Called “undoubtedly the biggest hoax that any reputable news establishment ever pulled,” the spaghetti tree hoax refers to a three-minute documentary produced by the BBC current affairs show Panorama as an April Fools’ Day prank in 1957....MORE
In the “report,” the voice of a respected British broadcaster narrates the story of a family in Ticino, Switzerland, busy at their annual spaghetti harvest. In one scene, women carefully pick strands of spaghetti from a tree and lay them in the sun to dry. At the time, pasta was still an exotic food in Britain, and hundreds of viewers phoned into the network, either skeptical of the veracity of the story, or asking how to grow their own spaghetti trees.
April Fools’ Day has long been an occasion for editors and journalists to peel open their inner Onion. Usually—like when The Guardian announced that it was converting to a Twitter-only newspaper—
Monday, April 1, 2013
"And that’s the way it was: April 1, 1957"
From the Columbia Journalism Review's The Kicker blog: