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#urbanlegend — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #urbanlegend, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The “188 Children” Benefits Myth That Won’t Go Away

    Viral stories spread fast online, but not all of them are grounded in fact. Photo credit: Unsplash.

    Dear Cherubs, every so often the internet serves up a story so outrageous it practically begs to be believed. This is one of those cases—and no, it doesn’t survive contact with reality.

    Let’s start with the claim: a man named “Alibana Muhammad” allegedly had 188 children to claim government benefits. It’s dramatic, it’s viral, and it’s also not supported by credible evidence. In fact, there’s no reliable record of a real person by that name linked to such a case in any verified news reporting.

    WHAT’S ACTUALLY GOING ON

    Stories like this tend to follow a familiar pattern. A shocking statistic appears, often tied to welfare systems, immigration, or cultural stereotypes. The details are fuzzy, sources are vague, and yet the claim spreads like it’s breaking news.

    According to fact-checking organizations such as Full Fact and Snopes, similar viral claims about individuals having extreme numbers of children for financial gain are almost always exaggerated or entirely fabricated. The numbers alone should raise eyebrows—188 children would require logistical, biological, and legal circumstances that simply don’t add up in any documented case.

    It’s also worth noting that benefit systems, particularly in countries like the UK, have caps and verification processes. As reported by the UK government, there are limits on how many children qualify for certain benefits, making the idea of someone successfully claiming for nearly 200 children highly implausible.

    WHY THESE STORIES SPREAD

    Here’s the part where things get a bit more human. Outrage travels fast. A story like this taps into existing frustrations about taxes, public spending, and fairness. It’s the kind of content that gets shared with a quick “this can’t be real” — except people rarely stop to check if it actually is.

    As noted by thisclaimer.com, viral “fail” stories and exaggerated claims often gain traction not because they’re true, but because they confirm what people already suspect or fear. It’s giving confirmation bias with a side of chaos.

    There’s also a digital echo chamber effect. Once a claim appears on social media, it gets reposted, reworded, and stripped of any original context. Before long, it feels like common knowledge—even if it started as a misunderstanding or outright fiction.

    THE REALITY CHECK

    Let’s be clear: large families do exist, and welfare systems can be complex. But extreme claims like “188 children for benefits” fall apart under basic scrutiny. No credible outlet—think BBC, The Guardian, or Reuters—has reported such a case.

    If anything, the persistence of this story says more about the internet than it does about reality. It highlights how easily misinformation can spread when it’s packaged as something outrageous and emotionally charged.

    So next time you see a claim that sounds like it belongs in a soap opera rather than real life, it might be worth pausing before hitting share. Not everything that trends is true—and some stories are just… very committed fiction.

    Sources list:
    Full Fact — https://fullfact.org/
    Snopes — https://www.snopes.com/
    UK Government (Benefits and Tax Credits) — https://www.gov.uk/browse/benefits
    thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com/

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #AI #benefitsSystem #factCheck #fakeNews #internetMyths #mediaLiteracy #misinformation #politics #SocialMedia #socialMedia #technology #ukWelfare #urbanLegend #viralStories
  2. The “188 Children” Benefits Myth That Won’t Go Away

    Viral stories spread fast online, but not all of them are grounded in fact. Photo credit: Unsplash.

    Dear Cherubs, every so often the internet serves up a story so outrageous it practically begs to be believed. This is one of those cases—and no, it doesn’t survive contact with reality.

    Let’s start with the claim: a man named “Alibana Muhammad” allegedly had 188 children to claim government benefits. It’s dramatic, it’s viral, and it’s also not supported by credible evidence. In fact, there’s no reliable record of a real person by that name linked to such a case in any verified news reporting.

    WHAT’S ACTUALLY GOING ON

    Stories like this tend to follow a familiar pattern. A shocking statistic appears, often tied to welfare systems, immigration, or cultural stereotypes. The details are fuzzy, sources are vague, and yet the claim spreads like it’s breaking news.

