Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation

Categories: World |

We present photos that have circled the Internet, claiming to become the most brilliant pictures. In fact, it turned out that all their "genius" is an interesting legend or post—processing in Photoshop.

Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation
Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation

Do you think this is a picture of India during the Diwali holiday, taken from space? No, these are infographics of population growth in different years combined into one image in a graphic editor.

Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation

One bear, two tripods and four running men. The photo gained viral popularity, but the myth was quickly debunked. In fact, the frame is staged, it was shot on the territory of a camping park in Colorado, and the bear was added in Photoshop.

Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation

It's not really Marie Curie. Look, the background in the photo is a school board of the 90s, and the cut of the dress the woman is wearing is not at all similar to the styles popular in the Curie era. The picture shows the actress Susan Marie Frontzak, who played Curie on the theater stage to popularize science. In Togo, Mali and Zambia, this photo was used to create postage stamps.

Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation

Do you think the woman in the photo is saving a magician? Not at all. In the picture you see the culmination of a burlesque show in New Orleans. Evangeline Oyster (the one with the axe) was so upset that her show on the stage of the Bourbon Street club faded into the background after the appearance of Divena the Water Seductress (the one in the aquarium) that in the midst of an underwater striptease jumped on stage and broke the glass of the aquarium with an axe. Divena was shocked, Evangeline was arrested and fined as much as $ 10.

Lies, p*** hedgehog and provocation

The Sun reports that the photographer of the American president found Vladimir Putin in a picture of 1988. In the photo, Ronald Reagan shakes hands with a Soviet boy on Red Square, and a tourist who looks like the Russian president is standing behind him with a camera around his neck.

There is an assumption that the Soviet secret services sent agents to foreign leaders during public events and meetings. According to experts, the main task was to ask tricky questions to foreign leaders in order to embarrass them and maintain the image of their own country. However, according to the official version of Moscow, at that time, KGB Major Putin was in Dresden.

Keywords: Frame | Lie | Provocation | Fake | Photos

     

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