Author: | Alex Palmer | ISBN: | 9781435166288 |
Publisher: | Fall River Press | Publication: | October 9, 2017 |
Imprint: | Fall River Press | Language: | English |
Author: | Alex Palmer |
ISBN: | 9781435166288 |
Publisher: | Fall River Press |
Publication: | October 9, 2017 |
Imprint: | Fall River Press |
Language: | English |
Did you hear that Pope Francis endorsed Trump? Or that you have to pay to perform “Happy Birthday to You” in public? How about that the Soviet Union once banned microwaves out of fear that they were spreading diseases? These are all totally true things!* Everyone is saying so.
There’s a lot of weird news out there today (thanks, Internet!). But given the speed of modern media, often these stories get disseminated faster than they can be fact-checked. As Mark Twain once said, “a lie can travel halfway around the world before the truth gets its boots on.” (Actually, that’s been attributed to about a half-dozen different people in various publications, but still, the point remains.)
In Alternative Facts, author Alex Palmer (*Weird-o-pedia*) collects 200 of the oddest stories he could find, ranging from history to pop culture and science, which have been disseminated over the years, whether true or not. You’ll have to flip to the back of the book to find out which ones were real and which were not; but you couldn’t be fooled that easily, right?
[* Actually, just one of those things is really really true; can you guess which one?]
Did you hear that Pope Francis endorsed Trump? Or that you have to pay to perform “Happy Birthday to You” in public? How about that the Soviet Union once banned microwaves out of fear that they were spreading diseases? These are all totally true things!* Everyone is saying so.
There’s a lot of weird news out there today (thanks, Internet!). But given the speed of modern media, often these stories get disseminated faster than they can be fact-checked. As Mark Twain once said, “a lie can travel halfway around the world before the truth gets its boots on.” (Actually, that’s been attributed to about a half-dozen different people in various publications, but still, the point remains.)
In Alternative Facts, author Alex Palmer (*Weird-o-pedia*) collects 200 of the oddest stories he could find, ranging from history to pop culture and science, which have been disseminated over the years, whether true or not. You’ll have to flip to the back of the book to find out which ones were real and which were not; but you couldn’t be fooled that easily, right?
[* Actually, just one of those things is really really true; can you guess which one?]