    According to fact-checking organizations such as Full Fact and Snopes, similar viral claims about individuals having extreme numbers of children for financial gain are almost always exaggerated or entirely fabricated. The numbers alone should raise eyebrows—188 children would require logistical, biological, and legal circumstances that simply don’t add up in any documented case.

    It’s also worth noting that benefit systems, particularly in countries like the UK, have caps and verification processes. As reported by the UK government, there are limits on how many children qualify for certain benefits, making the idea of someone successfully claiming for nearly 200 children highly implausible.

    WHY THESE STORIES SPREAD

    Here’s the part where things get a bit more human. Outrage travels fast. A story like this taps into existing frustrations about taxes, public spending, and fairness. It’s the kind of content that gets shared with a quick “this can’t be real” — except people rarely stop to check if it actually is.

    As noted by thisclaimer.com, viral “fail” stories and exaggerated claims often gain traction not because they’re true, but because they confirm what people already suspect or fear. It’s giving confirmation bias with a side of chaos.

    There’s also a digital echo chamber effect. Once a claim appears on social media, it gets reposted, reworded, and stripped of any original context. Before long, it feels like common knowledge—even if it started as a misunderstanding or outright fiction.

    THE REALITY CHECK

    Let’s be clear: large families do exist, and welfare systems can be complex. But extreme claims like “188 children for benefits” fall apart under basic scrutiny. No credible outlet—think BBC, The Guardian, or Reuters—has reported such a case.

    If anything, the persistence of this story says more about the internet than it does about reality. It highlights how easily misinformation can spread when it’s packaged as something outrageous and emotionally charged.

    So next time you see a claim that sounds like it belongs in a soap opera rather than real life, it might be worth pausing before hitting share. Not everything that trends is true—and some stories are just… very committed fiction.

    Sources list:
    Full Fact — https://fullfact.org/
    Snopes — https://www.snopes.com/
    UK Government (Benefits and Tax Credits) — https://www.gov.uk/browse/benefits
    thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com/

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #AI #benefitsSystem #factCheck #fakeNews #internetMyths #mediaLiteracy #misinformation #politics #SocialMedia #socialMedia #technology #ukWelfare #urbanLegend #viralStories
  3. The “188 Children” Benefits Myth That Won’t Go Away

    Viral stories spread fast online, but not all of them are grounded in fact. Photo credit: Unsplash.

    Dear Cherubs, every so often the internet serves up a story so outrageous it practically begs to be believed. This is one of those cases—and no, it doesn’t survive contact with reality.

    Let’s start with the claim: a man named “Alibana Muhammad” allegedly had 188 children to claim government benefits. It’s dramatic, it’s viral, and it’s also not supported by credible evidence. In fact, there’s no reliable record of a real person by that name linked to such a case in any verified news reporting.

    WHAT’S ACTUALLY GOING ON

    Stories like this tend to follow a familiar pattern. A shocking statistic appears, often tied to welfare systems, immigration, or cultural stereotypes. The details are fuzzy, sources are vague, and yet the claim spreads like it’s breaking news.

    According to fact-checking organizations such as Full Fact and Snopes, similar viral claims about individuals having extreme numbers of children for financial gain are almost always exaggerated or entirely fabricated. The numbers alone should raise eyebrows—188 children would require logistical, biological, and legal circumstances that simply don’t add up in any documented case.

    It’s also worth noting that benefit systems, particularly in countries like the UK, have caps and verification processes. As reported by the UK government, there are limits on how many children qualify for certain benefits, making the idea of someone successfully claiming for nearly 200 children highly implausible.

    WHY THESE STORIES SPREAD

    Here’s the part where things get a bit more human. Outrage travels fast. A story like this taps into existing frustrations about taxes, public spending, and fairness. It’s the kind of content that gets shared with a quick “this can’t be real” — except people rarely stop to check if it actually is.

