A Metairie woman has caused a Facebook stir with her "Edible Chicken Bears" for you to throw on the pit or toss in the oven. For a few extra bucks, she says she'll even make clothes for the edible chicken bear. But, is she for real?
By now you have probably seen people posting that long copyright message on their Facebook pages—but don't follow in their digital footsteps because its totally fake.
Louisiana State Police has a message for anyone trying to call in a hoax on the thirteenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks that killed more than 3,000 people: just don't do it.
By now you may have seen an image of a woman's infected breast claiming to have "larvae" or "abnormal creatures" growing in and around the nipple in your Facebook News Feed. Don't click it. It's a hoax.
"I hate fake people. It's like they're not there when you're talking to them," says Manti Te’o in this Funny or Die eHarmony parody.
In the latest conspiracy theory propaganda to circulate on Facebook, a heavily shared photo (above) suggests that 'crisis actors' were hired by Homeland Security in an effort to push for gun control. It even points out that one of the parents 'acted' as an attorney for Aurora shooting suspect James Holmes.
2012 has been a year of the Death Hoax....Remember Justin Bieber, Ryan Gosling, Lil Wayne, Chris Brown and Jon Bon Jovi just to name a few. Now, for the latest hoax.....R. Kelly. Reports of R. Kelly's death surfaced online early this morning. It wasn't long before R. Kelly himself, killed the rumor by tweeting a photo of himself, and said "Glad I don't even know how to Jet ski."
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Usher‘s not dead. Twitter told us so. After the R&B superstar fell victim of a death hoax that went viral on the web, he tweeted to let fans know that he is alive and well, and even shared a photo of him flexing his ripped abs to prove it.
A lot of people dislike Chris Brown. A lot of people use the Internet. What happens when these people are one and the same? Yet another Breezy death hoax.