tsiZM Modern Educayshun]] by [[https://www.youtube.com/c/neelk/featured Neel Kolhatkar]] is meant to be a mockery of social media culture affecting higher education, meant to joke about how everyone can easily get offended over anything while anything worth learning is silenced underneath a barrage of Political Correctness. This came out in ''2015''. Jump forward to the year 2020, and the comments section is filled with remarks about how true this is in real life, stating that it hits too close to home.
505* {{WebVideo/MarioTehPlumber}} is an infamous ''Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog'' "fan" who "reviews" video games in the eponymous franchise on Platform/YouTube. The "reviews" in question consist mostly of [[SensoryAbuse screaming into the microphone]], [[ClusterFBomb Cluster]][=/=][[AtomicFBomb Atomic F-Bombs]] [[SirSwearsALot every other word]], research failures galore, and [[SkewedPriorities "Character design > Gameplay" priorities]] complete with [[FreudWasRight sexual interpretations of characters and objects intended to be nothing of the sort]] -- so naturally he was laughed out of the fanbase as a {{troll}} in a matter of moments, right? Unfortunately, the ''Sonic the Hedgehog'' fanbase is infamous for being extremely [[BrokenBase divided]], made worse by a significant VocalMinority of [[FanDumb overzealous fans]]. The result is that it took several ''years'' before it became widely agreed that [=MarioTehPlumber=]'s immature behaviour is a fake personality and not sincere.
506* Funny or Die's ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhaihBGD2tc A Gaythering Storm]]'' regularly gets comments from people opposed to its homophobia, though the video is actually a parody of an anti-gay PSA calling attention to how ridiculous homophobia is.
507* The promotional video for ''Advertising/{{Cryptoland}}'', a plan by cryptocurrency enthusiasts to build a community on a Fijian island, was widely mocked once it was discovered by the internet at large due to its crude 3D animation, creepy and offputting mascot character, dialogue and location names consisting mostly of cringeworthy crypto in-jokes, inexplicable musical numbers, and the concept alone inviting unflattering comparisons to the disastrous Fyre Festival. Because of all this, the whole thing can come off like a scathing StealthParody of the culture surrounding crypto, with [[https://thenextweb.com/news/welcome-to-cryptoland-real-island-cryptocurrency-fans-analysis an article on the subject]] calling it "closer to a crypto satire than a sales pitch". However, whether the project is genuine or just a scam, it's clear the video wasn't meant to be seen as a joke, as evidenced by the fact the creators took it down from their [=YouTube=] channel in response to the mockery, and started issuing legal threats in an effort to silence their critics.
508* This was the subject of WebVideo/RenegadeCut's video "[[https://youtu.be/1EnzkgqkuW0 Post-Satire Capitalism]]", as he discusses how extreme politics and socioeconomics have become.
509* ''WebAnimation/TheOdd1sOut'': In one video, James jokingly claims to be a furry as part of a joke, saying that people tend to find furry animals cuter than hairless ones. However, a lot of commenters thought he was serious, so in another video, he confirmed it was a joke.
510* When WebVideo/DominicNoble made an AprilFools video comparing ''Film/TheRoom2003'' to the (non-existent) book that it was based on, the intention was that it would become obvious that he was joking near the end as the plot got more ridiculous and he ended on a clip of him trying to pronounce "Prima Aprilis"[[note]]April Fools in Polish[[/note]], the name of the "author". However, a large number of people didn't realize he was joking until he spelled it out at the start of a much later video.
511* In "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0twDETh6QaI ROBLOX_OOF.mp3]]", WebVideo/HBomberguy starts to dig deeper and deeper into Tommy Tallarico's history of making shit up to make himself look better, steadily growing more and more exasperated at the sheer volume and audacity of lies. It comes to a head when Harry hits what he calls the "Tallarico Event Horizon" -- Tommy posted a picture of himself standing next to the Dalai Lama on the Atari Age website, claiming that he just happened to run into him in London and that he was a fan of Tommy's work. Harry then discovers that the photo was of a ''wax sculpture'' of the Dalai Lama, and ''loses his mind'' completely, because he's heard Tommy say ''so many'' BlatantLies, he genuinely can't tell if he's joking or not.
