There’s a sucker born every minute – or so the adage goes. But sometimes being a sucker is fun, or, at the very least, offers a revealing glimpse into who we as a society are today.After all, in an era of YouTube, runaway bloggers and 24/7 celebrity gossip – we can’t even determine whether Jennifer Aniston and Vince Vaughn’s relationship is real or simply a marketing campaign, and really, why do we care?The question must be posed: Are we gullible or just looking for ways to be amused?Both, experts say.“We’re easily fooled, but we just move on to the next thing,” says Tracy Langlands, who teaches marketing at the University of Phoenix in Sacramento.“Our attention span is small because there’s such a mass of information available.”Alex Boese, author of “Hippo Eats Dwarf: A Field Guide to Hoaxes,” agrees.“(Mass media) makes this a ripe time for getting fooled,” Boese says, on the phone recently from San Diego.The good news?Mass media “also makes it easier for us to debunk (hoaxes),” he says.