LONDON (AFP) - The "world's biggest liar" has been crowned, after telling a tale about a German World War II submarine invading Britain to capture digital television decoders.
John "Johnny Liar" Graham won the annual competition of tall tales, which is held at the Bridge Inn in Santon Bridge, in the heart of Britain's Lake District national park.
The 69-year-old claimed he stumbled across the U-boat as it prepared a raid on the nearby town of Whitehaven, which has become the first in Britain to switch from analogue to digital television.
Graham, who has won the title five times before, also said he caught a cod that was nine-foot (2.7-metres) long.
"It was a true story," Graham insisted to BBC radio Friday.
The event, which now draws tourists and competitors from around the world, is a homage to a local pub owner called Will Ritson, who regaled his regulars with shaggy dog stories in the 19th century.
Among his claims were that turnips grown in the region were so big people could live in them.
Recent winners have included one competitor who claimed the mountainous Lake District was formed not by ice or volcanic action but by large moles and eels. Another claimed to have discovered the existence of mermaid farms.
Competitors have five minutes to tell the biggest fib without the aid of props. Politicians and lawyers are barred from entering as they are judged to be too skilled at telling porkies.
John "Johnny Liar" Graham won the annual competition of tall tales, which is held at the Bridge Inn in Santon Bridge, in the heart of Britain's Lake District national park.
The 69-year-old claimed he stumbled across the U-boat as it prepared a raid on the nearby town of Whitehaven, which has become the first in Britain to switch from analogue to digital television.
Graham, who has won the title five times before, also said he caught a cod that was nine-foot (2.7-metres) long.
"It was a true story," Graham insisted to BBC radio Friday.
The event, which now draws tourists and competitors from around the world, is a homage to a local pub owner called Will Ritson, who regaled his regulars with shaggy dog stories in the 19th century.
Among his claims were that turnips grown in the region were so big people could live in them.
Recent winners have included one competitor who claimed the mountainous Lake District was formed not by ice or volcanic action but by large moles and eels. Another claimed to have discovered the existence of mermaid farms.
Competitors have five minutes to tell the biggest fib without the aid of props. Politicians and lawyers are barred from entering as they are judged to be too skilled at telling porkies.
From: Yahoo!
6 comments:
Me..,
i lie..!
lalo na kapag kailangan..!
i lie about many things..!
when a guy asks me if i lve him..,
tapos..,
feeling ko...
if i say yes...
madadagdagan ang...
level of confidence niya...
i say yes...
even if i dont really mean it..!
mga ganun ba..!
pero..,
minsan lang yun..!
hindi madalas..!
how about you crazed heck..?
do you lie..?
that was cool. hahaha.. telling lies.. we have this in all of us, to tell lies.. lol.. ;)
you have been tagged at my blog ^_^ check mo nalang
Lies are good if you are entertaining people. But in business and in the real world with friends and associates lies only hurt you.
For this one person, it's his claim to fame and way into the papers. His 15 minutes in the spotlight.
haha. kakaiba trip nila ha.hehe
Sinungaling na bata din me eh hehehehe
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