‘This Is a Reverse Financed Internship So You Will Pay $15/hr to Work Here’
A bogus ad first spotted in January continued to find readers online, thanks to social media.
A bogus ad first spotted in January continued to find readers online, thanks to social media.
A photograph of a Trump supporter’s truck being towed spread across social networks, often with the description that it showed a repossession in progress.
An apparently outraged complaint about the juxtaposition of a Donald Trump mask and a section labeled “devil” spread in screenshots on social media.
“Sometimes I think about how Willy Wonka sent those chocolate bars INTERNATIONAL and still 5 white kids managed to win the golden tickets.”
During Netflix’s Watts murders documentary “American Murder,” viewers spotted a purported creepy coincidence involving images of a fetus, a skull, and oil after Ring footage aired.
A tweet attributed to U.S. President Donald Trump circulated on social media in screenshot form, but we had our doubts.
Eagle-eyed viewers of Netflix’s “American Murder” documentary claimed to spot the ghost of a child on police body cam footage taken at the Watts’ house in August 2018.
Following social media outrage over “Cuties,” Netflix was purportedly indicted by a grand jury in Texas — but we were unable to find much in the way of legal analysis.
A viral rumor can be traced back to a Canadian satire site.
A viral Facebook post beginning “Happy Banned Books Week” was swiftly followed by a correction which was nearly as popular.