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Your favourite Urban Legend?

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I was on my way to the post office to pick up my case of free M&M's (sent to me because I forwarded an e-mail to five other people, celebrating the fact that the year 2000 is "MM" in Roman numerals), when I ran into a friend whose neighbor, a young man, was home recovering from having been served a rat in his bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken (which is predictable, since as everyone knows, there's no actual chicken in Kentucky Fried Chicken, which is why the government made them change their name to KFC).

Anyway, one day this guy went to sleep and when he awoke he was in his bathtub and it was full of ice and he was sore all over and when he got out of the tub he realized that HIS KIDNEY HAD BEEN STOLEN. He saw a note on his mirror that said "Call 911!" but he was afraid to use his phone because it was connected to his computer, and there was a virus on his computer that would destroy his hard drive if he opened an e-mail entitled "Join the crew!"

He knew it wasn't a hoax because he himself was a computer programmer who was working on software to prevent a global disaster in which all the computers get together and distribute the $250.00 Neiman-Marcus cookie recipe under the leadership of Bill Gates. (It's true - I read it all last week in a mass e-mail from BILL GATES HIMSELF, who was also promising me a free Disney World vacation and $5,000 if I would forward the e-mail to everyone I know.)

The poor man then tried to call 911 from a pay phone to report his missing kidneys, but a voice on the line first asked him to press #90, which unwittingly gave the bandit full access to the phone line at the guy's expense. Then reaching into the coin-return slot he got jabbed with an HIV-infected needle around which was wrapped a note that said, "<I>Welcome to the world of AIDS</I>."

Luckily he was only a few blocks from the hospital - the one where that little boy who is dying of cancer is, the one whose last wish is for everyone in the world to send him an e-mail and the American Cancer Society has agreed to pay him a nickel for every e-mail he receives. I sent him two e-mails and one of them was a bunch of x's and o's in the shape of an angel (if you get it and forward it to more than 10 people, you will have good luck but for only 10 people you will only have OK luck and if you send it to fewer than 10 people you will have BAD LUCK FOR SEVEN YEARS).

So anyway the poor guy tried to drive himself to the hospital, but on the way he noticed another car driving without its lights on. To be helpful, he flashed his lights at him and was promptly shot as part of a gang initiation.

Send THIS to all the friends who send you their mail and you will receive 4 green M&Ms -- if you don't, the owner of Proctor and Gamble will report you to his Satanist friends and you will have more bad luck: you will get sick from the Sodium Laureth Sulfate in your shampoo, your spouse will develop a skin rash from using the antiperspirant which clogs the pores under your arms, and the U.S. government will put a tax on your e-mails forever.

I know this is all true 'cause I read it on the Internet.
 
Wow I cant believe nobody used this one yet.............

I heard this one from three friends who all swore they read it in a Detroit newspaper a few years ago (around 1994)...
A Detroit woman lived alone with her collie. On her 30th birthday, some of her friends snuck into her house to throw her a surprise party when she came home from work. They all hid in the basement and kept the collie downstairs with them.

They heard the woman come home and move around the house a bit. Then she called for her dog, and the collie began to bark from the basement. The friends opened the basement door, but THEY got the surprise: the woman was naked, and covered in peanut butter! (One part of her anatomy was particularly peanut-buttered, at least according to my vulgar friend.)

That night, the woman shot herself, unable to live with the embarrassment. Her suicide, my friend says, is why the story made it into the newspaper.
 
Originally posted by: aircooled
Originally posted by: Skyclad1uhm1
Religion. It fools billions.
Wow, only took two replies.
rolleye.gif


ZV
 
Originally posted by: dman
the one where kids drive around in cars at night w/o lights on and the first person to flash their lights at them they hunt down and kill as part of a gang initiation.

You think thats a legend??? You must not be from Rockford, huh? 😀
 
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: new2AMD
razor blade in the apple

Yeah, that's a pretty timely one too, with halloween coming up. Amazing that it's never happened, yet millions of parents won't allow their kids to receive healthy snacks on halloween for fear that there are razors or pins or poison in the apple (ala sleeping beauty).

Most people, upon finding out that something is an urban legend, regard it as silly that they believed it in the first place. The razor thing.... parents seem to think that urban legend or not, it's happening all over the place.

Snopes says it's true. Maybe you're the ones fooled?
 
Originally posted by: cpals
Originally posted by: DrPizza
Originally posted by: new2AMD
razor blade in the apple

Yeah, that's a pretty timely one too, with halloween coming up. Amazing that it's never happened, yet millions of parents won't allow their kids to receive healthy snacks on halloween for fear that there are razors or pins or poison in the apple (ala sleeping beauty).

Most people, upon finding out that something is an urban legend, regard it as silly that they believed it in the first place. The razor thing.... parents seem to think that urban legend or not, it's happening all over the place.

Snopes says it's true. Maybe you're the ones fooled?

Read beyond the "TRUE" in snopes...
As Best and Horiuchi (authors of the Razor Blade) note, more than 75 percent of reported cases involved no injury, and detailed followups in 1972 and 1982 concluded that virtually all the reports were hoaxes concocted by the children or parents. Thus this legend type seems to have grown out of a tradition of ostensive hoaxes relying on an understood oral tradition, rather than on any core of authenticated incidents.

So, while there has been at least 1 or 2 documented cases of this actually happening in the past 50 years (making it technically true).... Most of the fear is due to it as an urban legend. Good grief... I have people coming to my door who write down my address and what is given to their kid before they get the candy... Millions of dollars are wasted x-raying candy each year to prove it's safe...
 
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