another interesting bit from that article.. The first sentence is funny and somewhat contradicts the rest of the paragraph(way to prove your point there, writer)
Prank calls are funny to some people, but it seems childish and mean-spirited to me. According to the New York Times, a good prank simulates a crisis without being the real thing. The psychology behind pranks ranges from experts calling it bullied harassment to "a kind of flattery." Dr. Kathleen D. Vohs, a consumer psychologist at the Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota, claimed, "Being duped holds up this mirror to people, and may in fact show them where they are on the scale - too trusting or too vigilant." When people replay the prank over in their head, thinking how they could have reacted differently, feeling like they should have known better, it can "kick-start new behaviors, new self-exploration and, ultimately, self-improvement," said Neal Roese, a psychologist at the University of Illinois.