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Fictitious Who's Who entry news article
Published by: rose 2010-03-17
  • A couple of years ago I read an article in a newspaper (I'm 85% certain it was the New York Times) that had to do with a group of people who created a fictional person in their office. When they got cold calls or needed a scapegoat, they referred people to this made-up entity. Eventually they were approached by one of the Who's Who publications to include this fictional person in the directory. Thinking that someone was bound to fact check whatever it was they came up with, they went ahead and created a really wild entry for this fake person. It got published. I can't recall all the details of the entry, but the phrase "sur la abatoir" was part of it. I have done searching of the NY Times both through their own archive search and through the premium databases to no avail, but it's always possible I've been missing something obvious. It may not have been the NY Times though. Whatever the paper was, it would have been published before 6/2002. A successful answer will provide the complete citation for the article (I can locate the full text from there) with a tip if you can give me a citation to the pertinent entry in whatever Who's Who it was. Ask for clarification if you need it. Regards, luciaphile-ga


  • Culled two more things from my notes (lesson to me: write legibly in future): 1. Pretty sure this was Who's Who in America 2. And there was some kind of pun with Song of Roland. To be precise, I have written down chanson roland That's all I got. Oh, and the notes I have are dated 4/2001


  • Here you go. I can't give you the whole article due to , but I've excerpted the juciest bits: ========== Ghost Writer The Venerable `Who's Who' Lists an Author/Editor Who Never Was JACK SMITH The Los Angeles Times Feb 14, 1988. pg. 6 ...I was slightly disillusioned when I read [Joe Queenan]'s piece about the inclusion in the 1986-87 edition of Roland Chanson Webster, a magazine editor, who receives 18 lines, including the dubious information that he was born in Arcis-sur-L'Abattoir, France, that his wife is the former Trish Abigail Boogen, that he authored "Causes of World War II" and "Mr. Sleazy in Zion," that he has worked as a writer or editor for Your Business, the Business of Business, Latin-American Business and Our Business magazines and is a member of Christian Managing Editors, Tarrytown Dog Club, Westchester Dog Club, North Bronx Dog Club and Christian Dog Club... ...Queenan reveals that when he edited American Business... R. C. Webster had been a figure on the masthead for some time. "Though he may have started out as somebody's nom de plume...by the time I got there, he was turning up as managing editor, staff writer and general office help-wherever we needed to fill a space on the masthead." Queenan reveals that when he edited American Business a few years ago, R. C. Webster had been a figure on the masthead for some time. "Though he may have started out as somebody's nom de plume," Queenan says, "by the time I got there, he was turning up as managing editor, staff writer and general office help-wherever we needed to fill a space on the masthead." R. C. Webster was a handy name staffers used to get rid of salesmen, collectors and flacks... When Queenan inevitably received a Who's Who application, so did R. C. Webster. Queenan filled out both forms... ========== Cute story! pafalafa-ga search strategy: Lexis-Nexis search on [ sur l'abattoir ]


  • This is it! Thanks so much. I never thought of doing a search on Lexis for l'abatoir and I should have. Now to find the Who's Who entry, but you've given me enough to go on.


  • Thanks! Very kind of you...especially since I TOTALLY forgot about the actual Who's Who ref. I was so pleased with myself for finding the newspaper article, that it made me momentarily stupid (at least, I hope it's momentarily). If you run into any obstacles with the actual citation, let me know, and I'll be pleased to try and run it down for you. Cheers! paf


  • In reference to Pink's comment: Definitely not the Belgian Who's Who (from my scrawled notes, I really think it was Who's Who in America), and my memory is that the faked names and locations were more subtle than the one from the Google Groups posting. The reference to "sur la abatoir" had to do with either where the person in the entry supposedly lived or was part of a fake publication. The context if it helps: my Reference instructor handed us a photocopy of the Who's Who entry and asked us to see if anything popped out at us. Then she had a photocopy of the newspaper article which explained that it had been a joke/hoax.


  • Michele -- I did an exhaustive search in the NY Times for the 7 years 1995-2002 and nothing. But the Times' editors sure do like Who's Who backgrounders whenever an issue surfaces . . . I also checked the Internet and Infotrac using a variety of search schemes. I'm hoping that this will help other researchers who tackle it: "Who's Who" + false "Who's Who" + fake "Who's Who" + scam Best regards, Omnivorous-GA


  • Michele -- A check of the 1997-2001 Who's Who in America shows none of the following: Chanson Roland Chanson Rolland Rolland Chanson But they do have Susan Stockard Channing listed nearby. Best regards, O.


  • Any chance that this could be a reference to your story? "I have a book - The Book of Brilliant Hoaxes... It has a section about Victor Lewis-Smith who invented some character for his radio show and ended up with this imaginary person alledgedly getting into the Belgian(I think) Who's Who. The entry states, among other things, that one of his children is named Bobo Tampax Turdy." http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=6km66n%24lgp%241%40svr-c-01.core.theplanet.net&oe=UTF-8&output=gplain





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