5/15/26

Thought of the day


Ah, the era of the "friend of a friend" stories. Before the Internet could fact-check everything in seconds, urban legends spread through school hallways and slumber parties like wildfire. I was listening to a podcast that talked about some of the "stories" we heard and believed. 
Do you remember any of these?
Is there another urban legend that I missed? 

1. The Rod Stewart / Celebrity Stomach Pump Legend

Perhaps the most enduring celebrity rumor, it claimed that Rod Stewart (or sometimes Marc Almond or Lil’ Kim) had to have his stomach pumped after consuming a massive quantity of semen.

  • The Origin: Stewart believes the rumor was a retaliatory strike by a publicist he had recently fired.

2. The Jamie Lee Curtis is a Hermaphrodite Rumor

Throughout the 80s and 90s, a persistent rumor claimed that Jamie Lee Curtis was born with ambiguous genitalia or was intersex.

  • The "Proof": People often pointed to her androgynous name or her short haircut in A Fish Called Wanda.

  • The Reality: There has never been any evidence to support this. It’s a prime example of how the public used to "theorize" about celebrities who didn't fit traditional gender stereotypes of the time.

3. The Kidney Heist

This one was the ultimate 90s travel nightmare. The story usually goes: a man meets a beautiful woman at a bar, they have a drink, and he wakes up the next morning in a hotel bathtub filled with ice. There’s a phone next to him with a note: "Call 911 or you will die."

  • The Legend: He discovers a surgical incision where one of his kidneys has been harvested for the black market.

  • The Reality: While organ trafficking is a real crime, this specific "bathtub of ice" scenario has been debunked by law enforcement agencies across the globe for decades.

4. The Procter & Gamble is Satanic Panic

During the height of the "Satanic Panic" in the 80s, rumors swirled that the president of Procter & Gamble appeared on The Phil Donahue Show and admitted the company funneled profits to the Church of Satan.

  • The "Proof": People claimed the old P&G logo (the Man in the Moon with 13 stars) contained hidden "666" imagery.

  • The Reality: The CEO never appeared on the show, and the company eventually sued several individuals for spreading the libelous rumor. They eventually changed the logo just to stop the headaches.

5. Richard Gere and the Gerbil

Perhaps the most famous "ER visit" legend of all time, after Rod Stewart. The story claimed that Richard Gere was admitted to a Los Angeles hospital to have a gerbil removed from a certain... anatomical location.

  • The Reality: There is absolutely no hospital record, medical staff testimony, or shred of physical evidence that this ever happened. It was a pre-Internet meme that simply wouldn't die.

5. Pop Rocks and Mikey

The 80s were terrified of Pop Rocks. The legend claimed that "Little Mikey" (the kid from the Life cereal commercials) died after eating a large amount of Pop Rocks and washing them down with a six-pack of soda, causing his stomach to explode.

  • The Reality: The actor who played Mikey, John Gilchrist, is very much alive. The carbon dioxide in Pop Rocks isn't nearly enough to cause a "blowout," though it might give you a pretty impressive burp.


Meme dump






I will persevere.
I will keep moving forward.
I will be the stream. 

Comments

  1. I only remember the P&G thing and the kidney thefts. Interesting about Jamie Lee Curtis. She's always been my "girl crush". That is a great looking deck!

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    1. Nothing but the best and biggest decks on this blog.

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  2. Duh
    Richard Gere. Unforgettable. The kidney? Forever terrified of that one.
    I missed the satanic panic, though.

    XOXO

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    1. I vaguely remember the satanic one because of the logo.

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  3. I've heard of all of these. I really need to get a life. Oops, too late. I guess I'll keep the one I've lived already. I remember having to look up gerbil to see what it was. Mind you, I was married with young children at this time. I barely knew what a hamster was. We had stray dogs, cats, and an occasional bunny or two when I was growing up. That's my excuse and I'm sticking to it!

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    1. Sounds legitimate to me, Deedles.

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  4. I hadn't thought about some of those urban legends for years. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

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  5. I heard them all, or variations of the all, at different times. Love that last meme with the t-shirt, LOL!

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    1. The t-shirt meme is outstanding.

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  6. I don't remember any of them except for the gerbil. lol

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    1. The gerbil one is hard to forget.

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  7. I had forgotten about some of the these. Ha, I love the Rod Stewart actually commented on the one about him.

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    1. I didn't realize he had commented until I put together the blog post.

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  8. I have heard them all and believed none of them.

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    1. I wish I could say the same, Bob, but for some reason a gallon of cum seem perfectly reasonable to my young mind.

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  9. I lived a sheltered life. I’ve only heard a version of the kidney stealing though it never involved tubs or ice.

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    1. I don't think you missed out on too much, Ed.

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  10. The gerbil one was going around as a joke years ago. I thought I had posted it but can't find it.

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    1. It is one of those that seems to get reinvented with every new generation.

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  11. I remember all of those legends except the Curtis and Gere ones. I remember trying to tell the Rod Stewart one at the school bus stop but being too embarrassed to actually say the word 'semen' or any other description. LOL! Do you remember the Entenmann's legend that it was owned by Mormons? That was back in the 80's. Nobody today would care!

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    1. I vaguely remember the Mormon one and we hear quite a few new ones every so often about the LDS because we live in Idaho and they are nearby.

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  12. Either I have a very bad memory (totally plausible) or lived in too small of a town to hear those urban legends. Don't remember any of them, ha.

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