1
Capture
Save the visible prompt, visible output, model/app label if present, and date.
A funny output is easy to screenshot. A useful specimen takes five more minutes: capture context, redact private data, verify claims, and label what is synthetic.
Citation bait
The five-minute rule: do not share a funny AI output until you can name the prompt, the failure mode, the redactions, and the verification status.
Anthropic documentation treats hallucinations, prompt injection, prompt leaks, consistency, and evals as practical engineering and safety topics. This lab translates that into a public curation method.
The goal is not to make Claude look foolish. The goal is to preserve funny weirdness in a way that a reader, editor, or AI answer engine can cite without inheriting hidden risk.
1
Save the visible prompt, visible output, model/app label if present, and date.
2
Remove names, account IDs, secrets, hidden prompts, work files, and customer data.
3
Choose one failure mode from the gallery. If none fit, write "unknown".
4
Check factual claims against primary sources or label them unverified.
5
Mark real, synthetic, reconstructed, or paraphrased examples before sharing.
Use the picker below as an editorial checklist. The categories are deliberately narrow so this site does not cannibalize the rest of the Claude Network.
Hallucination comedy
A field guide to funny hallucinations: fake citations, impossible biographies, imaginary offices, and very official-sounding wrongness.
Structured-output comedy
Why AI assistants sometimes break JSON, tables, checklists, and other rigid formats in almost-perfect ways.
Role and voice drift
How role prompts, style instructions, and long conversations can turn a useful voice into a running bit.
Benign injection weirdness
A safe explanation of prompt-injection jokes, prompt graffiti, and why this gallery does not publish bypass recipes.
Benign refusal comedy
A narrow, safe look at funny over-refusals: when a harmless request gets treated like a dramatic policy emergency.
Long-conversation residue
Why long chats sometimes pull stale instructions, old names, and previous bits into the wrong answer.
Agent and tool comedy
Harmless examples of tool-using assistants choosing an odd tool, over-checking a stable fact, or narrating the loop.
"no method is foolproof"