512-->'''Harris:''' Is he doing a bit?! Is Tommy Tallarico a CIA experiment to see how far you can get in the liberal games industry by just making shit up?! ''Is Tommy Tallarico just [[PlatonicCave a shadow on the wall of a cave?!]]'' I- !! I STARTED MAKING THIS VIDEO BECAUSE I THOUGHT ''A SOUND EFFECT WAS FUNNY!!''
513* A major RunningGag in WebVideo/QuintonReviews' series of videos on ''Series/ICarly'' and ''Series/{{Victorious}}'' purposely never directly refers to series creator Creator/DanSchneider, always referring to him as [[HeWhoMustBeNamed "the creator"]] and steering away from discussing the many allegations made about him. The final part reveals that this was intended specifically to lampoon fans who just that and try to distance Schneider's reputation from the shows themselves - which the rest of the video goes on to point out is both futile given the sheer creative influence Schneider had on them, and potentially dangerous given how [[InherentToTheSystem it positions Schneider as a convenient scapegoat for systemic problems of working with child stars]]. However, because of the [[{{Doorstopper}} sheer length of the video series]] and how it reached to people with only a passing familiarity with the subject, many assumed he was doing the bit entirely seriously.
514[[/folder]]
515
516[[folder:Western Animation]]
517* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'': The show's 10th season has introduced ''[[CousinOliver yet another character]]'', named Chloe, who was written to be a ParodySue as she's blatantly, unrealistically perfect in many ways from knowing 12 languages to having a Nobel Prize. Despite this, she was still given the rights to Timmy's fairies half the time. It was later revealed that she was [[DeconstructedTrope perfect to a fault]] as she often tried so hard to make everything great that she ended up overcompensating and ruining everything instead which led to people ostracizing her. Unfortunately, her sue qualities got played so straight that many people in the show's fandom mistook her for an outright CanonSue and decried her inclusion and how she was able to get fairies despite being "perfect". Later episodes would downplay her sue qualities and show more of her flaws, but by then the damage was done, and the 10th season ended up being its last.
518* ''WesternAnimation/FeedTheKitty'': The scene where Marc Anthony cries upon thinking his cat friend was baked into cookies was meant to be BlackComedy. However, a lot of viewers genuinely found it sad. Even director Creator/ChuckJones was surprised at how tender the scene came off upon watching the finished film.
519* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
520** [[Recap/TheSimpsonsS8E24TheSimpsonsSpinOffShowcase "The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase"]] satirized the trend of TV networks trying to make spinoffs and successor series that are frequently inferior to the original show (this episode predated ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'' and Creator/SethMacFarlane's animated shows), with all three segments deliberately badly scripted, bland and cheesy. However, some fans mistook the StylisticSuck for actual bad writing. Creator/MattGroening was worried that fans would react that way. This happened mostly due to two reasons:
521*** This wasn't the first episode that gave some of the Springfield recurring characters ADayInTheLimelight; the previous season had the episode "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS7E2122ShortFilmsAboutSpringfield 22 Short Films About Springfield]]", [[PoorlyDisguisedPilot which also served as the pilot for a potential spinoff titled "Tales of Springfield"]], albeit that one had the series' usual tone and none of the (intentional) bad writing this episode had.
522*** Second, [[ParodyDisplacement many of the younger viewers had no idea the shorts were meant to be a parody of existing shows]], since, at least in the second and third short's case, were based on decades-old works that had very short runs (for a good reason) and thus were pretty obscure. Lisa being replaced by a DumbBlonde teen in the third segment came as particularly baffling to some, [[AluminumChristmasTrees not realizing something like that happened in]] ''Series/TheBradyBunchVarietyHour''.
523** [[Recap/TheSimpsonsS11E13SaddlesoreGalactica "Saddlesore Galactica"]] satirised the show's own SeasonalRot and [[DenserAndWackier tranformation into a much less grounded series]], and wasn't intended to be taken seriously. Despite [[StrawFan Comic Book Guy]] being used to hammer home that this was a parody, many fans missed the joke and it's widely considered to be among the worst episodes in the series.
524* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
525** This shows up in "Trapped in the Closet" when an official narrates Xenu's origin story. The phrase, "[[NotMakingThisUpDisclaimer This is what Scientologists actually believe]]" was put in because it would've been indistinguishable from the show's weird humor to those who didn't already know the story. Even then, some people '''still''' didn't believe it, because even that sounds like something ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' would do.
526** The episode "Butt Out" is suggested by Stone and Parker to be SelfParody of the show's own satirical structure; the issue of anti-smoking is portrayed in a spectacularly black-and-white fashion (the cigarette factory is a Wonka-esque wonderland, while Rob Reiner is depicted as a StrawHypocrite and borderline HumanoidAbomination) and the episode ends with a big dramatic speech for AnAesop. But a lot of reviews didn't even notice those elements, because we're talking about a show that once depicted Barbara Streisand as Mechagodzilla; ridiculous exaggeration to make a comedic point and incredibly simplistic and blatant messaging is ''South Park'''s stock-in-trade.
527** Many people assume that the pro-pedophile North American Man-Boy Love Association (NAMBLA) is a piece of satire invented by the show. Sadly, it's a real organization.
528* ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants'': The episode "Stuck in the Wringer" ends with the SpoofAesop that "crying does solve your problems after all!" While the moral was obviously a sarcastic one (compounded by the fact that [=SpongeBob=] looks straight into the camera to deliver it), many people missed the joke and were ''livid.'' Even among those who knew it was a joke, the line is divisive, with one reason being that children would miss the joke and take the line at face value.
529* When ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'' released [[https://derpibooru.org/591492 a teaser image]] for a then-upcoming episode ("Testing Testing 1, 2, 3") featuring Pinkie Pie as a rapper, more than a few people assumed that the show was charging headlong into TotallyRadical territory. Fortunately, when the episode actually aired, it quickly became clear that the rap was [[StylisticSuck intentionally ridiculous]], as it was a ''parody'' of TotallyRadical edutainment from the '90s. In particular, it's a rather direct spoof of the rap segment from the infamous [[https://youtu.be/up863eQKGUI Don't Copy That Floppy]] PSA.
530* There's been a lot of debate over whether ''WesternAnimation/{{Velma}}'' is legitimately promoting politically correct views or satirizing them, due to many audience members perceiving the narrative of the show as exaggerated and lacking nuance yet many audience members also feeling that a lot of moments lack self-awareness.
531
532[[/folder]]
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534[[folder:Other]]
535* Creator/SalvadorDali once sent a telegram to Romania's dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu, for his adoption of a scepter as part of his regalia. Dalí's intent was to mock him, but Ceauşescu, who had one of the biggest personality cults ever, took it seriously, and the text was published in the Party's newspaper. When he ''did'' find out it was a joke, he fired the editor who published it. Never mind that he was the one who ordered it to be published.
536* Creator/RogerEbert went political and wrote a [[https://www.rogerebert.com/roger-ebert/creationism-your-questions-answered blog post]] giving a statement of creationist beliefs, with the intention of making a point about people's inability to recognize irony. While many people did see the satire, a significant number of readers either thought he was being serious or assumed the site had been hacked. PZ Myers [[http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2008/09/there_is_such_a_thing_as_bad_s.php criticized]] the article, pointing out that when there are so many people making the same claims without irony, the joke becomes undetectable to anyone who doesn't already know Ebert's stance on the issue. Anyone who thought the piece was anything but satire must not have read it in full (or did, but were worried that other people would not before reacting), because it ends with an obvious joke question and answer.
537--> '''Q.''' Why would God create such an absurd creature as a moose?\
538'''A.''' In charity, we must observe that the moose probably does not seem absurd to itself."
