For the eager prankster, nothing beats the centuries-old tradition of April Fools' Day. "A lot of people think [April Fools' Day] is just obnoxious, and just wish it would stop," said Alex Boese, curator of the Museum of Hoaxes in San Diego, California. (Read an April Fools' Day Q&A with the Museum of Hoaxes curator.) "But people who love pranks really love the day and refuse to give up the tradition. They're the ones who keep it alive," Boese told National Geographic News in 2008. He said, however, that the number of pranks in the home and at the office has decreased in recent years in the...
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