I Tricked Influencers Into Promoting Gravel - Summary

Summary

The text appears to be a transcript of a video where the creators prank various influencers by sending them boxes of fake moon rocks. They had these boxes printed to look like they came from the National Space Center and included a letter and certificate of authenticity. The boxes were then delivered to the influencers' homes, some of whom were unaware of the prank. The creators filmed the reactions of the influencers upon receiving the boxes, which were then edited into a video that they posted online. The National Space Center later contacted the influencers to clarify that the moon rocks were not genuine.

Facts

1. The text is a transcript of a video where two individuals, possibly comedians or pranksters, are trying to convince influencers that they have received pieces of the moon.
2. The influencers are not aware that the moon rocks they received are actually made of gravel and are not from the moon.
3. The individuals are sending the influencers bespoke stationery that looks like it came from the National Space Center.
4. They also send a cover letter from the National Space Center, which includes a seal that looks like it came from the moon.
5. The influencers are being targeted because the individuals want to see how they would react to receiving these moon rocks.
6. The individuals are filming the reactions of the influencers to their "moon rocks" and plan to share the video online.
7. Some of the influencers being targeted include Josh Peters, Louise Thompson, Harry Barron, Chip Watson, and Emma Wolf.
8. The individuals are not affiliated with the National Space Center and are not sending official moon rocks.