539* A little-known example with Erwin Schrödinger. His infamous UsefulNotes/SchrodingersCat thought experiment was actually made by him as an absurd scenario to point out the flaw with the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics, which claimed that two systems (such as two subatomic particles) that interacted but then separated would each have to be in a non-definite state until observed. Schrödinger thought this was silly and so came up with a scenario so absurd that it would show the flaws in the Copenhagen interpretation. His scenario was that if you locked a cat in a box with a gas vial of poison that would be smashed upon the decay of a radioactive isotope, then left the box closed and unobserved for a half-life of the isotope, the isotope would be in a superposition of being (i.e. "both or neither") decayed and not decayed, the gas consequently in a superposition of being released and not released, and the cat in a superposition of being both alive and dead. Many laypeople today know Schrödinger's name only from this thought experiment, and assume that he believed (or perhaps even "proved") that quantum mechanics meant that you could have a cat simultaneously alive and dead, when in fact this was intended as an absurd implication of an interpretation of quantum mechanics that Schrödinger wished to discredit. Moreover, a few experiments have placed particles or quantum-scale systems in situations were they do genuinely appear to be in two states simultaneously.
540* There were "scientific" papers and conferences that swallowed and processed nonsensical, [[FeigningIntelligence but imitating their style and language]] papers, only to discover they were punned:
541** ''Transgressing the Boundaries: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity'' [[http://www.physics.nyu.edu/faculty/sokal by Alan Sokal.]] Alan Sokal, a physicist who was [[HardOnSoftScience severely annoyed]] at scientifically-illiterate deconstructionist philosophers trying to work quantum physics into their philosophy, submitted a paper to the journal ''Social Text'' which declared "quantum gravity"--and ultimately reality itself--[[ClapYourHandsIfYouBelieve to be a social construct]], and that somehow this was beneficial for left-wing politics. ''Social Text'' accepted it. No peer review, no attempt to verify the scientific 'facts'. Right after printing it, he notified them it was a [[InsaneTrollLogic logically inconsistent rambling]] as bad as he could write without [[MushroomSamba using mushrooms]]. Oops. ''Social Text'' was annoyed. According to the journal editors, they didn't agree with his argument and thought the paper was badly written, but at no point had it occurred to them that it wasn't a sincere effort. Sokal concluded that they had printed his paper because it came from a respected academic and [[BiasSteamroller flattered their political views]].
542** ''WMSCI 2005'' accepted an article ''Rooter: A Methodology for the Typical Unification of Access Points and Redundancy''. The only value it has for computer science is the fact that this garbage wasn't even written by a human, but by a pseudorandom text generator. Then these pranksters went to the conference, held a "technical" session and [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill read a few more randomly generated speeches]] with straight faces. [[http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/scigen/ It's all there]] -- along with the Open Source text generator.
543** In the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogdanov_Affair Bogdanov Affair,]] Igor and Grichka Bogdanov published their papers in reputable scientific journals claiming that their calculations could puzzle out what things were like in the Planck era (the point immediately after the Big Bang). Subsequent criticisms of the papers by scientists and in Internet forums claimed that the poorly-written papers, filled with many commonly used scientific buzzwords used in nonsensical contexts, were meant as a big hoax. The controversy is frequently called the "reverse Sokal hoax" because A) the material was submitted to scientific journals rather than liberal arts journals, and B) the Bogdanovs consistently maintained that they were completely sincere.
544** [[https://areomagazine.com/2018/10/02/academic-grievance-studies-and-the-corruption-of-scholarship/ "Sokal Squared":]] The authors half-successfully (the hoax blew before it could be completed) fooled several "Gender Studies" magazines. They even managed to sneak in reworded passages from ''Literature/MeinKampf''. This caused a giant scandal.
545** [[https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Body_Ritual_among_the_Nacirema "Body Ritual among the Nacirema"]] was a satire of the way anthropologists tended to write about non-Western cultures with clinical distance and treating all customs as incomprehensible superstition by taking the exact same approach to the [[SdrawkcabName "Nacirema"]] people. For instance, it describes a strange nude ritual where a medicine man performs magic upon male excreta (read: going to a doctor, stripping naked so they can check on you, and giving a urine sample). It got published in ''American Anthropologist''.
546* In 1985 MIT pranksters managed to get a sculpture included in an exhibition at MIT's List Visual Art Center. Titled "No Knife", it consisted of an overturned wastebasket on which was a dining hall tray, plate, bowl, glass, fork, and two spoons. It was accompanied by an artist's statement describing it as "a study in mixed media earth tones", and going on to praise and interpret it ("The casual formalism of the place setting draws upon our common internal instincts of existential persistence to unify us with the greater consciousness of human bondage") in a parody of the style of art criticism. It took the gallery staff several hours to discover it was not actually part of the exhibition.
