On April 1, 1957, BBC television viewers were treated to a short documentary about the spaghetti harvest in Ticino, Switzerland. The film showed spaghetti trees laden with ripe pasta, and Swiss farmers harvesting long strands and laying them out to dry “in the warm alpine sun.” The public’s reaction ranged from curiosity to outrage (at the time, pasta was an unusual dish in Britain, so the story was at least vaguely plausible). The BBC wrote:
The BBC has received a mixed reaction to a spoof documentary broadcast this evening about spaghetti crops in Switzerland.
The hoax Panorama programme, narrated by distinguished broadcaster Richard Dimbleby, featured a family from Ticino in Switzerland carrying out their annual spaghetti harvest.
… But some viewers failed to see the funny side of the broadcast and criticised the BBC for airing the item on what is supposed to be a serious factual programme.
Others, however, were so intrigued they wanted to find out where they could purchase their very own spaghetti bush.
It’s believed that this spoof is the first time television was used for an April Fool’s prank. Check it out:
For further information on spaghetti, read our very own Dietribes: Spaghetti Junction or read more about the hoax at Wikipedia.
I appreciate any good prank on my special birthday!
posted by Lulu on 4-1-2010 at 3:22 pm
Uhm… Spaghetti Harvest does NOT mean MOLTO MANGIARE. Molto Mangiare means ‘A lot to eat’. Or maybe I don’t get the joke.
posted by Kate on 4-1-2010 at 4:50 pm
All I can think of is how tedious a job it must have been for whoever had to put all the spaghetti in the trees in the first place…
posted by Erika on 4-1-2010 at 5:34 pm
Yeah, I’m not sure what that YouTube annotation is about. I guess they’re just pointing out that the trees have a lot of “fruit” on them or something?
posted by Chris Higgins on 4-1-2010 at 5:38 pm
I LOVE this docujoke….I use it with my high school history students to teach them to be critical of all sources of information they encounter. Even those narrated with that soothing BBC accent that lulls you into a false sense of security.
Recaptcha: compel complicated
posted by Worrals on 4-1-2010 at 7:21 pm
The really critical part of the spaghetti season is the unstopping of the sauce springs in the happy hills of Florence.
posted by Tim S. on 4-1-2010 at 7:35 pm