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Home > Joey Skaggs


Joey Skaggs (born 1945) is an US media prankster who has organized successful hoaxes and other presentations. He is also regarded as one of the originators of phenomena such as culture jamming.

In his youth Skaggs studied in the High School of Art and Design and School of Visual Arts in New York. In 1966-1968 Skaggs organized crucifixion performances in Easter Sundays.

In 1968 Skaggs noticed that middle-class suburbanites had tours in the East Village where they observed hippies. Skaggs organized a sightseeing tour for hippies in the suburb of Queens. On Christmas day he made Vietnamese Christmas Nativity Burning to protest against Vietnam War.

In 1969 he tied a 50-foot bra in front of the U.S. Treasury building on Wall Street, organized a Hell's Angels' wedding procession through the Lower East Side and made grotesque Statues of Liberty on the 4th of July to again protest against the Vietnam War.

In 1971 Skaggs bought Earlville Opera House . In the same year he organized what he called a Fame Exchange during the New York Avant Garde Festival ; he hired a group of admirers to follow him instead of John Lennon and Yoko Ono.

It was a forerunner for his next pranks:

According to himself – and his web site – Skaggs does not like vicious pranks like fake anthrax-containing letters. First Skaggs ensures that he is not doing anything illegal. He hires actors to play the role of customers before the media and refuses real willing customers to avoid really scamming anyone. However, often the prank is nothing else than a press release with a phone number. He leaves hints or uses details that could be easily checked. Eventually he reveals the hoax to make his point.

On a couple of occasions he sent a substitute to an interviews on programs like Entertainment Tonight and To Tell The Truth. Apparently producers did not notice. Also National Enquirer and Playback Magazine have depicted the wrong man.

Many of the Skagss' pranks have been reported as true in various news media. Sometimes the stories are retracted.

Skaggs earns his living by painting, making sculptures and lecturing.



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