    As noted by thisclaimer.com, viral “fail” stories and exaggerated claims often gain traction not because they’re true, but because they confirm what people already suspect or fear. It’s giving confirmation bias with a side of chaos.

    There’s also a digital echo chamber effect. Once a claim appears on social media, it gets reposted, reworded, and stripped of any original context. Before long, it feels like common knowledge—even if it started as a misunderstanding or outright fiction.

    THE REALITY CHECK

    Let’s be clear: large families do exist, and welfare systems can be complex. But extreme claims like “188 children for benefits” fall apart under basic scrutiny. No credible outlet—think BBC, The Guardian, or Reuters—has reported such a case.

    If anything, the persistence of this story says more about the internet than it does about reality. It highlights how easily misinformation can spread when it’s packaged as something outrageous and emotionally charged.

    So next time you see a claim that sounds like it belongs in a soap opera rather than real life, it might be worth pausing before hitting share. Not everything that trends is true—and some stories are just… very committed fiction.

    Sources list:
    Full Fact — https://fullfact.org/
    Snopes — https://www.snopes.com/
    UK Government (Benefits and Tax Credits) — https://www.gov.uk/browse/benefits
    thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com/

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #AI #benefitsSystem #factCheck #fakeNews #internetMyths #mediaLiteracy #misinformation #politics #SocialMedia #socialMedia #technology #ukWelfare #urbanLegend #viralStories
  4. The “188 Children” Benefits Myth That Won’t Go Away

    Viral stories spread fast online, but not all of them are grounded in fact. Photo credit: Unsplash.

    Dear Cherubs, every so often the internet serves up a story so outrageous it practically begs to be believed. This is one of those cases—and no, it doesn’t survive contact with reality.

    Let’s start with the claim: a man named “Alibana Muhammad” allegedly had 188 children to claim government benefits. It’s dramatic, it’s viral, and it’s also not supported by credible evidence. In fact, there’s no reliable record of a real person by that name linked to such a case in any verified news reporting.

    WHAT’S ACTUALLY GOING ON

    Stories like this tend to follow a familiar pattern. A shocking statistic appears, often tied to welfare systems, immigration, or cultural stereotypes. The details are fuzzy, sources are vague, and yet the claim spreads like it’s breaking news.

    According to fact-checking organizations such as Full Fact and Snopes, similar viral claims about individuals having extreme numbers of children for financial gain are almost always exaggerated or entirely fabricated. The numbers alone should raise eyebrows—188 children would require logistical, biological, and legal circumstances that simply don’t add up in any documented case.

    It’s also worth noting that benefit systems, particularly in countries like the UK, have caps and verification processes. As reported by the UK government, there are limits on how many children qualify for certain benefits, making the idea of someone successfully claiming for nearly 200 children highly implausible.

    WHY THESE STORIES SPREAD

    Here’s the part where things get a bit more human. Outrage travels fast. A story like this taps into existing frustrations about taxes, public spending, and fairness. It’s the kind of content that gets shared with a quick “this can’t be real” — except people rarely stop to check if it actually is.

    As noted by thisclaimer.com, viral “fail” stories and exaggerated claims often gain traction not because they’re true, but because they confirm what people already suspect or fear. It’s giving confirmation bias with a side of chaos.

    There’s also a digital echo chamber effect. Once a claim appears on social media, it gets reposted, reworded, and stripped of any original context. Before long, it feels like common knowledge—even if it started as a misunderstanding or outright fiction.

    THE REALITY CHECK

    Let’s be clear: large families do exist, and welfare systems can be complex. But extreme claims like “188 children for benefits” fall apart under basic scrutiny. No credible outlet—think BBC, The Guardian, or Reuters—has reported such a case.

    If anything, the persistence of this story says more about the internet than it does about reality. It highlights how easily misinformation can spread when it’s packaged as something outrageous and emotionally charged.

