
About 68 years ago, millions of people controlled the BBC Panorama on a Swiss family harvesting from trees.
It may appear meaningless, but many audiences believed it.
Look at the black and white grain footage today and you are close to forgetting everything you know about Italian food.
Actors of the “Bree of Manufacture” Spagiti Tarkan presents a commitment, and the death of the late Richard Dimbeleb gives the report authentic air.
of course it was a joke of the foolish day of April.
To avoid doubt, spaghetti is made from wheat and water. It doesn’t grow on trees.
But Spaghetti wasn’t a common food in the UK at the time, so they can know why some of them may have taken it seriously.
This old Panorama report is part of a tradition in the British press.
Every year on April 1, newspapers published strange stories at zero or very little, all of them to have a little pleasant with their readers.
In the 1970s, the Guard managed to pull a guide to the imaginary island of the Indian Ocean. Its name is a talkative talk about the Sans Cerif group in Typface, and the island is portrayed as a semi-colonic shape.

Ten years ago, the story of the fool was so common in the newspapers that the BBC published it. this roadup of them.
Most of them focused on the 2015 general election, the selection website of The Sunny Election newspaper reported, the then president Ed Milliband, the work of “a hopeless demand for Boris Johnson’s factor (Boris Johnson)”
It is unclear whether he would have moved the step of his election if the story were true.
The Scottish Independence Referendum focused on April 1, 2014, when the Daily Express, the Daily Mail, the Sun and the Guardian, who published all the stories of printing that year.
For example, the Guardian said it would change an independent Scotland to driving on the right.
Today, by reading the papers, you may find the story of the Day of the Foal of one or two on April. But they don’t have the same readiness they had one day.
Stewart Alan, a professor of journalism and communications at Cardiff University, says the rise of social media has begun a “different type” between readers and the press.
“We are stable in an era of ‘fake news’ and protesting information, which is a matter of trust in the editorial mind,” he told the BBC.
Professor Alan said the decline in the news of April’s stupidity against “cleaning of doubts about news about news in general,” he said.
Jim Waterson, who heads the news website, London Centrek, agrees.
“Spread fake news to deceive readers with the goal and then say that everything is a joke doesn’t actually work well when you spend the end of the year to beating about how important the trusted truth is,” he said.
But the biggest crime against journalism is that the story of the foolish newspaper is very rarely comedy from a remote.”
The global political climate, which Donald Trump has re-elected the US presidential re-election.
“If you have the world’s leader who is only very happy to reject anything that doesn’t like, as ‘fake news’, why do you give them fake fake news?” Mr. Waterson asks questions.

Social media also facilitates the frame to get news.
People read the news in a newspaper. They will be aware, on April 1, when all the news was published on that day. The date of the narrative was on top of the page.
Now, readers can discuss online news together on social media days, months or even years after being published for the first time.
Many people connect the news articles without reading one word. According to a study by Colombian University. So is there a possibility of reading the date of the publication?
There is then the emergence of a reproductive AI, which has been widely used in recent years in the dissemination of false information.
In a world where AI’s images can appear almost real, the media role is the separation of truth in the imagination.
Dr. Beatna Oghbor, a lecturer in journalism research at the University of Sheffield, says the story of the fool is serving the duty of journalistic time, but there is no truth or accuracy.
In some cases, these stories can “explode”, anger some readers and prevent the trust of a media organization, he tells the BBC.
“It’s still something people laugh,” he said, adding that news websites should increase the rejection of very clear responsibility if they choose to run them.
Although the news publisher has taken a step back, the stupid tradition of April is alive on social media. But it is the brands, not the broadcasters, who are the leader of the accusation.
Every year, most of them are after the announcement of new products or promotions, which are a little very ridiculous to be real.
Tesco once announced that he would test the Bonsian Sports Station in his supermarkets from the inspiration of Trump.
But the brands could find themselves in hot water by playing in the newspapers without allowing them to enter the joke.
In late March 2021, Volkswagen claimed Changing his name to “Voltsugen” On the heads of electric vehicles.
Dozens of publications had to publish reforms when it was revealed that it had become an ugly and stupid thing in April that had been sent to the media early.
Based on the current trends, it is unlikely that we will see an adult trick on the criteria of Panorama Spaget by Spacel.
“The 1957 Harvest Story of Spagiti landed like that because of the choice of a very limited brand,” said Richard Thomas, a media professor at the University of Swansea.
“The joke of the dead has died before taking even his first breath,” he said.
“So the days when the most reliable broadcasters and news sources in the country can make fun of viewers by playing with such a scales that we remember about 70 years later.
“All feelings about how the news should be honest – in a world where good news is often at a high level is a shame, so.
Excessive report by Grace Din.