This Isn’t a 3D Model of the ‘First Human’ Designed by Princeton University

Princeton University's Media Relations Director Michael Hotchkiss told The Quint that the post was a parody.

Aishwarya Varma
WebQoof
Published:
<div class="paragraphs"><p>The graphic shows Vin Diesel fan art.</p></div>
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The graphic shows Vin Diesel fan art.

(Source: ArtStation/Altered by The Quint)

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A graphic resembling Hollywood actor Vin Diesel is being shared on social media with the text that it shows a project by scientists at Princeton University in New Jersey, United States of America.

What 'project' is being referred to?: It claims that while constructing a three-dimensional (3D) model of the "first human ever made by God," scientists at Princeton made a model that resembled Hollywood actor Vin Diesel.

An archive of this claim can be seen here.

(Source: Facebook/Screenshot)

(Archives of more claims on social media can be seen here and here.)

What is the truth?: The graphic shared in the claim is a 3D design of actor Vin Diesel from his film 'Riddick,' and was created by an artist Vitaly Tenishev.

Moreover, Princeton University's Media Relations Director Michael Hotchkiss told The Quint that the post was a parody.

How did we find out?: We ran a reverse image search on the photograph, which led us to a tweet by Alamo Drafthouse NYC, a verified Twitter account for a movie theatre.

This account had also shared the claim. However, continuing in a thread, they mentioned that they were "a movie theatre, not an academic journal,"

Are Princeton University scientists working on this?: The Quint then wrote to Princeton University's communications team for clarification regard the claim.

  • Responding in an email, Princeton University's Media Relations Director Michael Hotchkiss said, "This post is a parody."

During our search to look for claims, we found that the statement "Scientists at Princeton University have reconstructed this 3D model..." was used as a meme template, where users share photographs or graphics of different celebrities.

  • On Twitter, we saw that users were sharing similar claims using photographs and graphics depicting notable persons such as Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan, Twitter CEO Elon Musk, Hollywood actor Dwayne Johnson and so on.

  • Facebook, too, had users widely sharing Diesel's likeness with the claim, as well as that of former Rolling Stones member Keith Richards, and former Black Sabbath member Ozzy Osbourne.

Where is Vin Diesel's photo from?: A search for the image's source led us to an account belonging to one Vitaly Tenishev on ArtStation.com, where he had published the photograph as a 3D fan art project six years ago.

The fan art from 'Riddick' was posted six years ago.

(Source: ArtStation/Altered by The Quint)

Conclusion: As per Princeton University's input, the post is a parody. We also found that the post's layout is a meme template, and that the photograph it uses in a 3D model of Diesel's likeness from a film.

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