    So next time you see a claim that sounds like it belongs in a soap opera rather than real life, it might be worth pausing before hitting share. Not everything that trends is true—and some stories are just… very committed fiction.

    Sources list:
    Full Fact — https://fullfact.org/
    Snopes — https://www.snopes.com/
    UK Government (Benefits and Tax Credits) — https://www.gov.uk/browse/benefits
    thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com/

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #AI #benefitsSystem #factCheck #fakeNews #internetMyths #mediaLiteracy #misinformation #politics #SocialMedia #socialMedia #technology #ukWelfare #urbanLegend #viralStories
  5. The “188 Children” Benefits Myth That Won’t Go Away

    Viral stories spread fast online, but not all of them are grounded in fact. Photo credit: Unsplash.

    Dear Cherubs, every so often the internet serves up a story so outrageous it practically begs to be believed. This is one of those cases—and no, it doesn’t survive contact with reality.

    Let’s start with the claim: a man named “Alibana Muhammad” allegedly had 188 children to claim government benefits. It’s dramatic, it’s viral, and it’s also not supported by credible evidence. In fact, there’s no reliable record of a real person by that name linked to such a case in any verified news reporting.

    WHAT’S ACTUALLY GOING ON

    Stories like this tend to follow a familiar pattern. A shocking statistic appears, often tied to welfare systems, immigration, or cultural stereotypes. The details are fuzzy, sources are vague, and yet the claim spreads like it’s breaking news.

    According to fact-checking organizations such as Full Fact and Snopes, similar viral claims about individuals having extreme numbers of children for financial gain are almost always exaggerated or entirely fabricated. The numbers alone should raise eyebrows—188 children would require logistical, biological, and legal circumstances that simply don’t add up in any documented case.

    It’s also worth noting that benefit systems, particularly in countries like the UK, have caps and verification processes. As reported by the UK government, there are limits on how many children qualify for certain benefits, making the idea of someone successfully claiming for nearly 200 children highly implausible.

    WHY THESE STORIES SPREAD

    Here’s the part where things get a bit more human. Outrage travels fast. A story like this taps into existing frustrations about taxes, public spending, and fairness. It’s the kind of content that gets shared with a quick “this can’t be real” — except people rarely stop to check if it actually is.

    As noted by thisclaimer.com, viral “fail” stories and exaggerated claims often gain traction not because they’re true, but because they confirm what people already suspect or fear. It’s giving confirmation bias with a side of chaos.

    There’s also a digital echo chamber effect. Once a claim appears on social media, it gets reposted, reworded, and stripped of any original context. Before long, it feels like common knowledge—even if it started as a misunderstanding or outright fiction.

    THE REALITY CHECK

    Let’s be clear: large families do exist, and welfare systems can be complex. But extreme claims like “188 children for benefits” fall apart under basic scrutiny. No credible outlet—think BBC, The Guardian, or Reuters—has reported such a case.

    If anything, the persistence of this story says more about the internet than it does about reality. It highlights how easily misinformation can spread when it’s packaged as something outrageous and emotionally charged.

    So next time you see a claim that sounds like it belongs in a soap opera rather than real life, it might be worth pausing before hitting share. Not everything that trends is true—and some stories are just… very committed fiction.

    Sources list:
    Full Fact — https://fullfact.org/
    Snopes — https://www.snopes.com/
    UK Government (Benefits and Tax Credits) — https://www.gov.uk/browse/benefits
    thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com/

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #AI #benefitsSystem #factCheck #fakeNews #internetMyths #mediaLiteracy #misinformation #politics #SocialMedia #socialMedia #technology #ukWelfare #urbanLegend #viralStories
  6. Chīsai-ojisan 小さいおじさん

    #Wss366 bottom

    There, right by the hem of her dress, was a face: round, big yellow eyes; smaller than a child, but bigger than a mouse.

