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  • At the end of my video on misconceptions,

  • I mentioned the supposed fact that people swallow 8 spiders a year while sleeping,

  • but unlike the other misconceptions in that video which I explained away,

  • I turned this one into a cheap joke and left it at that.

  • This wasn't because it's true, but because the story behind that myth turns out to be a bit of a mystery.

  • The first place that I remember coming across the 8 Spiders fact was years ago on the lid of a Snapple can.

  • Snapple used to print facts of dubious value on their drinks, and though they've tried to hide it,

  • The Wayback Machine reveals that, "8 Spiders," was one of them.

  • Take a trip to Snopes.com, the go-to site for debunking urban legends of all kinds,

  • and, sure enough, the 8-Spiders-A-Year thing is listed.

  • Scroll down and Snopes says the story comes from Lisa Holst in 1993, when email was still fairly new

  • for most people and messages with subjects like:

  • RE:RE:FWD:RE:RE:FWD: AMAZING FACTS!!

  • were a higher proportion of network traffic.

  • Lisa Holst, says Snopes, wrote an article called, "Reading is Believing," in PC Professional, listing all kinds of made up facts that people would believe,

  • and 8-Spiders-A-Year was one of them. This, I thought,

  • was the perfect misconception to finish the video, like a little moral on why you should be less credulous.

  • Out of interest, I went looking for the article to see what other fake facts she mentioned,

  • but Googling for her brought up nothing.

  • Well, not literarily nothing, but nothing helpful; moslty it's other articles debunking the 8-Spiders myth

  • using the exact same language as the Snopes article, which looks suspicious.

  • Intrigued, I contacted Snopes myself about their source, but got back a formed reply.

  • I don't know if ignoring their contact form is their usual way of doing business,

  • along with copy-paste blocking and pop-under-ads,

  • but it seemed odd for a site dedicated to exposing the truth.

  • Further digging yielded other articles about people like myself, trying to find Lisa Holst and verify Snopes' version of the story.

  • There's a page on Metafilter and Stack Exchange and even a website called eightspiders.com that went looking for her.

  • The guy who runs that last one even went so far as to contact the Library of Congress, who said they didn't know of any magazine called, "PC Professional."

  • Which leaves us in an odd, XKCD kind-of mood about Snopes.

  • If the Lisa Holst-version of the story is real, then why can't anyone find any record of her or her article?

  • And, if it's not real, is it just a mistake on Snopes' part?

  • If so, why haven't they replied to any of the people who brought it to their attention?

  • Or, perhaps we've gone through the looking glass, and the Lisa-Holst-made-up-the-8-Spiders-fact IS the myth,

  • promulgated by none other that Snopes themselves.

  • It wouldn't be the first time, as Snopes does have a purposely fake article on the site claiming that Mr. Ed was actually a zebra.

  • I wasn't able to go any further than this, but if you happen to know anything about Lisa Holst or the deal with Snopes,

  • please feel free to get in touch.

At the end of my video on misconceptions,

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リサ・ホルストを探して (Re: 10の誤解徹底解説) (Looking for Lisa Holst (Re: 10 Misconceptions Rundown))

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    稲葉白兎 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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