The CIA assassinated John F. Kennedy after he refused to kill and replace billions of birds with drones. The U.S. government is sequestering a team of Boeing engineers in Area 51 for a secret military mission. Our tax dollars have been funneled into building the 鈥淭urkey X500,鈥 a robot used to hunt large birds.
Combine all these conspiracies and you get Birds Aren鈥檛 Real, a nearly two-year-old movement the CIA took out 12 billion feathered fugitives because directors within the organization were 鈥渁nnoyed that birds had been dropping fecal matter on their car windows.鈥 The targets were eradicated between 1959 and 1971 with specially altered B-52 bombers stocked with poison. They were then supplanted with avian-like robots that could be used to surveil Americans.
Sounds extreme but also somewhat fitting, given the landscape of today's social discourse. By surfacing murky bits of history and the ubiquity of Aves, Birds Aren鈥檛 Real feeds into this era of post-truth politics. The campaign relies on internet-fueled guerilla marketing to spread its message, manifesting through and tagged with the 鈥淏irds Aren鈥檛 Real鈥 slogan.
For much of its devoted fanbase, Birds Aren鈥檛 Real is a respite from America鈥檚 political divide鈥攁 joke so preposterous both conservatives and liberals can laugh at it. But for a few followers, this movement than QAnon, a right-wing conspiracy theory turned that holds that someone with high-level government clearance is planting coded tips in the news. Therein lies the genius of Birds Aren鈥檛 Real: It鈥檚 a digital breadcrumb trail that leads to a that leads to a shop full of ready-to-buy merchandise.
The creative muscle behind the avian-inspired conspiracy (and thinly disguised marketing scheme) is 20-year-old Peter McIndoe, an English and philosophy major at the University of Memphis in Tennessee. McIndoe first went live with Birds Aren鈥檛 Real in January 2017 at his city鈥檚 Women鈥檚 March. A shows McIndoe with a crudely drawn sign, heckling protesters with lines like, 鈥淏irds are a myth; they鈥檙e an illusion; they鈥檙e a lie. Wake up America! Wake up!鈥 The idea of selling Birds Aren鈥檛 Real goods, he says, came after the stunt gained traction over Instagram.
McIndoe didn鈥檛 break character once during a 30-minute-long phone interview with 爆料公社. He defended the movement鈥檚 legitimacy, mainly by proselytizing about what Birds Aren鈥檛 Real 颈蝉苍鈥檛. 鈥淭he thought that this could be used to make a satire of a dark and tense time in American culture鈥擨 find those things to be baloney,鈥 McIndoe says.
What 颈蝉苍鈥檛 baloney is the attention Birds Aren鈥檛 Real has drawn on social media, thanks to an with more than 50,000 followers, a with more than 45,000 views, and a with nearly 8,500 followers. McIndoe handles all these accounts and fulfills every order for the Birds Aren鈥檛 Real goods he sells online. He declined to comment on how much money he鈥檚 made off the T-shirts, hats, and stickers, many of which are out of stock.
Exploiting conspiracists for profit is nothing new, says Mike Metzler, a social media influencer and viral-content creator . Amazon sells dozens of styles of QAnon T-shirts that have become around the country. What鈥檚 different is that while many QAnon believers wear their shirts in earnest, most Birds Aren鈥檛 Real fans seem to wear theirs .
鈥淏irds Aren't Real is taking advantage of the meme-ification of previous conspiracy theories,鈥 Metzler says. 鈥淧eople really want to believe in conspiracies鈥攂ut more than that, people want to make fun of people who believe in conspiracies even more. Starting a conspiracy theory and selling Birds Aren鈥檛 Real merchandise allows them to sell to both sides,鈥 Metzler says.
McIndoe鈥檚 movement got a free jolt of publicity on October 30 after Chicago-based journalist Robert Loerzel of a Birds Aren鈥檛 Real flier he found on the street. The same flier also popped up on Reddit numerous times over the . The hectic and cryptic nature of the website makes it an incubator for conspiracy theories like QAnon. The Reddit forum has 721,000 anonymous subscribers alone.
Message in a Chicago newspaper box
鈥 Robert Loerzel (@robertloerzel)
While some people will draw parallels between QAnon and Birds Aren鈥檛 Real (they were both launched in 2017, after all), their popularity on Reddit is the only true similarity, says Brooke Binkowski, managing editor of the myth-busting website TruthOrFiction.com and the former managing editor of Snopes. 鈥淏irds Aren鈥檛 Real is a good one, but it in no way ranks up there with the incredible complexity of whatever QAnon is,鈥 she says over email. 鈥淨Anon has caught on because it's interactive, it's always evolving, and it's completely vague鈥攕o vague that anything they say could be 鈥榯rue鈥 if you interpret it the right way.鈥
How could Birds Aren鈥檛 Real gain more dark-web cred then? 鈥淐onspiracy theories offer a way for the world to make sense, and they offer a sense of purpose to the purposeless,鈥 Binkowski writes. 鈥淚f Birds Aren't Real hinted at some larger, dark pattern, it would really take flight.鈥
For now, though, this shallow conspiracy seems harmless and may even be a net gain for birds. Jordan Rutter, the director of public relations at the , thinks the intricate history behind McIndoe鈥檚 movement is hilarious and thus, something positive. 鈥淎nything that gets people talking about birds is a good thing,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a way we can start a conversation.鈥
The filmmaker Oliver Stone that Kennedy鈥檚 assassination is 鈥渁 mystery wrapped in a riddle inside an enigma.鈥 Birds Aren鈥檛 Real, on the other hand, is a chimera of conspiracies that wraps satire, modern insecurities, and internet culture into a successful marketing scheme.
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