Phony Article

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A Phony Article is a magazine ad dressed up to look like an article from the magazine, with a tiny little tag in the corner or at the top saying something like "advertisement" or "advertising feature".

This is particularly prevelant in magazines that are already basically promotional, as these give the illusion the magazines at least have some content.

Examples of Phony Article include:
  • The New Yorker often has a few pages of cartoons by that magazine's regular cartoonists, advertising the product.
  • Reader's Digest also has these.
  • As does Harper's.
  • One of the regular puzzles in Games is to identify which of its ads is a Phony Ad for a nonexistent product.
  • Saturday Night Live performed a live-action version of this in the 2008/09 season, where a series of Pepsi ads shown during an episode featured SNL's "MacGruber" character, played by the normal actor and produced by the normal team. The style and placing of the segments made it unclear whether they were truly ads for the soft drink, or a parody of ads for softdrinks.
  • A common sight in Nintendo Power magazine, trying to convince "nintenfriends" of how awesome the SNES was over the Sega CD and Genesis. Ass-pulled stats were a given.
    • Nowadays, they have phony covers. Granted, they are fairly different than the actual cover format.
  • Common in major American newspapers such as USA Today and the Wall Street Journal to sell things like 'fireplaces in a box' which were built by allegedly Amish people and coin collections by private parties which are usually much cheaper and easier to buy through your own bank, but are presented as 'amazing deals'.
  • Used as a plot-point in an episode of Mathnet, where a businessman, hoping to devalue the price of a certain berry, takes out ads in Berry Magazines where he uses faulty sampling data to link the food-stuff to skin blemishes. Pat and George expose the problem, but admit that the damage has been done and they need more evidence if they want anything more than "a correction on page 183".
  • New Scientist sometimes does this, for instance a two-part "Advertising Feature" about how awesome cloud computing is and how it's going to change everything, with an IBM logo discreetly placed at the end.
  • These appear pretty frequently on websites: on a news site they might be disguised to look like a link to another article on the site, and on file-sharing websites the ads often appear to look like the button you press to download the file - it might take some hunting to find the real one.
  • Drew Curtis, founder of Fark.com, dissects the practice in his 2008 book It's Not News, It's Fark: How Mass Media Tries to Pass Off Crap As News.