“The controversy is over what Chaucer really wrote and whether there can be a direct link to April Fools’ Day,” he explains. “The line in question is ’32 March,’ which was thought to be a joke because ...
For the most part, TV audiences today wouldn't fall for such a prank. But in 1957, plenty of viewers were eating it up.
Most April Fool’s Day pranks end with someone being tricked, but BMW New Zealand flipped that script in 2015. Instead of fooling people, they rewarded one. A mysterious ad in the paper promised a new ...
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