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Ugh, We Just Got Hoaxed: The Real Story About the ‘This Man’ Dream Face

Your dreams are safe. We just got hoaxed.
"thisman" dream man, Guerriglia Marketing
This Man is going to haunt our dreams in a very different way tonight

Earlier today, VICE ran a story titled ' Have You Ever Dreamed of 'This Man'?'. It's still there, actually, you can still read it. It's about a photofit of some Andrew Lloyd Webber-looking motherfucker who is widely dreamt about by various unconnected people across the world, and an interview with the psychologist who first put his face to paper. It's really good! It's also entirely made up and fake.

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This sort of thing is encouragingly rare: we run a story, it turns out to be something that was denounced in 2009 and could be easily verified as fake with a single google, a few people call us dickheads and the editorial team drown in their own tears. Sometimes we mess up.

The truth behind "This Man" is that the original photofit – and the online database of supposed dreams people have had about him, thisman.org – is the brainchild of sociologist and marketer Andrea Natella. Andrea runs a company called Guerriglia Marketing, which – according to this Knowyourmeme post – specialises in "subversive hoaxes" and creates, in the grand European tradition of groups like the Situationists, "weird art projects exploring pornography, politics, advertising" and creepy dream dudes who don't exist. He's also the person we interviewed for a story about his own hoax.

Essentially, yes: what has happened here is we have walked up to the hoaxer, said, "Hiya, could you very immediately hoax us," and then they rubbed their little hoax-y hands with glee and said: yes. A goof has happened. We have goofed.

Thing is, This Man properly looks like the kind of dude you might see in a dream. You know: he's got a suede jacket on that smells distantly of cigarettes. His car is old and maroon. His voice is like a violin going backwards. He pats you on the back and you feel warm and nostalgic. You wake up with an erection you can't explain. Is it possible that seeing This Man can make you dream about This Man? Is the This Man story a self-fulfilling prophecy, priming people to dream what they've never dreamed before? Kind of like Inception but with memes? These are questions we cannot answer, because we don't dare talk to anyone about it in case we get hoaxed again.

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Anyway: whoops.

More ironic VICE reports on hoaxes:

We Got Internet Scammers to Unwittingly Do Our Cover Shoot For Us

Was Jesus a Roman Hoax to Trick the Jews?

How to Prevent Fake News from Spreading on Social Media