The actor may have been in Florida shooting Tomorrowland at the time this photo of "George Clooney" visiting a Florida nail salon was supposedly captured, but look closely and you can clearly see it wasn't Mr. Clooney getting a foot massage. It was some other dude with his face photoshopped on.
We're not sure who exactly was the victim of this hoax: The movie theater in China who accidentally displayed this fan-made Thor 2 poster as the real deal. Or the world, who will never see this version of the movie.
People were so anxious to see what Bey and Jay-Z's daughter looked like that the Internet decided to just make it up. This is the most convincing of the bunch, supposedly showing Blue Ivy. (Spoiler alert: It's not Blue Ivy.)
Renaissance man Franco takes on some many weird projects that we wouldn't be surprised if he decided to strip down for a calendar too. But nope, this brilliant photoshopping with the work of Ellen DeGeneres.
Same idea, different speedo.
In the real photograph, the presidential-hopeful was able to spell his name properly. Still, this doctored photo poking fun at Romney's deep pockets managed to convince many. Some might call this satire.
"Tired of rumors, the Twilight star opens up about his decision to finally come out. ‘I'm more liberated, and happier than I've ever been.'" So said the cover of this fake albeit impressively photoshopped People magazine cover.
The Magic Mike star was a Fifty Shades of Grey fan favorite, so the Internet exploded when this supposed Entertainment Weekly cover confirming the casting leaked. Alas, it was a fake. Here's the real EW cover with the real cast.
Even presidents get 'shopped! This infamous photo turned out to be a phony, a fact uncovered by a curator at a Harvard University. The photo was doctored by a newspaper during Roosevelt's presidential race.