547* Valerie Solanas, infamous for shooting Creator/AndyWarhol, was also known for her ''SCUM Manifesto'', (with SCUM believed to stand for Society for Cutting Up Men, though she denied this) her infamous rant about [[StrawFeminist how the world would be a better place without men]]. Even though ''The SCUM Manifesto'' is generally taken at face value, Solanas [[ParodyRetcon did claim that it was satire]], with academics such as Laura Winkiel arguing on her behalf. Those who know Solanas have given inconsistent accounts of whether or not she herself claims it to be satire.
548* In a strange case, creationist speaker Kent Hovind earned the P.T. Barnum "One Born Every Minute" Award when he incorporated information about the finding of man and dinosaur fossils co-existing and the government cover-up of this discovery, from a website into his lectures as evidence against evolution. In reality, the website was a fake one ([[http://www.nmsr.org/Archive.html and somewhat conspicuously so]]) that the New Mexicans for Science and Reason (NMSR) had set up as an April Fool's Day prank.
549* OlderThanFeudalism: Scenes from Creator/{{Aristophanes}} over-the-top parody of Creator/{{Socrates}}, ''Theatre/TheClouds'', were cited in Socrates' trial as if they were real evidence against him. You know, the one that ended with him forced to drink hemlock. Since the formal charges against him were all a blatant farce to get around that he was protected from punishment of what they were actually mad about by an amnesty agreement, and everyone involved knew this, there's a decent chance it was deliberate.
550* UsefulNotes/SarahPalin mocked the way her opponents [[FelonyMisdemeanor obsess over minor misstatements of hers]] by releasing a blog post consisting entirely of erroneous statements made by President UsefulNotes/BarackObama. At least some of her detractors criticized the new "mistakes" from Mrs. Palin. Reimagined with [[BeamMeUpScotty common knowledge]] that Sarah Palin said, "I can see Russia from my house!" ... via Creator/TinaFey's parody (the actual quote was that you can see Russia from a certain place in Alaska, which is true as far as it goes).
551* There's a minor political party in Russia called "Communists of St. Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast" (CPLO), that is best known for their public appeals, written in an over-the-top style of mock Soviet propaganda. They sent a hate mail to Steven Spielberg over ''Film/IndianaJonesAndTheKingdomOfTheCrystalSkull'', and accused ''Avatar'' of ripping off from Creator/StrugatskyBrothers. Recently, they claimed that European probe Philae is a 'space pirate' and should pay for landing on a 'Soviet' Churyumov-Gerasimenko comet. Their philippics have been picked up by the media and taken too seriously so that the ''real'' Communist Party had to remind them they have nothing to do with that. There's still a debate is CPLO parodying Communists JustForFun, as an advertisement strategy, or if they're really nuts (which is unlikely).
552* As a satire of excessive capitalism, an artist made a bench that you must pay to sit on; overstay your purchased welcome and the bench will ''[[DisproportionateRetribution impale you with steel spikes]]''. And now, a Chinese park owner who didn't get the joke [[http://www.metro.co.uk/news/838228-retractable-spikes-installed-on-park-benches-to-deter-lazy-bums actually wants to install these in his park]] to prevent hobos from hanging around on the benches.
553* At the First West Coast Computer Faire, Apple engineer Steve Wozniak had made several gag brochures for a successor to the MITS Altair called the "Zaltair." The ad copy was filled with absurd claims, like having 18 expansion card slots, a new "BAZIC" programming language that could be rewritten by the user, and a case that will "add to the decor of any living room." People bombarded the MITS stand with questions about the new model, and it wasn't until late in the day that anyone caught on to the joke. Today, these brochures are highly sought-after collector's items. What made it plausible was Woz's unorthodox sense of humor and that everything listed there ''did'' really exist at that time — the fictional computer just had little to do with those features. Except maybe 18 expansion slots — this was how many slots were in the full-feature ''Altair 8800'' MB, though not all of them could be used for expansion.[[note]]MITS' S-100 bus was a passive backplane, and at least three to four slots were taken up by the [[UsefulNotes/CentralProcessingUnit CPU]] board, [[UsefulNotes/RandomAccessMemory memory]] board, I/O board, etc.[[/note]] The first MediaNotes/ProgrammingLanguage that could be rewritten on the fly [[note]]John [=McCarthy=]'s Lisp[[/note]] was actually invented [[OlderThanTheythink back in '55]], but was virtually unknown in the microcomputer world, and a case might be successfully built that the case that will "add to the decor of any living room" was present in Woz's own work — the fair was a venue where the Platform/AppleII was first unveiled, and it was the first fruit of Steve Jobs' famous "computer as appliance" philosophy.
