That awkward moment when everyone finds out a 13-year-old girl wrote your best quote
- Text by Alex Taylor
Picture this. You’re a mega-fan of author John Green. You’ve read The Fault in Our Stars like a million times. You’ve seen the film and can pull quotes from his five other novels off by heart. One of your favourites is this: “I’m in love with cities I’ve never been to and people I’ve never met” Did you fall in love with John Green and his writing from that one line? Reblogged it on Tumblr? Well, you’ve been reblogging something written by a 13-year-old girl.
In a recent post from his YouTube series, VlogBrothers, Green explains that it was only when he came across a post on subreddit /r/copyright that he realised that the quote that had been attributed to him for the last seven years was written by a teenage ‘nerdfighter’ (a community of cult fiction fans). How embarrassing for John.
Green handles the situation well, though. He takes it lightheartedly and is now selling posters of the young girl’s artwork on his site with all the money raised going directly to her. But some people are a little less gracious. Some people like to pretend that other peoples’ work is actually their own. In fact, it happens all the time.
There are a lot of examples of people trying to pass off someone else’s ideas or words as their own. Here are just a few of them.
Jonah Lehrer
A brilliantly successful young journalist, Jonah Lehrer was working at the New Yorker and had just written his first book, Imagine, when fellow journalist Michael C. Moynihan started questioning some of quotes that Lehrer claimed came from Bob Dylan. A self-confessed ‘Bob Dylan nerd’, Moynihan pressed the issue with Lehrer and, eventually, published a piece exposing him for the false attribution of quotes and self-plagiarism that Moynihan suspected all along. Disgraced, Lehrer resigned from The New Yorker but retained his position at WIRED until their internal review of his work found recycled material in 17 of his 18 posts on the site.
Johann Hari
Johann Hari’s career took off quicker than he could have expected. As Deborah Orr points out: “Johann became a top ranking journalist on a national newspaper when he was 23 years old.” Do you see what I did there? I quoted someone within the context of which they said something. Hari didn’t do that when interviewing his subjects, though. Allegations of his queer quotations had been circulating since 2003 but eight years later he was suspended from The Independent and went on a strange Wikipedia tirade under the pseudonym of David Rose that involved changing his own page to seem like “one of the essential writers of our times.”
Marie-Louise Gumuchian
Not one, not two, not even three. Marie-Louise Gumuchian, a former London-based news editor for CNN, had 50 separate instances of plagiarism found across the body of her work for the organisation. Needless to say, they weren’t best pleased. Gumuchian was fired immediately. “We’ve terminated Gumuchian’s employment with CNN, and have removed the instances of plagiarism found in her pieces. In some cases, we’ve chosen to delete an entire article,” CNN said. “Trust, integrity and simply giving credit where it’s due are among the tenets of journalism we hold dear, and we regret that we published material that did not reflect those essential standards.”
Vladimir Putin
Even Vladimir Putin has been accused of plagiarism. Way back in 2006, Clifford Gaddy, a specialist on the Soviet Union, said that Putin’s thesis didn’t seem like the work of just one man. Speaking to RFERL, Gaddy said that the thesis entitled ‘Strategic Planning of the Reproduction of the Resource Base’ “would not qualify as a PhD dissertation at any first, second, or third rate university in the United States.” His questions were raised after having studied it and noticing a lack of consistency in style.
Brian Williams
Okay, so this is less a case of plagiarism and more an outright lie. But it’s earned its place on the list because just… wow! Revered NBC host Brian Williams really embellished this one. Claiming that he was in a helicopter shot down by RPG fire in Iraq, Williams was called out by an army veteran who had no memory of him being aboard the shot-down helicopter. Instead, he was in the one behind and suffered no harm. After apologising on-air, NBC deemed this to be in such breach of journalistic ethics that Williams is currently on a six-month suspension from the show he has hosted for the last decade.
Follow Huck on Twitter or like us on Facebook.
You might like
How Japan revolutionised art & photography in the ’60s and ’70s
From Angura to Provoke — A new photobook chronicles the radical avant-garde scene of the postwar period, whose subversion of the medium of image making remains shocking and groundbreaking to this day.
Written by: Miss Rosen
Artifaxing: “We’ve become so addicted to these supercomputers in our hands”
Framing the future — Predominantly publishing on Instagram and X, the account is one of social media’s most prominent archiving pages. We caught up with the mysterious figure behind it to chat about the internet’s past, present and future, finding inspiration and art in the age of AI.
Written by: Isaac Muk
The lacerating catharsis of body suspension in Hong Kong
Self-Ferrying — In one of the world’s most densely packed cities, an underground group of young people are piercing their skin and hanging their bodies with hooks in a shocking exploration of pain and pleasure. Sophie Liu goes to a session to understand why they partake in the extreme underground practice.
Written by: Sophie Liu
What we’re excited for at SXSW 2026
Austin 40 — For the festival’s 40th anniversary edition, we are heading to Texas to join one of the biggest global meetups of the year. We’ve selected a few things to highlight on your schedules.
Written by: Huck
Huck’s 20th Anniversary Issue, Wu-Tang Clan is here
Life is a Journey — Fronted by the legendary Wu-Tang Clan’s spiritual leader RZA, we explore the space in between beginnings and endings, and the things we learn along the way.
Written by: Huck
Clavicular isn’t interesting, really
Dreaming Small — The ‘looksmaxxer’ of the moment has garnered widespread furore over recent controversies. But newsletter columnist Emma Garland asks whether the 20-year-old influencer is actually doing anything that new, and what his rise says about modern turbo-nostalgia’s internet dominance.
Written by: Emma Garland