From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joey Skaggs (born 1945) is an American prankster who has
organized numerous successful media pranks, hoaxes, and other
presentations. He is considered one of the originators of the
phenomenon known as culture jamming. Skaggs used
Kim Yung Soo,[1][2][3]
Joe Bones,[4]
Joseph Bonuso,[5][6]
Giuseppe Scaggioli, Dr. Joseph
Gergor, and the Rev. Anthony Joseph as
aliases. [7]
In his youth, Skaggs studied at the High School of Art and
Design and School of Visual Arts in New
York. Between 1966 and 1968, Skaggs organized crucifixion
performances on Easter Sundays.
In 1968, Skaggs noticed that middle-class suburbanites were
going on tours of the East Village to observe hippies.
Skaggs subsequently organized a sightseeing tour for hippies to
observe the suburbs of Queens.
On Christmas Day, he created the Vietnamese Christmas Nativity Burning
to protest against the Vietnam War.
In 1969, Skaggs tied a 50-foot bra to the front of the U.S. Treasury
building on Wall
Street, organized a Hells Angels' wedding procession through
the Lower East
Side, and made grotesque Statues of Liberty on the 4th of
July, again to protest against the Vietnam War.
In 1971, Skaggs bought Earlville Opera House. In the same year,
he organized what he called a Fame Exchange during the New York
Avant Garde Festival, where he hired a group of admirers to follow
him around instead of John Lennon and Yoko Ono. It was a forerunner for his next
pranks:
- Cathouse for Dogs (1976): Skaggs published an
ad for a dog brothel in
The
Village Voice and hired actors to present their dogs for
the benefit of an ABC
news crew. The prank annoyed the ASPCA and the Bureau of Animal Affairs
until Skaggs revealed the truth after a subpoena. ABC did not
retract the story (the WABC TV producer insisted that Skaggs had
said it was a hoax to avoid prosecution), possibly because the
piece had been nominated for an Emmy Award. It was subsequently
disqualified.
- Celebrity Sperm Bank (1976): Skaggs organized
a sperm bank auction
in New York; the sperm bank was then robbed and semen was supposedly taken as hostage.
- Wall Street Shoeshine (1979): Skaggs played
Joseph Bucks, a shoeshine man who had become rich on Wall Street
and was working his last day—at $5 a shine.
- Metamorphosis (1981): Skaggs played Dr.
Gregor, inventor of the Cockroach Vitamin Pill, which was supposed
to be a cure-all drug. It was a nod to Franz Kafka's story "The
Metamorphosis."
- Gypsies Against Stereotypical Propaganda
(1982): Gypsy
King JoJo (played by Skaggs) led a protest demanding that the Gypsy moth's name be
changed because it was demeaning to his people.
- Windsurfing from Hawaii to California (1983):
Windsurfer J.J.
Skaggs attempted the first crossing of the Pacific Ocean on a
sailboard.
- Fish Condos (1983): Skaggs created an aquarium
depicting rooms with furniture. It was meant to satirize gentrification,
but the aquariums sold very well.
- Bad Guys Talent Management Agency (1984): In
an attempt to get an acting job for a friend, Verne Williams,
Skaggs founded a fictitious management agency for "bad-guy" actors.
Eventually even real studios and wannabe actors contacted him.
- WALK RIGHT! (1984): Skaggs put together a
fictitious militant group that wanted to enforce proper street
walking etiquette and make its rules into law.
- The Fat Squad (1986): Skaggs played Joe Bones,
the founder of a disciplinarian diet program where musclemen
watched the customers 24 hours a day to make sure they stuck to
their diets, at a cost of $300 a day.
- 1986 was also the first year of the Annual April Fools'
Day Parade; it existed only as press release.
- Save the Geoduck Campaign (1987): Skaggs
played Dr. Richard J. Long who sought to save geoduck mollusks from extinction because they
had become a popular aphrodisiac among the Japanese.
- Comacocoon (1990): As Dr. Joseph Schlafer,
Skaggs offered a literal dream vacation—customers were to sleep in
a cocoon, enjoying programmed dreams about the vacation. The
Department of Consumer Affairs was alerted.
- Hair Today, Ltd. (1990): Joseph
Chenango—another Skaggs character—marketed a new kind of hair
implant: whole scalps from the dead. The prank began as an ad in
the Village Voice soliciting scalp donors.
