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How fake ‘celebrity geniuses’ fooled the internet
LATE LAST WEEK, you may have noticed a minor slew of news stories about celebrities with very high IQs.
Shakira was a certified-genius with an IQ of 140, we learned – as was Madonna (140), Steve Martin (142), Quentin Tarantino (160), James Woods (180) and 14-year-old Modern Family star Nolan Gould (150).
You might have found this in the Huffington Post…
… the Mail Online…
… countless celebrity websites like this one…
… and Yahoo, which went so far as to put together a reporter-hosted video on the list. (This is just a screengrab.)
The figures were said to have been published by Mensa, the UK-based society which calls itself an “international high IQ organisation”.
But here’s the thing: Mensa published no such figures.
In a press release on June 6 – before the Mail and Yahoo stories were published – the organisation refuted all the stories, saying:
It added:
So the stories, it seems, are all completely false. Ahem.
Strangely enough, they’re all still live. The Huffington Post is the only one to have acknowledged the (apparent) fake – with an update noting that Mensa is “denying” issuing a list, but left the headline intact and body of the piece intact.
The source for all the stories appears to be this story from June 1 on Sinembargo, a Mexican online news site. Bizarrely, Sinembargo quotes its own source as Notimex, Mexico’s official state news agency.
Beyond that, the story is hard to trace. But it’s a measure of just how easy it is get a catchy story out into the media (remember this?) – and how the story hangs around even after being retracted.
Anyway, there are probably a couple of lessons here for the outlets involved. But most of all, we’re a little sad that Shakira and Madonna aren’t certified geniuses.
At least, not as far as we know.
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