Today a regular at the cigar lounge hands me his phone and says read this, I wasn't sure what to make of it, it sounded too good or too terrible to be true.
He was however very convinced.
Grow muscle without even exercising, 165% increase in higher brain functions so on and so forth.
When another friend and I tried to Google the same article, neither one of us could find it, was supposed to be Tom Brady banned from the NFL for using some drug or food supplement, the alleged ESPN article was unfindable.
So I get home hours later and give it another try, found the article below.
No, Those Fake ESPN Stories About Tom Brady And J.J. Watt Doing Drugs Aren't Real
Tim Marchman
1/20/16 7:34pm
https://deadspin.com/no-those-fake-espn-stories-about-tom-brady-and-j-j-wa-1754149481
Quote:
If you’ve used the internet over the past year and a half or so—and especially if you’ve visited the front page of Yahoo in that time—you may have seen some strange, seemingly ESPN-branded stories about NFL stars getting caught up in scandals you’ve never heard about anywhere else and promoting the use of sketchy nutritional supplements. Earlier today, reader James wrote in to point out one such story:......................
The main question here is whether ESPN is unaware this is going on, doesn’t care, or just has no idea what to do about it......................
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Quote:
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............Ryan Hasman (the author) obviously doesn’t exist
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How is it three years after this Fake News was started it's still making it's way into our lives?
.
Messing with politics is one thing, leave the NFL and NASCAR (
another thing he fell for) alone.