- Geraldo Hoax (1991): Skaggs appeared on Geraldo Rivera's
TV talk show and told a story about New York artists living in water towers—which he
had not done.
- Brooklyn Bridge Lottery (1992): Skaggs
released a "leak" informing the public of a lottery where the first
prize would be renaming rights to the Brooklyn Bridge.
- Portofess (1992): Skaggs played Father Anthony
Joseph, appearing with a portable confession booth at the Democratic National
Convention.
- Sex Tapes Saved Marriage (1993): Skaggs sent
two actors to Faith
Daniels' show to claim that sex tapes had saved their
marriage.
- SEXONIX (1993): Skaggs created a hoax about a
sex machine, claiming that the prototype had been seized by Customs
at the Canadian border on its way from the United States. He used
his own name. Uproar ensued in various bulletin boards.
- The Psychic Attorney (1994): On April 1,
Skaggs appeared as Madnadanda, a combined New Age telephone psychic
and lawyer. His voice mail box was flooded with calls.
- Dog Meat Soup (1994): Skaggs portrayed Kim
Yung Soo, a butcher who wanted to purchase dogs for food, to expose
cultural intolerance and the media's tendency to overreact.
- Baba Wa Simba (1995): Skaggs appeared in
London as Baba Wa Simba, a therapist who recommended that
participants roar and behave like lions (reminiscent of primal scream
therapy).
- The Solomon Project (1995): Joseph Bonuso
(Skaggs) claimed to have created a computer program that would work
as both judge and jury and announce sentences. It pronounced O.J.
Simpson guilty.
- STOP BioPEEP (1998): Skaggs appeared as Dr.
Joseph Howard, supposed employee of an Australian company, and
revealed surreptitious genetic engineering to create
addictive poultry.
- Doody Rudy (1999): Skaggs created a large
satirical portrait of New York mayor Rudy Giuliani and let people throw fake
elephant dung at it, in response to Giuliani's criticism of an
artwork by Chris
Ofili that incorporated real elephant dung.
- The Final Curtain (2000): Skaggs' creation was
a combined funeral company, virtual graveyard and theme park. It
was meant to satirize showmanship in places like Forest Lawn
cemeteries. Some investors were actually interested. Final Curtain's website is still
functioning.
- Art Attack (2000): Espai D'Art Contemporani
(EACC) in Castellon, Spain asked Skaggs to organize a presentation; in
response, Skaggs created a computer game where people could shoot
passersby in the outside corridor going through the building.
According to his web site, Skaggs does not care for "vicious"
pranks such as letters containing fake anthrax; he also states that he is not doing
anything illegal. He hires actors to play his customers, refusing
to really scam anyone except the media. Often the prank is nothing
more than a press release with a phone number; in these press
releases, Skaggs leaves hints or details that easily could be
checked for accuracy. Eventually, he reveals the hoax to make his
point.
On a couple of occasions, Skaggs sent a substitute to interviews
with programs such as Entertainment Tonight and
To Tell
the Truth. Producers did not notice. [7]
Also, photographs in the National
Enquirer and Playback
magazine have depicted the wrong man.
Many of Skaggs's pranks are originally reported as true in
various news media. Sometimes the stories are retracted.
When not pranking the media, Skaggs earns his living by
painting, making sculptures and lecturing.
References
- ^
Yang, Jeff. "ASIAN POP Putting On The
Dog." San Francisco Chronicle.
Thursday October 13, 2005.
- ^
Kennedy, Mike. "Relax, Rover: 'Dogs for food'
was just a hoax Exposing racism and bias was the aim says a New
York artist." Kansas City
Star. May 28, 1994. C3.
- ^
Sinisi, J. Sebastian. "Fido-as-food letter offends
Offer to buy dogs is apparent hoax." Denver Post. May
21, 1994. B-1.
- ^
Starita, Joe. "FAT SQUAD HOAX HOOKED THE
MEDIA." San Jose Mercury News. May
17, 1986. 1C.
- ^
Poniewozik, James. "Justice in the Blood."
TIME. Monday November 13,
2000.
- ^
Landler, Mark. "MEDIA: PRESS;Joey Skaggs, who delights in practical
jokes on the press, has got a million of them." The New York
Times. January 29, 1996. 1.
- ^ a
b
"Korean Dog Soup," Snopes
External
links