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The company has, as well, officially weighed in on the claim. On June 26, 2023, the company tweeted an image from a USA Today crossword puzzle that included the clue "Fruit of the ____ (company ...
“The Mandela effect is real, the cornucopia in our logo is not,” Fruit of the Loom wrote in a post from 2023. In a study published in 2022, ...
It’s the same with Fruit of the Loom: so many people are convinced they saw the cornucopia growing up that it is considered a mass delusion, or the Mandela Effect.
The fact checking site found the cornucopia labels people were posting to the internet came from two sources - an 2017 Imgur image and an 2022 April Fools joke by the company itself.
However, that is a fabrication, not the actual Fruit of the Loom logo. The perception of a cornucopia goes back decades. For example, a 1994 piece in a local Florida paper about the actor, Samuel ...
Updates. UPDATE [Jan. 2, 2024]: Added new research and information regarding the claims that there is either photographic or legal proof that the Fruit of the Loom logo once included a cornucopia.
However, that is a fabrication, not the actual Fruit of the Loom logo. The perception of a cornucopia goes back decades. For example, a 1994 piece in a Florida newspaper about the actor Samuel ...
On March 10, 2024, a user on X (formerly known as Twitter) challenged the veracity of a January 2022 post from the clothing company Fruit of the Loom. The company had reminded the Internet, two years ...
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