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  • 2019-04-08 (xsd:date)
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  • Is the 'Haiku Bird' a Real Creature? (en)
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  • Photographs purportedly showing a haiku bird have been circulating on social media for a number of years. In 2020, the image appeared in advertising that claimed to lead to 20 Animals That Are Real and Dangerous, leading through Revcontent, a content marketing, native advertising and discovery platform, to a website named Upbeat News. It also appeared in April 2019, when interest in this enigmatic four-legged bird was renewed in part by a post from the Universal Nature Twitter account: These images are often attached to the claim that this animal is native to Nepal, and a viral video about the haiku bird that racked up more than one million views claimed that this mysterious animal was the lord parvathi devi's pet, that it eats bananas, and that it was immortal: Alas, these photographs do not document the existence of a four-legged, banana-eating, immortal pet of a deity. Photographs of this haiku bird actually show a posable art doll created by Deviant Artist CMWyvern. The Deviant Artist provided a description of her doll and refuted rumors that the images depicted a real-life Pokemon in a 2014 post to her page. CMWyvern labeled her work a cloud antelope: Deviant Artist CMWyvern, whose real name is Calyn McLeod, sells similar products on her Etsy page. Several photographs of some her other creature creations are available on her website: This is not the first time that an artistic doll or figurine has been mistaken for a genuine image of some sort of mythical or suspiciously cute creature. We've previously covered artistic creations that resembled a short-tailed weasel, an adorable bunny, the world's cutest rodent, baby owls, a baby platypus, monkeys from Madagascar, furry albino tarantulas, and the marvelously mythical marbled faurk. (en)
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