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The internet has allowed many people to share their own personal prank calls and develop into communities, upload them on social networking sites and even on youtube. Prank calls can be carried out in many ways; live or pre-recorded. The use of social networking and the popularity of user generated content also allows these prank calls to spread and popularity to grow. Despite having no official recognition, April 1 has long been celebrated as a day to celebrate, well, foolishness to be exact. More specifically, April Fools’ Day is about making other people look stupid with practical jokes.
What is April fool’s Day? (sometimes called April Fool's Day or All Fools' Day) it is celebrated every year on the first day of April. Popular since the 19th century, the day is not a national holiday in any country, but it is well known in Canada, Europe, Australia, Brazil and the United States, and it is celebrated as a day when people play practical jokes and hoaxes on each other. The jokes and their victims are known as "April fools". Hoax (act intended to deceive or trick) stories may be reported by the press and other media on this day and explained on subsequent days.
Origin of April Fools; The most common theory about the earliest April Fools’ celebrations goes like this: In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII issued a papal bull decreeing a new standard calendar for Christian Europe that would take his name and centuries later become the standard internationally in the 21st century. In the 15th century, Europe’s nations and city states operated using the Julian calendar. The Gregorian calendar moved the date of the new year from April 1 to January 1, among other changes. Catholic monarchies were naturally its earliest adopters. Given the nature of the reform, both in terms of communicating such a fundamental change to a large population and dealing with critics of the new calendar, some Europeans continued to celebrate the new year between March 25 and April 1. April fools were those who still celebrated the holiday in the spring, and were the subject of pranks and ridicule by those who observed the new year months ago. That’s just one theory for the origin of the holiday, however. As HowStuffWorks.com notes on a piece about the holiday’s traditions, other occasions resembling April Fools’ Day preceded the more contemporary incarnation by centuries.
However, An observance which takes place in western countries on April first, traditionally known as April Fools' Day or All Fools' Day, during which merriment is supposed to reign and pranks, practical jokes, and hoaxes are socially sanctioned. Customary practices range from simple tricks played on friends, family, and co-workers to elaborate media hoaxes concocted for mass consumption.
On the other hand, Teens today set off different ways of planning a prank, Teens are just so mysterious—like those weird deep-sea fish that have flashlights growing from their faces. We know they’re fish, but are they really even fish? One day they’re watching cartoons and the next day they’re playing paddleball behind a school, except the rubber ball they’re playing with is filled with drugs and the paddle is actually a stale pancake stolen from a local Denny’s. Oh, and they’re not actually behind a school; it’s a “cyber cafe,” probably.
The point is: teens are crazy. A 13-year-old is about as much like an 18-year-old. It’s an arbitrary language-quirk-based grouping. Yet, still, we love to know what The Teens are up to. Studying them all together might not make too much sense, but hell if that’s gonna stop us. Well it’s just so funny to think about what happens nowadays.
So catching all these things up, Here’s a video with relation to teens putting up a prank on april fools about a fake pregnancy which turned out very realistic, This was uploaded by Josh W on Youtube which reached about 35 million views and went viral on the internet.