Once again, the internet is ablaze with conspiracy theories surrounding Kate Middleton – this time about her ‘rumoured’ cancer diagnosis and recovery.
Some of the thinking is that law enforcement’s failure to act is a sign that the apparent assassination attempt was coordinated by the “deep state”.
Surprisingly, it wasn’t aliens.
Justin Mohn was charged with first-degree murder and abusing a body after police discovered the headless body of Michael Mohn in the toilet of his home.
An author remembers the experience of his father, a cattle farmer who shot to infamy after recounting, during a hypnosis session, the alien abductions that would regularly occur on his farm.
Did Meghan really get to see her father-in-law being crowned king of the planet, or did the planet just insult a Grateful Dead-looking old man?
Some conspiracy theorists believe that another art installation in Concourse C represents the ruins of a post-apocalyptic city.
If this holds true, the characters’ phones in Succession might just be the most obvious easter egg yet.
The 15-year-old boy has apparently recovered from his coma and has no memory of the day his family jumped to their deaths.
Fans are spiralling after seeing a video of Katy Perry’s eye twitching freakily during her recent Las Vegas concert.
Despite the fact that unvaccinated Americans account for virtually all recent COVID-19 hospitalisations and deaths, there is still a great deal of hesitancy.
There is so much misinformation doing the rounds these days that it’s sometimes difficult to separate fact from fiction, if you don’t know what to look out for.
Gareth Cliff is in trouble with the BCCSA after he interviewed a conspiracy theorist who believes that the world is run by lizard people, and that COVID-19 is a hoax.
New Zealand doesn’t tolerate nonsense, and deputy prime minister Winston Peters was very quick to shut down an American COVID-19 denier who popped up at a public meeting.
‘Plandemic’, videos of so-called medical experts talking about how the virus is a hoax, Bill Gates injecting tracking devices via a vaccine, 5G – yes, more so now than ever, we are surrounded by wilful ignorance.
Mysterious lights appeared in the sky over the municipality of Magé in Brazil last week, sparking panic and conspiracy theories.
The coronavirus pandemic is ripe for the spread of conspiracy theories and misinformation, and any trip down the rabbit hole can get weird pretty quickly.