- Bitterwood
Alternate:
Pinhead: "I'll tear your soul apart"
Current:
Pinhead: "We'll tear your soul apart"
Hellraiser 1987
Pinhead made his first terrifying appearance in Clive Barker's 1987 Hellraiser movie.
He was played by Doug Bradley, a classically trained stage actor friend of Barker's, and boy did this experience show in the chilling way he delivered his lines.
It's one on those lines - perhaps his most famous one - which is the subject of a Mandela Effect.
Did he say "I'll" or "We'll" tear your soul apart when he was talking to Kirsty? Viewing the movie today, he clearly says "We'll", but many remember him saying "I'll". There is a popular internet meme with him saying "I'll" too.
- Carter Tweed
Alternate:
TV showed panic and people dropping in the streets in Wuhan
Current:
TV did not show panic and people dropping in the streets in Wuhan
Covid-19: TV showed Wuhan mass panic?
2020 was the year of the global lockdowns due to the Covid 19 pandemic, with the sign of everyone wearing a face mask becoming the new normal.
When the outbreak was first reported, it was shown to be from Wuhan with reports of it suspected to have originated in a bat. However, there are also reports that the TV at the time showed much more, with mass panic and people falling in the streets as the army moved in to control the chaos. Whilst there are some reports from this time online, none of the kind people remember seeing are available now. Certainly, as Covid spread throughout the world, its effects, whilst serious, were nothing like as dramatic anywhere else.
Is this a 2020 Mandela Effect, or is something else going on such as censorship after the event?
- Ian Scott
Alternate:
Paul Revere rode the streets shouting "The British are coming!"
Current:
Paul Revere did not ride the streets shouting "The British are coming!"
Paul Revere's midnight run
Americans are familiar with the Henry Wadsworth Longfellow poem describing how Paul Revere made a midnight run on his horse, alerting the streets with his cry "The British are coming!". This is so ingrained it's become a major focal point of the history of the American revolution.
There's a problem though. Almost nothing in the story is true. For a start, he wasn't alone - there were two others with him - and he never made it to the end because he was stopped by a British soldier. He did escape, but without his horse, so walked back to Lexington where he then saw the fighting had begun. It wasn't him who actually succeeded in warning the American troops in Concord of the imminent arrival of the British, it was one of his companions. The other got lost in the dark.
- Roy Rodriguez
Alternate:
AT&T made the first public video call in the 1970's
Current:
The Nazis made the first public video call in 1936
Who made the first public video call?
The Covid-19 pandemic has caused a massive boost in the use of video conferencing technology.
This is because the social distancing rules mean most people are advised to work from home. Video conferencing helps with this tremendously, and like every technology, it has a history.
The idea itself first emerged in the 1870's, and was in the realm of science fiction. There was even a recognisable term for it: videotelephony. Various research projects made some progress alongside the invention of the television, but most involved just two transmitters and receivers, so weren't switchable in the way the term "public" meant. The first actual public one which could be described this way, because each party could connect to any of several different parties on the same network, was actually created in 1936 and known as the Gegensehn-Fernsprechanlagen system, It connected the cities of Berlin and Leipzig, and the governing party of the day was indeed the Nazi party.
- Eve Clemmons
Alternate:
Defibrillators can revive flatlined patients
Current:
Defibrillators can't revive flatlined patients
Defibrillators on flatlined patients?
We've all seen the scenes in movies and TV shows where a patient is lying still, and a monitor beside them makes a constant tone as the activity line remains flat. Then a doctor or nurse calls "Clear!" and the electric pads are applied, only for the patient to stir back to life as the monitor shows the line has peaks again.
The problem? Medical experts will confirm this doesn't happen. The electric shock is to stabilise a heart which isn't beating correctly, not to revive one which has stopped. This myth is so widespread in the media because it contains so much drama. There's nothing better to move a story along, or give one a happy ending, than a character being brought back to life. Unfortunately, that's just not how it is in this case.
- Helen Phillips
Alternate:
Real Ninjas always wore black
Current:
Real Ninjas did not wear black
Ninjas were masters of disguise
The ninja is the legendary figure feared throughout history for their agility, stealth and above all superior fighting skills.
They are always depicted in an entirely black outfit with just a small slit for their eyes. They usually brandish various weapons such as one or two swords, a set of nunchaku or even the dreaded "flying star" shurikens.
There's a big problem with this picture, however. Ninjas did exist, and are well documented as a kind of mercenary force performing special missions where the army or Samurai were not best suited, for example espionage.To achieve this, they were renowned masters of disguise, often blending in perfectly with ordinary people, workers or government officials. You see the problem here? Any kind of instantly recognisable outfit would make this role completely useless. The impression given throughout history is wrong.
- Cory Grajales
Alternate:
Motto was "Do no evil"
Current:
Motto was "Don't be evil"
What was Google's motto?
There were many other search engines around before Google, with a few notables being Yahoo, AltaVista and Lycos. Google wasn't really considered amongst them until 1998, but even from it's early days it strove to be different, and from the year 2000 it included a mission "motto". This was a cute phrase which encapsulated the whole company ethos, and the one it used was widely seen as a sly dig at Microsoft, because it those days that was the computing giant with a colorful history, whilst Google was the plucky new upstart.
The motto it used then was abandoned in 2018 following the Alphabet restructure, which it performed largely to mitigate against future anti-trust problems. There is confusion, however, over exactly what the original motto was, with many remembering 'Do no evil' and many also remembering "Don't be evil".