    “It’s under your dress,” I said.

    “What is?”

    “A Tiny Uncle, one of those little old men they used to talk about on TV.”

    She lifted the #bottom of her skirt, revealing only her feet and ankles. “You were dreaming again,” she said.

    “Maybe,” I replied.
    #cryptid
    #NMFic #TootFic #UrbanLegend #MicroFiction

  7. Chīsai-ojisan 小さいおじさん

    #Wss366 bottom

    There, right by the hem of her dress, was a face: round, big yellow eyes; smaller than a child, but bigger than a mouse.

    “It’s under your dress,” I said.

    “What is?”

    “A Tiny Uncle, one of those little old men they used to talk about on TV.”

    She lifted the #bottom of her skirt, revealing only her feet and ankles. “You were dreaming again,” she said.

    “Maybe,” I replied.
    #cryptid
    #NMFic #TootFic #UrbanLegend #MicroFiction

  8. Welcome to #LoveMakeShare for May 2026! Tell us about you, and the things you create!
    I am a web novelist of #Mythpunk, #UrbanFantasy, #HistoricFantasy, #TimeTravel, #Fantasy, and #Yuri-- fueled by #Folklore, #UrbanLegend, and #Creepypasta. I am working on my fourth light novel series: Bijou the #TimeTravelingGhost.

    Bijou the Time-Traveling Ghost

    For Love of a Konbini Idol

    My Girlfriend Almost Got Me Killed (R18)

    Arisu: The Girl Who Saw Ghosts

    I also write Poetry: Waka, Tanka, Renga, and Rengay.
    And I am an urban photographer

    #NMFic

  9. Welcome to #LoveMakeShare for May 2026! Tell us about you, and the things you create!
    I am a web novelist of #Mythpunk, #UrbanFantasy, #HistoricFantasy, #TimeTravel, #Fantasy, and #Yuri-- fueled by #Folklore, #UrbanLegend, and #Creepypasta. I am working on my fourth light novel series: Bijou the #TimeTravelingGhost.

    Bijou the Time-Traveling Ghost

    For Love of a Konbini Idol

    My Girlfriend Almost Got Me Killed (R18)

    Arisu: The Girl Who Saw Ghosts

    I also write Poetry: Waka, Tanka, Renga, and Rengay.
    And I am an urban photographer

    #NMFic

  10. Welcome to #LoveMakeShare for May 2026! Tell us about you, and the things you create!
    I am a web novelist of #Mythpunk, #UrbanFantasy, #HistoricFantasy, #TimeTravel, #Fantasy, and #Yuri-- fueled by #Folklore, #UrbanLegend, and #Creepypasta. I am working on my fourth light novel series: Bijou the #TimeTravelingGhost.

    Bijou the Time-Traveling Ghost

    For Love of a Konbini Idol

    My Girlfriend Almost Got Me Killed (R18)

    Arisu: The Girl Who Saw Ghosts

    I also write Poetry: Waka, Tanka, Renga, and Rengay.
    And I am an urban photographer

    #NMFic

  11. Welcome to #LoveMakeShare for May 2026! Tell us about you, and the things you create!
    I am a web novelist of #Mythpunk, #UrbanFantasy, #HistoricFantasy, #TimeTravel, #Fantasy, and #Yuri-- fueled by #Folklore, #UrbanLegend, and #Creepypasta. I am working on my fourth light novel series: Bijou the #TimeTravelingGhost.

    Bijou the Time-Traveling Ghost

    For Love of a Konbini Idol

    My Girlfriend Almost Got Me Killed (R18)

    Arisu: The Girl Who Saw Ghosts

    I also write Poetry: Waka, Tanka, Renga, and Rengay.
    And I am an urban photographer

    #NMFic

  12. Welcome to #LoveMakeShare for May 2026! Tell us about you, and the things you create!
    I am a web novelist of #Mythpunk, #UrbanFantasy, #HistoricFantasy, #TimeTravel, #Fantasy, and #Yuri-- fueled by #Folklore, #UrbanLegend, and #Creepypasta. I am working on my fourth light novel series: Bijou the #TimeTravelingGhost.

