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Female cyclist's van man revenge video may be fake, admits company that posted it

Fake news storm surrounds video that was watched 10 million times on Facebook but has now been removed

A video showing a female cyclist in London pulling a wing mirror off a van after one of the vehicle's occupants made sexist comments at her may be fake, the company that  uploaded it to Facebook yesterday has admitted.

The video, which received more than 10 million views on the Viral Thread Facebook page but has since been removed,  was widely reported today on both mainstream and specialist news outlets today, including road.cc.

> Video of cyclist's revenge on sexist London van man goes viral

As the story went viral, however, the focus quickly switched to claims that the incident depicted in the footage had been staged.

The Mirror reported social media user Kareem Naaman as saying: "This is fake and was filmed by actors. Mate of mine saw it all being filmed. Not sure who or why, but interested to find out what it was for."

Scott Deane, a builder, told the Sun that he had seen the video, shot in an around London's Tottenham Court Road, being made.

He said: "I was across the road having a break and I saw this very attractive girl with a bike talking to a blonde guy who was giving her instructions.

“Then three guys dressed in orange site clothes turned up in a van and the blonde bloke was giving them instructions, too.

“He was telling the girl: ‘You need to ride behind the van aggressively'."

The Viral Thread Facebook page is owned by an east London-based company called Jungle Creations.

The business produces its own viral content, as well as hosting and licencing material on behalf of third parties. Besides earning advertising revenue through its own social media channels such as Facebook, it also charges media outlets who wish to use its content themselves.

When approached by the Guardian earlier today, it quoted the newspaper £400 if it wanted to host the video in its own media player, and £150 on its social media channels.

Jungle Creations insists it did not make the video itself, with a spokesman saying in response to claims that the footage was staged:  "The syndication arm  ofJungle Creations asked the content creator for verification that this incident was true and they received this confirmation."

But this afternoon, the company admitted in a statement that correct vetting procedures had not been followed and as good as confirmed that the footage was, in all likelihood, flase.

It said: "It has come to our attention that a video distributed on our Facebook channel Viral Thread on February 21, 2017 may be factually incorrect.

"Contrary to reports, we want to make clear that we were in no way involved in the making or production of this video.

"The video was received from a third-party content provider and it was distributed on Viral Thread under the impression that it portrayed real-life events.

"We rigorously vet all content received from third parties to ascertain its credibility, but unfortunately our usual high standards were not met on this video.

"We are committed to ensuring and protecting the integrity of content on our channels and take matters of this nature extremely seriously. We’ve since started an internal investigation to make sure it doesn’t happen again."

Viral Thread was founded in 2014 by university graduate Jamie Bolding when he moved back to his mother's house in Surrey after graduating from university.

According to BBC News, his Jungle Creations business, which owns several social media channels, made him £2.5 million last year through viral hits such as the Camembert Hedgehog Bread video, which has been watched more than 22 million times and shared by almost 300,000 people on another of his Facebook pages, Twisted Food Social.

 

 

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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37 comments

Avatar
JohnnyRemo | 7 years ago
8 likes

Nah - it went viral cos it refects our prejudices. Worked both here and with the Daily Mail anti-cyclist/PC/feminist brigade. 

Avatar
Rich_cb | 7 years ago
5 likes

If it seems too good to be true...

In fairness I think the reason it went viral is because it reflects behaviour that is unfortunately all too common.

Avatar
zanf replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
5 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

In fairness I think the reason it went viral is because it reflects behaviour that is unfortunately all too common.

Exactly.

Dawn Foster, who writes for the Guardian, used to run a blog called "101 Wankers" [link goes to archive.orgs wayback mahcine] where she documented the unsolicited advice, comments and sexual harassment she used to get when cycling.

All of those are fairly tame to others stories I've heard.

Avatar
tritecommentbot replied to zanf | 7 years ago
3 likes

zanf wrote:

Dawn Foster, who writes for the Guardian, used to run a blog called "101 Wankers" [link goes to archive.orgs wayback mahcine] where she documented the unsolicited advice, comments and sexual harassment she used to get when cycling.

 

 

Fact of the day! Thanks for that laugh

Avatar
brooksby replied to zanf | 7 years ago
0 likes

zanf wrote:

Dawn Foster, who writes for the Guardian, used to run a blog called "101 Wankers" [link goes to archive.orgs wayback mahcine] where she documented the unsolicited advice, comments and sexual harassment she used to get when cycling.

I remember reading that years ago (I'd forgotten about it, until you mentioned it). Scary stuff.

Avatar
muffies replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
2 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

If it seems too good to be true...

In fairness I think the reason it went viral is because it reflects behaviour that is unfortunately all too common.

are you serious, or just dreaming of confirming whatever weird victimization belief?

im sure it has happened but in 30y of daily road usage in busy places ive seen less than 20 cat calls and zero touching people. zero.

of course if you keep reading fake and constructed stories then mistake them for reality...

you gotta verify things very carefully in this day and age.

Avatar
PotholeHeaven replied to muffies | 7 years ago
5 likes

muffies wrote:
Rich_cb wrote:

If it seems too good to be true... In fairness I think the reason it went viral is because it reflects behaviour that is unfortunately all too common.

are you serious, or just dreaming of confirming whatever weird victimization belief? im sure it has happened but in 30y of daily road usage in busy places ive seen less than 20 cat calls and zero touching people. zero. of course if you keep reading fake and constructed stories then mistake them for reality... you gotta verify things very carefully in this day and age.

 

You are a woman saying all this of course?

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