Girl Scout cookies are accused of containing toxins. Here's why they're still safe to eat
A child would need to eat 9,000 cookies in a day to approach harmful levels of pesticide or naturally occurring heavy metals.
A child would need to eat 9,000 cookies in a day to approach harmful levels of pesticide or naturally occurring heavy metals.
For years, people claimed a video depicted a man finding a secret cave offering a free way into Disneyland. The clip spun up other rumors, as well.
Internet users claimed Leavitt said, "They want you to panic, but Trump wants you to remember Jesus didn't have electricity either."
Musk's father claims to have been influenced by the novel when naming Elon, but the book wasn't published until 2006.
Social media users called for a boycott of Coca-Cola products in response to the company's purported actions.
The alleged lawsuit was reportedly based on comments co-host Sunny Hostin made about Trump's marriage to President Donald Trump.
In the footage, the U.S. president allegedly said people had been waiting "for years" for such an intervention.
In February 2025, Ye shared the image on his X account, writing, "I used to be woke too."
A senator from Vermont claimed Elon Musk's Starlink received "millions" from the humanitarian aid agency.
The photo of the supposed sign, appearing on Reddit in February 2025, displayed a "security notice" for DFW International Airport.
By mid-February 2025, Trump had signed 279 executive orders (220 in first term, 59 in second), surpassing Obama's 276 over two terms.
Trump supporters argued he was cheered. Detractors claimed he was booed. Both were correct.
The purported post circulated only in the form of one screenshot with the same number of likes and and shares.
The president did post about Super Bowl LIX, but did not blame DEI or USAID for the Kansas City Chiefs' loss.
A picture of a man giving the "double birds" to the president received tens of millions of social media views in February 2025.
Versions of the quote have circulated on social media since at least 2017.
Eagles fans celebrated in Philadelphia's streets on Jan. 26 after their team secured a place in the 2025 Super Bowl.
We talked to the Ohio protester in 2020 to find out the story behind the sign.
Some social media posts claimed the man’s name was “Tyrone ‘F*** The Klan’ Johnson.”