VERA FILES FACT CHECK: Jet Li NOT dead, video a HOAX
A Filipino Facebook user published a reel claiming international action star Jet Li has died, including a photo of his alleged funeral as proof. This is fake.
A Filipino Facebook user published a reel claiming international action star Jet Li has died, including a photo of his alleged funeral as proof. This is fake.
A Facebook page posted an article supposedly based on an interview with Health Undersecretary Maria Rosario Vergeire endorsing a product that claims to treat hypertension and other blood pressure-related conditions. The website article is fabricated.
A vlogger posted a video with a title falsely insinuating that former president Rodrigo Duterte criticized President Ferdinand “Bongbong” Marcos’ performance in his first year in office.
Several Facebook pages and netizens posted video compilations claiming to show the five passengers aboard the Titan submersible moments before it imploded on its way to the Titanic wreckage. These are false.
A video erroneously claiming a cataclysmic event will strike Leyte and nearby towns with a series of volcanic eruptions triggering tsunamis was posted on Facebook. The Office of Civil Defense debunked this.
A Facebook page posing as SM Megamall uploaded a video promoting an unregistered niacinamide toothpaste.
A video claiming to show what happened to the Titan submersible, including an audio recording of the final words of its passengers, was uploaded by a Facebook page. This is not true.
An impostor Facebook (FB) page posted an announcement supposedly from the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) saying that the difficulty level of the next Licensure Examination for Professional Teachers (LEPT) will be reduced. This is fabricated. Published on June 3, the still-circulating post was uploaded by a page pretending to be affiliated with the national government’s […]
A Facebook page uploaded a video containing old audio clips and claimed they were from the Titan submersible that imploded in its descent to the Titanic wreckage last week. Not true. The audio clips came from viral videos that circulated online before the incident took place.
A website imitating CNN Philippines posted an article on a product for joint diseases supposedly formulated by former National Task Force against COVID-19 special adviser Tony Leachon. This story is fabricated. Circulating on Facebook (FB) as early as April, the site featured an interview of internist and cardiologist Leachon with CNN Philippines anchor Pinky Webb. […]