12/13/2025 - Who's Not On Board For 6-7 and Conspiracy Theories.
- bribriny
- 49 minutes ago
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Saturday 12/13/25
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In-N-Out Burger has officially retired the number "67" from its ticket order system, amid the viral “6-7” trend.

PEOPLE confirms that the West Coast burger chain has quietly removed "67" from orders, much to the detriment of the throngs of adolescents who've been lining up to eagerly await the number being called.
One commenter says they “didn't think much of” the “67” removal, to which someone replied, “You’re presumably over the age of 15.”
But Wendy's and Pizza Hut have gone the opposite direction and gotten on board with the trend adding a “67-cent Frosty deal” and “67-cent wings" to their respective menus.
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When it comes to conspiracy theories, there is no shortage of weird and wacky “alternative truths” out there. But although it is easy to dismiss conspiracy theories as “unhinged beliefs held by a small number of paranoid idiots”, said New Scientist, they are in fact the product of normal human psychology.
Social Media sure doesn't help.
TheWeek.com has some of the most intriguing and bizarre.
Denver airport is home to Illuminati and lizard people.
Depending on who you believe, Denver International Airport is actually a hidden lair for Nazis, members of the New World Order or an underground colony of lizard people.
Depending on who you believe, Denver International Airport is actually a hidden lair for Nazis, members of the New World Order or an underground colony of lizard people.
They get it and lean into it, during recent renovations, with one display reading: “What are we doing behind this wall? Adding new restaurants … or hiding the Illuminati?”
Speaking of the Illuminati..a powerful elite secret society influencing the world, and one of the longest-running and most widespread conspiracy theories of all time.
Conspiracy theories began almost the moment the secret society was banned, by Karl Theodor, the Duke of Bavaria, in 1785. In 1797, Jesuit priest Augustin Barruel claimed the Illuminati were behind The French Revolution, and the order was the “bogeyman” of the fledgling US republic, according to AP News.
The government controls the weather and climate for sinister purposes.
Avril Lavigne was replaced with a clone
When a Brazilian pop fan published a blog post titled “Avril Está Morta” (“Avril is Dead”) in 2011, few thought it would spark a global conspiracy theory that persists to this day.
It claimed that Canadian singer Avril Lavigne died in 2003 and that her “record company used Melissa Vandella – Lavigne’s doppelganger who was supposedly hired to pose as Lavigne for paparazzi – in her place to profit off of her celebrity”, said Rolling Stone.
The only problem is that, as Buzzfeed explained in an article titled “Here’s How I Accidentally Made An Old Avril Lavigne Death Hoax Go Viral,” the original Brazilian post made it clear at the beginning that it was created to show “how conspiracy theories can look true”.
The Moon landings were a hoax.
Neil Armstrong’s giant leap kicked off one of the most persistent conspiracy theories of the 20th century – that the 1969 landings, and all those that followed, were faked by Nasa and that no human being has ever set foot on the surface of the moon.
Some remain adamant that film director Stanley Kubrick was hired to produce the footage after his experience on “2001: A Space Odyssey”.
Elvis is alive
Music legend Elvis Presley died on 16 August 1977 – or did he? If one conspiracy theory is to be believed, the King of rock ’n’ roll faked his own death and now works as a groundsman in Graceland.
One leading theory is that a preacher from Arkansas named Bob Joyce may be Elvis, or “at least a doppelgänger who bears an uncanny resemblance”, said International Business Times. Believers claim Joyce has “striking similarities in his appearance, voice, and mannerisms”, linking him to the music star. His sons, too, look “eerily” like the singer.
Elvis would be 90 today.
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