Which of these statements, lifted from a newspaper, is true?
The New Yorker has parted ways with its art critic (Jackson Arn) after the Condé Nast-owned magazine received complaints that he behaved dishonorably and made people "uncomfortable" with his allegedly “inappropriate” behavior at the periodical's 100th anniversary party in February.
Don Lemon claims women at CNN sexually harassed him, including one who touched his nipples.
Rosie O'Donnell, who will turrn sixty-three next week, revealed that she is moving to Ireland for "a nexus of reasons, tax benefits being one, but also my lifelong love of Yeats, Keats, and Gerard Manley Hopkins."
“I’m gutted," Amanda Gorman siad. "Because of one parent’s complaint, my inaugural poem, The Hill We Climb, has been banned from an elementary school in Miami-Dade County, Florida.”
“Heroin, it’s my wife and it’s my life,” the late Lou Reed confided. "So what? Everyone knows Freud took cocaine, Nitetzsche opium, and Picasso hashish. Carl Sagan smoked pot, and it wouldn't surprise me if these computer geniuses, Steve Jobs and Bill Gates, took LSD."
POTUS posted: “The ‘Pardons’ that Sleepy Joe Biden gave to the Unselect Committee of Political Thugs, and many others, are hereby declared VOID, VACANT, AND OF NO FURTHER FORCE OR EFFECT, because of the fact that they were done by Autopen.”
Admitting he had lied when he bragged to have cooked for multiple US presidents in the White House, TV chef Washington Irving pled guilty to the lesser charge of hiring a female cook to dress up like Aunt Jemima.
Three cheers for journalism!
These gossip snippets offer a mix of truth, scandal, and absurdity, illustrating how rumors can blur reality in the media. The line between fact and fiction often feels dangerously thin in today's news cycle.
Posted by: Workie | March 20, 2025 at 06:10 AM