Can I Make Stuff Up? A Visual Guide

When This American Life retracted an episode based on Mike Daisey’s one-man show about workers’ rights abuses at Apple factories in China, it reignited a long-running debate about when, if ever, it’s OK for writers to embellish the truth. Recent years have seen a cornucopia of storytellers—journalists, memoirists, humorists, novelists, and so on—fudging facts. Sometimes this prompted outrage and public scorn; other instances were met with a shrug. Which raises an important question: Who gets to make stuff up?
To make life easier for would-be liars everywhere, we have attempted to answer that question with a handy visual guide. Some of our conclusions are obvious: If you’re a journalist, making stuff up is not a good career move. If you’re a fantasy writer, on the other hand, you’d better make stuff up by the chapter-load, or you’ll be out of a gig. But what if you fall somewhere in the middle?
Well, if you want to make stuff up, it helps to be funny. While David Sedaris’s books are classified as nonfiction, for example, no one seems to mind that they’re not all true. Likewise, stand-up comedians can tell you about the hilarious thing that happened to them last week, and no one will check to see if that hilarious thing really happened last week. Even if you’re writing a reported piece for a fact-checked magazine like Harper’s or Rolling Stone, you might be able to throw in a few whoppers if you’re as funny as David Foster Wallace. (Try to write prose as memorable as his, too—that seems to have helped Truman Capote.)
You may also want to consider putting your story on film. While biographers get a hard time for documentable inaccuracies, biopics don’t get the same degree of scrutiny. If you write a true story, it should probably be true; if you make a movie “based on a true story,” people will assume you made a bunch of stuff up.
One other thing: You may notice that the pretty little heads on the left nearly all belong to men. The only fact-fudging scandal involving a woman we could find went back over 30 years, and didn’t make our chart. Do men make stuff up more often? Or are there simply not as many female storytellers in the public eye? Let us know what you think in the comments—and if you can think of any other women who got in trouble for making stuff up, tell us where you’d put them on the guide.
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Photo credits: Stephen Glass, YouTube; Mitch Albom by Vincent Wagner; James Frey, Berrien County mug shot; 'Truman Capote', a Polaroid portrait by artist Andy Warhol, rephotographed by EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP/Getty Images; David Foster Wallace by Keith Bedford/Getty Images; Tom Hooper by Chris Jackson/Getty Images; Dan Brown by Elisabetta A. Villa/WireImage; Matthew Weiner by Jason Merritt/Getty Images; David Sedaris by Ralph Orlowski/Getty Images; Louis C.K. by Katy Winn/Getty Images; Ice Cube by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images; Dr. Isaac Asimov, 1965, from "New York World-Telegram and the Sun Newspaper Photograph Collection"; J.K Rowling by Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images