Episode Transcript
In nineteen twenty, a magazine article announced something incredible.
Real fairies had been photographed.
Two young girls playing by the creek near their house in Cottingley, England, had been surrounded by fairies and had been able to snap pictures to prove it.
That magazine article announcing their discovery it was written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Speaker 2If you don't recognize his name, you probably know the name of his most famous character, Sherlock Holmes.
Yes, the man who invented literature's most brilliant.
Speaker 1Detective was fooled by.
Speaker 2Two girls into thinking fairies were real.
Speaker 1The thing which you probably know is that fairies aren't real, but Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wanted to believe they could be, and so he found ways to dismiss all of the logical ways the photos of the Cottingley fairies could have been faked.
Speaker 2History is filled with hoaxes, people coming up with scams and tricks for profit, but sometimes just for fun.
In an era of misinformation, the ability to think critically and to understand what's real and what isn't seems more important than ever.
Speaker 1Hoax is a new podcast for me.
Danish Warts, the creator of Noble Blood and me Lizzie Logan.
Speaker 2Every episode, we'll explore one of the most audacious and ambitious tricks in history, from the fake Shakespeare's to balloon boys, all trying to answer the question why we believe what we believe.
Speaker 1The first episode of Hoax is available on August fourth.
Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.