Daily Snopes provides a daily email list of stories circulating on the Internet and the message board allows individuals to post whatever rumor they heard to check with the community on its veracity.
However, Snopes declared this rumor false.
I mention FactCheck and Snopes as two examples of the many enterprises on the Internet that subject every government utterance to scrutiny in something approximating real time.
Many people check the large database on the Snopes site when they hear stories in order to separate fact from fiction.
Snopes staffers noticed that the show featured very obscure urban legends that were mostly only found on the Snopes website.
The Internet can provide a valuable resource, since many urban legends are dissected by Snopes and other websites soon after making the rounds in chain emails and college dorms.
The urban legend Snopes created claimed that the famous pirate Blackbeard created the nursery rhyme "Sing a Song of Sixpence" as a coded pirate recruitment song.
The website Snopes is renowned for its ability to pick through urban legends and separate the real from the absurd.
To test their suspicions that the show wasn't verifying Snopes's information with other sources, the staffers made up a very impossible "True" legend.
When the show aired using the made-up legend, Snopes staffers were amazed.