Deceived by an AI-generated Pakistan-based website that quickly spread online, thousands of people turned up in Dublin ...
The website, he said, compiled information from about 1,400 Halloween events from all over the world. The nonexistent parade ...
MySpiritHalloween, the website that promoted a Halloween parade in Dublin that never existed, says it is “ashamed” and blamed human error.
Attendees said they felt hornswoggled by the happening, a la the notorious Fyre Festival, a so-called luxury musical event ...
Thousands of people in Dublin received a rude awakening when they showed up to the city for a Halloween parade that never happened.
Thousands of people gathered in Dublin, Ireland on Thursday night for a Halloween parade that was never going to happen. Videos and photos posted on social media showed large crowds gathered in ...
This Halloween, crowds lined the streets in central Dublin and waited for a parade to begin. They’d gathered after a website called MySpiritHalloween.com published an AI-generated article ...
A large crowd of people were duped into lining the streets of Dublin for a Halloween parade that did not exist. Spectators turned out in force to watch the apparent procession in the Irish capital ...
In what can only be described as a bit of Halloween mischief, hundreds of people were tricked into attending a fake parade in Dublin on Thursday night. Crowds gathered in the Irish city on Thursday ...
Thousands of people gathered on Dublin’s O’Connell Street on October 31, in hope of attending a Halloween parade that would never come. Footage filmed by X user @liam_B02 shows people lined up along O ...
A Pakistan-based company has issued an apology after mistakenly advertising a non-existent Halloween parade in Dublin, Ireland. According to The Guardian, the error, attributed to a "human mistake ...