A Lie Gets Halfway Around Social Media While the Truth Is Still Getting Its Boots On

Why did so many people think a blatantly fake apology from Chris Rock was real?

James Surowiecki
OneZero

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Peter Chernaev / Getty Images

A couple of days after Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars, a guy you’ve never heard of who thought that Rock should apologize for having made a joke at Jada Pinkett Smith’s expense sat down and wrote out the apology that he thought Rock should give. Then he posted it to his Facebook page.

Although the apology was written as if it came from Chris Rock, the guy who wrote it was not trying to impersonate Rock or pretend that the statement came from him. In fact, his next post said something like, “That’s what I’d say, anyway.” But for whatever reason, the post started to get attention from other Facebook users. That, at some point, made Facebook’s algorithms kick in and elevate it, and soon enough the statement made the leap to other social-media sites, most notably Instagram and Twitter, where it was picked up and retweeted by users with massive followings.

Somewhere in that process, though, something interesting happened: people started to think, and to say, that Chris Rock had actually made this apology that some random guy on Facebook had written. And it wasn’t until Rock’s publicist quashed the story…

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James Surowiecki
OneZero

I’m the author of The Wisdom of Crowds. I’ve been a business columnist for Slate and The New Yorker and written for a wide range of other publications.