    Bijou the Time-Traveling Ghost

    For Love of a Konbini Idol

    My Girlfriend Almost Got Me Killed (R18)

    Arisu: The Girl Who Saw Ghosts

    I also write Poetry: Waka, Tanka, Renga, and Rengay.
    And I am an urban photographer

    #NMFic

  13. 𝗨𝗿𝗯𝗮𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗱-𝗿𝗲𝗴𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗲𝘂𝗿 𝗝𝗮𝗺𝗶𝗲 𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗸𝘀 (54) 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻

    Filmregisseur Jamie Blanks is overleden. Dat heeft de familie van de Australiër bekendgemaakt in een bericht op sociale media. Blanks (54) was bekend van zogenoemde slasherfilms als Urban Legend (1998) en Valentine (2001).

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55809

    #UrbanLegend #JamieBlanks #Overleden

  14. 𝗨𝗿𝗯𝗮𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗱-𝗿𝗲𝗴𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗲𝘂𝗿 𝗝𝗮𝗺𝗶𝗲 𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗸𝘀 (54) 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻

    Filmregisseur Jamie Blanks is overleden. Dat heeft de familie van de Australiër bekendgemaakt in een bericht op sociale media. Blanks (54) was bekend van zogenoemde slasherfilms als Urban Legend (1998) en Valentine (2001).

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55809

    #UrbanLegend #JamieBlanks #Overleden

  15. 𝗨𝗿𝗯𝗮𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗱-𝗿𝗲𝗴𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗲𝘂𝗿 𝗝𝗮𝗺𝗶𝗲 𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗸𝘀 (54) 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻

    Filmregisseur Jamie Blanks is overleden. Dat heeft de familie van de Australiër bekendgemaakt in een bericht op sociale media. Blanks (54) was bekend van zogenoemde slasherfilms als Urban Legend (1998) en Valentine (2001).

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55809

    #UrbanLegend #JamieBlanks #Overleden

  16. 𝗨𝗿𝗯𝗮𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗱-𝗿𝗲𝗴𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗲𝘂𝗿 𝗝𝗮𝗺𝗶𝗲 𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗸𝘀 (54) 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻

    Filmregisseur Jamie Blanks is overleden. Dat heeft de familie van de Australiër bekendgemaakt in een bericht op sociale media. Blanks (54) was bekend van zogenoemde slasherfilms als Urban Legend (1998) en Valentine (2001).

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55809

    #UrbanLegend #JamieBlanks #Overleden

  17. 𝗨𝗿𝗯𝗮𝗻 𝗟𝗲𝗴𝗲𝗻𝗱-𝗿𝗲𝗴𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗲𝘂𝗿 𝗝𝗮𝗺𝗶𝗲 𝗕𝗹𝗮𝗻𝗸𝘀 (54) 𝗼𝘃𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗲𝗱𝗲𝗻

    Filmregisseur Jamie Blanks is overleden. Dat heeft de familie van de Australiër bekendgemaakt in een bericht op sociale media. Blanks (54) was bekend van zogenoemde slasherfilms als Urban Legend (1998) en Valentine (2001).

