Was That Fake? - #NoCaps in Las Vegas welcome sign

Was That Fake?

Did God really tell a guy to buy a fourth private jet? Not just any jet, but a Dassault Falcon 7X worth $54 million. Pastor Jesse Duplantis is claiming that God personally told him that he doesn't have to pay for the aircraft but he says it is not about possession but priority. Pastor Duplantis says he wants to use it to spread the word of the Lord and that the jets belong to the ministry.

Was That Fake?

Did the City of Las Vegas change its iconic welcome sign to all lowercase letters? Photos of such a sign are being shared, but this is no ordinary altered image. As a matter of fact, it is straight from the mayor's office! The Las Vegas Golden Knights, in the team's first year in the National Hockey League, is facing the Washington Capitals for the Stanley Cup. The Capitals are using the slogan "All Caps" with a hashtag campaign using the same phrase, prompting several Las Vegas city leaders to refuse to type anything in capital letters and using the hashtag campaign "no caps" instead. In other words, the famous sign did not get a makeover.

Was That Fake?

MOSCOW (AP) — Russian journalist Arkady Babchenko may have been the last person reporters expected to see at a news conference in Ukraine's capital about his shooting death.

But with a flourish, the chief of the Ukrainian Security Service produced the 41-year-old Babchenko in the flesh Wednesday and revealed the slaying reported by Kiev police a day earlier was staged.

Vasyl Gritsak says the deception was needed to thwart an alleged plot by Russia's security services to assassinate the journalist. He says a Ukrainian citizen allegedly paid $40,000 to arrange the hit has been arrested.

Babchenko says even his wife was led to think he died. He apologized to her "for the hell she had to go through in the past two days. There was no choice there, either."