We won't have the back story for all of them, but in this case the original poster later claimed "part" of this story was true, but later deleted his account.
Proof that you shouldn't make enemies with someone who is skilled with Photoshop. This looks straight off the BBC News website even though they never published the article. We wonder
Even Taylor Swift herself caught wind of this weird and random internet falsehood. She responded by posting a Polaroid of herself wearing a yellow shirt with the words
We're not saying all the funny kids notes and test answers aren't funny, but since we're on the subject, you've got to have a healthy amount of doubt about how
Back in 2013 (when Pinterest was still cool) Pinterest user Emily Pattinson created a board called "Real Taylor Swift Quotes" with quotes superimposed over wistful images of TSwift.
And then they went on a shopping spree and Bey paid for everything and then they went skipping down the yellow brick road and Beyonce asked for a collab...
The old saying, "don't believe everything you read," has never been more true since the internet came into being.
Obviously we've heard The Gigantic Toupee-Wearing Tangerine we elected President yelling about "fake news" for months now, but that is not a new idea. People have been lying online since the days of "1000 Free Hours of AOL" CDs.
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