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55809

    #UrbanLegend #JamieBlanks #Overleden

  18. For ex-Jehovah's Witnesses of a certain age, I present to you what may be the ground zero of the Smurf in the Kingdom Hall urban legend. Even if you don't know anything about it, this is a hilarious read.

    jehovahs-witness.com/topic/219

    #ExJW #Smurf #JehovahsWitnesses #UrbanLegend

  19. For ex-Jehovah's Witnesses of a certain age, I present to you what may be the ground zero of the Smurf in the Kingdom Hall urban legend. Even if you don't know anything about it, this is a hilarious read.

    jehovahs-witness.com/topic/219

    #ExJW #Smurf #JehovahsWitnesses #UrbanLegend

  20. For ex-Jehovah's Witnesses of a certain age, I present to you what may be the ground zero of the Smurf in the Kingdom Hall urban legend. Even if you don't know anything about it, this is a hilarious read.

    jehovahs-witness.com/topic/219

    #ExJW #Smurf #JehovahsWitnesses #UrbanLegend

  21. For ex-Jehovah's Witnesses of a certain age, I present to you what may be the ground zero of the Smurf in the Kingdom Hall urban legend. Even if you don't know anything about it, this is a hilarious read.

    jehovahs-witness.com/topic/219

    #ExJW #Smurf #JehovahsWitnesses #UrbanLegend

  22. For ex-Jehovah's Witnesses of a certain age, I present to you what may be the ground zero of the Smurf in the Kingdom Hall urban legend. Even if you don't know anything about it, this is a hilarious read.

    jehovahs-witness.com/topic/219

    #ExJW #Smurf #JehovahsWitnesses #UrbanLegend

  23. Una delle più antiche leggende metropolitane (a mia memoria) trae origine dalla sparizione di cinque aerei il 5 dicembre 1945 durante un'esercitazione della Marina statunitense. Ora è passata di moda, superata (a destra) da complottisti del livello di QAnon. Ma ci ha lasciato splendidi B-Movies come questo con interpreti quali John Houston (!) e Gloria Guida (!!!). Il triangolo delle Bermude (1978) - TokyVideo tokyvideo.com/it/video/il-tria

    @spettacoli

    #cinema #urbanlegend

  24. Una delle più antiche leggende metropolitane (a mia memoria) trae origine dalla sparizione di cinque aerei il 5 dicembre 1945 durante un'esercitazione della Marina statunitense. Ora è passata di moda, superata (a destra) da complottisti del livello di QAnon. Ma ci ha lasciato splendidi B-Movies come questo con interpreti quali John Houston (!) e Gloria Guida (!!!). Il triangolo delle Bermude (1978) - TokyVideo tokyvideo.com/it/video/il-tria

    @spettacoli

    #cinema #urbanlegend

  25. Una delle più antiche leggende metropolitane (a mia memoria) trae origine dalla sparizione di cinque aerei il 5 dicembre 1945 durante un'esercitazione della Marina statunitense. Ora è passata di moda, superata (a destra) da complottisti del livello di QAnon. Ma ci ha lasciato splendidi B-Movies come questo con interpreti quali John Houston (!) e Gloria Guida (!!!). Il triangolo delle Bermude (1978) - TokyVideo tokyvideo.com/it/video/il-tria

    @spettacoli

    #cinema #urbanlegend

  26. Una delle più antiche leggende metropolitane (a mia memoria) trae origine dalla sparizione di cinque aerei il 5 dicembre 1945 durante un'esercitazione della Marina statunitense. Ora è passata di moda, superata (a destra) da complottisti del livello di QAnon. Ma ci ha lasciato splendidi B-Movies come questo con interpreti quali John Houston (!) e Gloria Guida (!!!). Il triangolo delle Bermude (1978) - TokyVideo tokyvideo.com/it/video/il-tria

    @spettacoli

    #cinema #urbanlegend

  27. Una delle più antiche leggende metropolitane (a mia memoria) trae origine dalla sparizione di cinque aerei il 5 dicembre 1945 durante un'esercitazione della Marina statunitense. Ora è passata di moda, superata (a destra) da complottisti del livello di QAnon. Ma ci ha lasciato splendidi B-Movies come questo con interpreti quali John Houston (!) e Gloria Guida (!!!). Il triangolo delle Bermude (1978) - TokyVideo tokyvideo.com/it/video/il-tria

    @spettacoli

    #cinema #urbanlegend