Search Results
6/27/2025, 2:37:10 AM
"people misremembering things" lmao
>fruit of the loom cornucopia
>objects in mirror may be closer than they appear
>berenstain/berenstein bears
>robber emoji
>seahorse emoji
>hiking man emoji
>the kit-kat dash
>febreeze/febreze
>pikachu's tail
>scooby's prominent adam's apple
>monopoly man's monocle
>mirror mirror on the wall/magic mirror on the wall
>the raisin bran mascot's sunglasses
>tinker bell flying over disney castle intro
>stouffer stovetop stuffing apparently never existed
>the position of the kidneys in the body
>skechers/sketchers
>luke, i am your father
"uhhh people remembering things wrong" isn't a valid argument. yes, memory is imperfect, but millions of people have _the same exact_ memory. not "i thought there was a wooden crate in the fruit of the loom logo", not "i thought it was a bunch of vegetables", everyone remembers the same cornucopia. people have conducted blind experiments asking strangers on the street to describe the logo, half or more talk about the cornucopia. no prompting, suggesting, or prior exposure to the mandela effect. if it could be explained with "false memory", everyone would remember something different and there would be no phenomenon.
"uhhh multiverse timeline swaps bro" is plausible yet lazy. there's nothing to suggest this isn't the cause, but does anyone have more interesting/engaging theories to field?
>fruit of the loom cornucopia
>objects in mirror may be closer than they appear
>berenstain/berenstein bears
>robber emoji
>seahorse emoji
>hiking man emoji
>the kit-kat dash
>febreeze/febreze
>pikachu's tail
>scooby's prominent adam's apple
>monopoly man's monocle
>mirror mirror on the wall/magic mirror on the wall
>the raisin bran mascot's sunglasses
>tinker bell flying over disney castle intro
>stouffer stovetop stuffing apparently never existed
>the position of the kidneys in the body
>skechers/sketchers
>luke, i am your father
"uhhh people remembering things wrong" isn't a valid argument. yes, memory is imperfect, but millions of people have _the same exact_ memory. not "i thought there was a wooden crate in the fruit of the loom logo", not "i thought it was a bunch of vegetables", everyone remembers the same cornucopia. people have conducted blind experiments asking strangers on the street to describe the logo, half or more talk about the cornucopia. no prompting, suggesting, or prior exposure to the mandela effect. if it could be explained with "false memory", everyone would remember something different and there would be no phenomenon.
"uhhh multiverse timeline swaps bro" is plausible yet lazy. there's nothing to suggest this isn't the cause, but does anyone have more interesting/engaging theories to field?
Page 1