Fake News Article Screenshots
Also known as: Fake Headlines · Fake News Screenshots · Imposter Content
Fake News Article Screenshots are fabricated headlines designed to look like real news stories from major outlets, shared on social media usually for comedic or satirical purposes. The format exploded on Twitter in early 2022, driven largely by a single shitposter named @JUNlPER whose doctored screenshots fooled right-wing pundits, candy companies, and mainstream journalists alike2. What started as ironic trolling became a case study in how easily misinformation spreads when it confirms existing outrage narratives1.
TL;DR
Fake News Article Screenshots are fabricated headlines designed to look like real news stories from major outlets, shared on social media usually for comedic or satirical purposes.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format follows a simple recipe. Take a headline from a major news outlet's mobile site, then replace the text with something absurd while keeping the layout, fonts, and branding intact. The fake headline typically plays on an existing news cycle or cultural moment, pushing the real story's logic to an extreme conclusion. Post the screenshot with a caption expressing mock disbelief ("no fucking way," "WHAT," or similar). The most effective versions ride existing outrage waves, making the fake headline just plausible enough that people who are already mad about something will share it without checking. Creators typically use basic image editing tools to match the outlet's visual template.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
The Mandatory website published a satirical "Snickers deveining" article with a fake corporate quote months before JUNlPER's viral screenshot, but the website version didn't fool anyone. The screenshot format was the key ingredient.
Snickers dick vein jokes existed online since at least 2009, a full 13 years before the fake headline made it international news.
The smooth Snickers photo JUNlPER used as "evidence" was likely the result of chocolate melting and reforming, a manufacturing error, or some other mundane cause.
JUNlPER's display name at the time of the viral posts was "Transgender Marx".
Whitney Chewston's owners Ben Campbell and Logan Hickman are themselves a gay couple, making the "homophobic dog" premise extra absurd.
Derivatives & Variations
Snickers Dick Vein saga
— JUNlPER's April 2022 fake headline spawned its own sub-meme, with Snickers officially responding and ongoing jokes about veinless candy bars[2].
Goblin Mode discourse
— The fabricated Julia Fox quote triggered a real cultural conversation about "goblin mode" as a lifestyle concept, despite the originating quote being entirely fictional[4].
Whitney Chewston homophobia dog
— The fake Washington Post article about a homophobic dachshund became its own meme after DeSantis' press secretary fell for it, with Lorenz jokingly offering to write the article for real[3].
Breaking News Parodies
— The precursor format using TV news chyrons rather than mobile article screenshots, active since the early 2010s[4].
Fake Google Search Results
— @DoctorPenisBoob's April 2022 contribution extended the format beyond single-article screenshots to fabricated search result pages showing multiple fake outlets[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4Fake News Article Screenshots - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 5Fake newsencyclopedia