Google is canceling its traditional April Fools' Day jokes this year, citing the need to keep things real amid the coronavirus pandemic. That's according to multiple reports citing an internal email obtained by Business Insider.
The letter, from Chief Marketing Officer Lorraine Twohill, told workers that Google would focus on providing accurate information during the pandemic and to show respect for those fighting the virus.
Twohill reportedly wrote that the annual pranks will likely return in 2021.
“Our highest goal right now is to be helpful to people, so let’s save the jokes for next April, which will undoubtedly be a whole lot brighter than this one,” Twohill reportedly wrote.
According to the Museum of Hoaxes, previous Google April Fools' Day pranks have included:
- Gmail Autopilot, which would read and respond to your emails automatically
- Changing Google's name to Topeka in response to the mayor of Topeka, Kansas, wanting to change the city's name to Google
- Gmail Motion, which allowed users to write emails using hand and body gestures
- Gmail Tap: An app that changed the standard mobile keyboard to just dots and dashes so users could communicate with Morse code
- Google Maps 8-bit: A low-res version of its maps that would be compatible with the Nintendo Entertainment System
- gDay Mate: Letting you search for content on the internet before it's created