Back to the Future Day
Confirmed 201,015
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About
Back to the Future Day refers to the date October 21st, 2015, which the characters Marty McFly and Doctor Emmett Brown travel to in the second installment of the Back to the Future trilogy. Prior to the arrival of the date, it was commonly changed in photoshopped images used to trick others into thinking the date from the movie had arrived.
Origin
Back to the Future Part II[1] is a science fiction comedy film released on November 22nd, 1989, as the second installment in the Back to the Future trilogy. In the film, Doctor Emmett Brown and Marty McFly travel from 1985 to 2015 in a time machine made out of a silver DeLorean sports car. In 2015, the characters find themselves in a time period with highly advanced technology, including hovering skateboards and flying cars.
On July 5th, 2010, the film magazine Total Film posted a tweet claiming that day was the same date from the movie,[8] and later followed with a photoshopped picture of the timeclock as confirmation.[9] Although fans of the films quickly mentioned how this was incorrect, others were fooled by the photoshopped image.
Great Scott! It's Future Day! In Back To The Future, Doc Brown sets the time circuits for 25yrs in the future..that day is today! #futureday
— Total Film (@totalfilm) july 5 2010
Spread
In the coming days, the hoax was mentioned on various news sites, including Buzzfeed,[10] The Week,[11] The Guardian,[12] The Telegraph,[13] The Age,[14] Perthnow[15] and News.com.[16] On July 6th, 2010, Total Film published a blog post on their website explaining how they executed the hoax and noting a new hoax image for July 6th had begun circulating online (shown below).[17]
On July 11th, 2012, a photoshopped image began appearing on Facebook with the caption "Today is the day Marty McFly arrives when he travels to the future" (shown below). The image was subsequently posted on the hoax investigation site Snopes,[27] which revealed that the image was a fake.
On June 27th, the mobile checkout company Simple Tap made a post on their Facebook[18] page with a picture of the time clock edited to read "June 27, 2012" (shown below). The picture was reposted on various other Facebook accounts, including the page of the craft company Colour Me Fun[19] where it was shared over 10,000 times. The hoax was subsequently covered by numerous news sites and blogs, including The Telegraph,[20] Slate,[21] Mashable,[22] Buzzfeed[23] and NME.[24] Also on June 27th, Simple Tap's social media manager Steve Berry was interviewed by the tech news blog Mashable,[25] revealing that he made the post on purpose to promote a Back to the Future trilogy Blu-ray box set for one of his clients. According to Berry, the hoax was a inspired by the Total Film hoax two years prior and was done under the assumption that nobody would fall for the same joke twice.
The hoax by Simple Tap triggered the creation of various single-serving websites. On June 27th, the website October212015[26] was launched, which displays the Back to the Future timeclock with correct date from the film next to the current day's date. On the following day, the website istodaythedaymartymcflyarriveswhenhetravelstothefuture[6] was launched, featuring the message "NO!" in large capital letters. Also on June 28th, the website itsbacktothefutureday.com[7] was created, which contains a generator that creates custom time clock images.
Derivative: Dear Scientists
Image macros have been created in anticipation of the actual date of October 21st, 2015, by demanding scientists create hoverboards or flying cars within the time frame. Many of these images have been shared on Internet humor sites, including Cheezburger,[2] WeKnowMemes,[3] Memerial[4] and Funny Wall Photos.[5]
Search Interest
External References
[1] Wikipedia – Back to the Future Part II
[2] Cheezburger – Dear Scientists
[3] WeKnowMemes – Scientists You Have 3 Years
[4] Memerial – Scientists you have 3 years
[5] Funny Wall Photos – Scientists, You Have Three Years
[6] Istodaythedaymartymcflyarriveswhenhetravelstothefuture.com
[8] Twitter – @totalfilm
[9] Twitpic – @totalfilm
[10] Buzzfeed – Back To The Future is NOT Today
[11] The Week – The great 'Back to the Future' web hoax
[12] The Guardian – Why you shouldn't tamper with the time frame of Back to the Future
[13] The Telegraph – Back to the Future fans fooled by Twitter hoax
[14] The Age – Great Scott! Back to the Future fans fooled
[15] Perthnow – Back to the Future hoax sparks memory trip
[16] News.com – Back to the Future fans celebrate the wrong day
[17] Total Film – Back To The Future 'hoax' – we confess!
[18] Facebook – Simple Tap
[19] Facebook – Colour Me Fun
[20] The Telegraph – Back to the Future hoax hits… again
[21] Slate – Sorry, Back to the Future Fans, the Future Still Isn’t Here Yet
[22] Mashable – Today Is Not the Future; 'Back to the Future' Hoax Fools the Web
[23] Buzzfeed – Why Is “Back To The Future Day” Such A Persistent Hoax?
[24] NME – 'Back to the Future' day hoax hits again
[25] Mashable – Guy Behind 'Back to the Future' Hoax: It Was an Accident
[27] Snopes – Back to the Future day
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