Richard Branson was once arrested for pulling an extreme April Fool's Day prank
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Its founder and chairman, Richard Branson, is a notoriously huge fan of April Fool's Day and he enjoys using it as a way to score some marketing for his brands and trick the media and public in the process.
Virgin hasn't given up the joke yet, but its latest assumed prank is an Airbnb-esque logo redesign for its airline Virgin America, in the shape of a woman's bikini top. It even comes with a launch video satirizing the self-importance of Silicon Valley.
Last year, Branson collaborated with the government of Branson, Missouri, to announce that he was relocating Virgin's United Kingdom headquarters to the small town.
Branson explained in his 2014 book "The Virgin Way" that an essential part of the brand is fun, and so a harmless April Fool's Day joke is a perfect fit.
But one of the biggest pranks he ever backfired spectacularly and landed him in a holding cell for almost 12 hours, in his pajamas, he wrote.
On March 31, sometime back in the '90s, Branson decided that his early Virgin Records business partner, Ken Berry, was going to be his April Fool's target.
Branson invited Berry and his girlfriend to a nice late-night dinner at a rooftop restaurant he owned - for the purpose of distracting him while some "hired hands," as Branson calls them, broke into Berry's apartment at midnight and stole his furniture, television, and stereo. When Berry arrived at his emptied apartment, actors posing as policemen would follow him in to interrogate him and dust for fingerprints. After Berry suffered long enough, Branson would pop in to yell "April Fool!" and move everything back in.
Virgin America
"Not knowing what to do I headed for home and was greeted by my wife Joan (who wasn't in on the joke because she would have totally disapproved of it) saying, 'Richard, something awful has happened. Kenny's flat's been broken into and the police are there now. He called to ask if his girlfriend could spend the night with us as she's too scared to stay in the flat,'" Branson writes.
Branson decided the joke was long past spoiled, and he called Berry to come clean. The thing was, Berry had already filed a police report. He told Branson he'd try to work something out.
Before Branson had a chance to go to bed, two cops showed up at his door and arrested him. He was in his bathrobe and slippers as he protested, "This is all a terrible mistake."
They took him to the Harrow Road Police Station and tossed him into a holding cell, taking his robe's sash from him, following protocol for potential suicide threats.
After a half hour of dozing, Branson writes, he was startled by screams coming from the cell next to him. He couldn't see what was happening, but "it sounded like a beating was underway as I heard, 'Please don't hit me again. Honest, guv, I didn't do nothing!'"
Branson spent the entire night and morning in the cell before two police officers took him upstairs around noon to charge him with "a dozen or more offences including wasting police time," he says.
Confused, tired, and ashamed, he stepped outside into the daylight and was greeted by his Virgin Records staff, led by Berry and police. "April Fool!" they yelled.
Branson then learned that after he had confessed to Berry on the phone that the burglary was just an elaborate prank, Berry asked the police officers to drop the case.
The annoyed cops wanted to charge Branson with criminal mischief and wasting police time, but Berry claims he was able to strike a deal: They wouldn't press charges if they could keep Branson in a holding cell until noon, which according to "official" April Fool's rules, is when you have to announce a prank. The beating in the cell next to Branson was staged for extra flair.So while this all may seem like "fun" that's gotten out of hand, Branson insists it's just a byproduct of the kind of corporate culture that has allowed Virgin employees to feel free to express themselves and give their all to the company.
In the "Virgin Way," he writes, "At every step along the way, from 'Student' magazine to Virgin Galactic and everything in between, we have certainly enjoyed great times together and laughed a lot - quite often at my expense, as with my night locked up in a London police station cell!"
Here's Virgin's cheeky video about the launch of the "new Virgin America logo":
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