554* In many retail stores, thinking you'll be funny by making a ridiculous statement, unreasonable demand, or just acting stupid will almost always elicit an entirely serious response from cashiers and customer service associates. ("Can someone help me carry this carton of eggs to my cart?" "Can I pay in monopoly money?" "I'd like to speak with the CEO of this franchise.") Odds are [[SeenItAll if they've been there awhile, someone has probably already asked or demanded something far, far crazier and were utterly serious about it.]]
555* After years of secrecy, English [[CropCircles crop circle]] makers Doug Bower and Dave Chorley decided to fess up to their pranks in 1991, only to find many UFO believers deciding that, although the circles were man-made, the two must have been possessed by aliens who had [[InsaneTrollLogic made the circles through them]]. As Podcast/{{Skeptoid}} sums up in an episode on crop circles:
556-->''It is an interesting world we live in, where you can tell a group of people that you made a crop circle with a rope, even show them how you did it, and they still insist that an unknown paranormal intelligence did it. Many of the people making these claims had built a cottage industry out of talking and writing about the circles, and their reputations and livelihoods were at stake.
557* During a game in longtime New York Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter's final season (2014), the opposing Minnesota Twins featured a hilariously effusive "scouting report" graphic on their TV broadcast, which led to sportswriter Joe Posnanski [[http://joeposnanski.com/joeblogs/greatest-thing-ever/ musing on his blog]] about how perfectly said graphic could work as satire.
558* An "actual news that could be mistaken for satire" example, on Australia Day 2015, when Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot decided to have Prince Phillip of England made a Knight of the Order of Australia (knights and dames being something he re-introduced with much mockery from the general public and the media), [[http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-01-27/benson-australia-day-a-tipping-point-for-abbott/6047686 media writers checking their sources was a common mention in comment articles that day,]] Abbot's own ministers and the entire media went "WTF? ''Seriously?!''", and First Dog on the Moon [[http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jan/27/its-over-its-now-impossible-to-satirise-tony-abbott decided that Tony had transcended satire.]]
559* 2017 saw a sudden explosion in "[[FlatWorld flat Earth]]" conspiracy theories. The problem is that while it had been smoldering away in the background for centuries, the sudden influx included so many parodists and people just along for the meme and there's no way to tell them apart from the genuine article. It's entirely possible that there are ''no'' genuine believers outside the same few religious fundamentalists that have always carried the torch. Indeed, fans of Creator/TerryPratchett, whose ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' fantasy novels are set on a flat world, have gleefully pitched in with tongue-in-cheek support for the Flat Earthers: a general attitude among Pratchett fans who are in on the joke is to criticize the Flat Earthers for not going far enough and for leaving out the necessary supporting infrastructure of elephants and world turtle necessary for the cosmos to work. Some of the best Pratchett-inspired "support" for Flat Earthism includes finely detailed arguments for the existence of elephants and turtle having been hushed up by NASA, and is indistinguishable from genuine flat-Earth advocacy.
560* Roosh "The Douche" Vash [[BlackComedyRape published a satirical article advocating the decriminalization of sexual assault]], [[InTheStyleOf inspired by A Modest Proposal]]. [[PersonaNonGrata This got him banned from entering the United Kingdom]] because people thought he ''really was'' advocating decriminalizing rape. However, to double dip this trope, the article was so unremarkable among his body of work (he was already famous as an anti-feminist and open rape apologist) that there's no way to tell if he really thought this was an obvious exaggeration or if it was a desperate ParodyRetcon.
