1000_Ways_to_Lie

<i>1000 Ways to Lie</i>

1000 Ways to Lie

American television special program


1000 Ways to Lie is an American television special and spin-off of the television series 1000 Ways to Die. It recreates intricate lies that people have told, as well as how, and what happened when they were found out. It also includes interviews with experts who describe the science behind each lie. The special aired on Spike on March 3, 2010.[1]

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Stylizations

The special is in the style of its parent show, by telling the location and date with a border that has the words "Liar", "Deception", "Greed", "Money", "Shame", "Secrets" and "Betray" surrounding a picture of the incident. At the end of each summary, there is another picture of the incident, and the "Way to Lie #" and the nickname for the incident typed over the image in yellow "Sin City" font, mocking the 1000 Ways to Die presentation. At the beginning of the episode there is a sped-up voice over that is merely the voice over from 1000 Ways to Die with a few words changed around:[2]

"WARNING: The stories portrayed in this show are based on real scams and depict illegal activities."

"Names have been changed to protect the guilty...and the gullible."
"Do not attempt to try ANY of the actions depicted."

"YOU CAN BE ARRESTED AND/OR PROSECUTED!"

The disclaimer then cuts to animation while the voice-over reads:

"Everybody lies, and everybody gets lied to...We lie to get ahead, we lie to get the girl, and to keep our secrets. Whether motivated by greed, ego, or criminal intent, just when you think you've heard it all, there are 1000 WAYS TO LIE."

Failed pilot episode

Originally aired March 3, 2010, the first episode was to be called "Natural Born Liars", but because it got negative reviews, 1000 Ways to Lie became a special instead of a spin-off, and "Natural Born Liars" is no longer an episode title. 1000 Ways to Lie hasn't aired again since.

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References

  1. "Articles". SPIKE. Retrieved 2012-11-06.
  2. "Spike Tv 1000 Ways To Lie Shows". Spike Tv. 2010-03-20. Archived from the original on 7 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-03.

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