561* The hysteria over the Large Hadron Collider theoretically being powerful enough to create micro-black holes [[https://www.inquisitr.com/1943961/satirical-newsite-sparks-cern-lhc-doomsday-fears-physicist-amit-goswami-warns-lhc-could-destroy-planet/ originated from a satirical article.]]
562* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9qv8RSreIM&t= Trumpy Bear]]. It is a teddy bear patterned after Donald Trump. It even has an American flag that unfurls from its back like a cape. The commercial itself plays like a parody straight out of ''Series/TheDailyShow'' or ''Series/LastWeekTonightWithJohnOliver''. However, shows like Series/TheLateLateShow [[https://youtu.be/XHorfRgvLsI?t=104 here,]] Series/JimmyKimmelLive [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ulw332DQ52M here,]] and with {{Website/Snopes}} [[https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/trumpy-bear have shown]] that the product and the commercial are [[https://www.gettrumpybear.com/ very, very real and sincere,]] as were the patriotism and the testimonial from a Navy veteran.
563* It's hard to tell how many people really believe in the idea that the MandelaEffect, the real phenomenon of mass false memories, happens because the "wrong" version you remember was actually true until reality changed somehow. Many of the posts on the Mandela Effect [[Website/{{Reddit}} subreddit]] feel like {{troll}}ing, with people either pretending to be really dense (with obviously contrived misspellings of celebrity names, or thinking that well-known, very much alive celebrities really died years ago), or coming up with overly complex, nonsensical explanations of what might be causing the effect (Parallel universes colliding! Time travelers deliberately messing with things!), all seemingly to goof around with the apparent small handful of posters who feel it's SeriousBusiness.
564* Russian film-maker Anton Ilmyanov was disconcerted to see videos showing [=UFOs=] and putative "sky-beasts" living in Earth's upper atmosphere appearing on ufology websites as proof positive that not only [=UFOs=] but the fabled "sky beasts" existed. The reason for his disconcertment was simple: he had created the videos himself as educational exercises, demonstrating how ridiculously easy it is to fake these things with modern technology. Even though he had clearly labelled his work as deliberate fakes that should not be taken as real, and the whole point of making them had been to demonstrate how such things can be faked, they had still ended up with the UFO-nuts anyway. Even today they are still out there, with some commentators explaining that Ilmanyov has clearly been "got at" by Them and forced to denounce the films... see Magazine/ForteanTimes, [=FT329=], July 2015)
565* Amid 2020's worldwide debate over systemic racism and removing monuments to historical figures who perpetuated bigotry, someone spray-painted [[USefulNotes/{{Denmark}} Copenhagen's]] landmark statue of Literature/TheLittleMermaid with the words "RACIST FISH". Which is a bit confusing, since even the most nitpicky scholar would have trouble labeling either the mermaid herself or the story she's from "racist". Nobody knows whether it was sincere but misguided activists, drunk pranksters, people trying to satirize the whole statue debate by painting a nonsensical slogan on an innocent marker...
566** [[HarsherInHindsight Then it took an entirely new and unexpected turn]] with the backlash towards Ariel's RaceLift in ''Film/TheLittleMermaid2023''...
567* In 1981, the town of Sunol, California elected a dog named Bosco as its mayor, beating out two human candidates. However, Sunol is an unincorporated community, so 'mayor' is a purely honorary position with no actual authority. This didn't stop the Chinese government-run ''People's Daily'' from printing an article in 1990 claiming that this was an example of the failings of the American democratic process.
568* In response to [[https://www.cnet.com/culture/m-ms-spokescandies-controversy-how-things-got-so-sticky M&M's rebranding themselves as Ma&Ya's for the Super Bowl]], A&M made a [[https://twitter.com/awrestaurants/status/1617975902004019231 satirical post]] announcing that their mascot Rooty was now wearing pants because not wearing pants could be polarizing. [[https://www.avclub.com/a-w-m-ms-fox-news-rooty-the-great-root-bear-1850035144 Cue Fox News dedicating a segment to Rooty's change,]] decrying that "cancel culture has gone too far".
569[[/folder]]
570----
571Aha, you fell for it! This isn't a [=TV Tropes=] article at all, it's a scathing parody of one.

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