Mandela Effect

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❖ Origine of this effect Effect started in 2013 Do you remember it that way?

❖ Kennedy's death in the car: Some people remember his death in another way ...

❖ Theories Mirror mirror,kit-kat, looney tons… ❖ Mercedes-Benz: High technology


Editorial message As we have seen before but maybe we do not pay attention, we remember certain moments, places or things in a way and when we go by simple curiosity to check if they are like that BOOM! He's on his head. So what happened to me since I remembered series or deaths that had already happened but people around me kept it in their mind in a different way, this made me open my curiosity a bit and start investigating all kinds of alternative theories that They are very interesting and carry the so-called Mandela Effect. More than ever in the history of humanity we are living in a parallel universe ...

Until next time.


INDEX 6 Origin 7-8 What it is? 9-10-11 Examples 12-13 Theories 14 Mercedes-Benz


On the cover: Nelson Mandela Design: Isabella Acosta: Photography: Courtesy Google

Production: Credentials.com

Director- Editor: Isabella Acosta General Coordinator: Isabella Costa Executive Director: Isabella Acosta Design and art: Isabella Acosta Concealer style: Isabella Acosta Telephone: 04243112116


Nelson Mandela died on December 5, 2013 due to the effects of a respiratory infection. The death of the first president of color of South Africa and one of the main icons of the fight against apartheid occurred in his home after a prolonged period of agony at ninety-five years of age, being picked up by most mainstream media Communication.

However, there is a large number of people who were surprised of this fact, stating that they remember that the South African president died in prison and even declaring to remember scenes of his funeral. It is not an isolated case, but on other occasions a similar phenomenon has been reported in which some people remember things that in principle have not happened. Although there are numerous cases prior to the death of the South African leader, this phenomenon has been called the Mandela effect.


Do you remember that?

The Mandela effect was named after Fiona Broome, a researcher and passionate about the paranormal, who would receive with great surprise the news of the death of Nelson Mandela. The reason for the surprise is that Broome vividly remembered his death and the consequences of it, as well as his funeral, many years before the actual death. And not only her, but other people said to remember the same thing. Later the debate would be transferred to the Internet, where many people would share similar experiences.


Thus, with Mandela effect reference is made to those situations in which multiple people seem to remember, in a similar way or even identical to each other, phenomena that have not occurred or that do not coincide with the real historical data. For these people, their memory is real and true, as is the fact that in the present they are receiving information that contradicts this memory and it seems to be true. We could describe the "Mandela Effect" as a pseudoscientific belief that tries to explain those dissonances between our childhood memories and tangible reality as the product of an alteration in space-time. At some point in the recent past, probably between 2009 and 2012, a kind of massive cosmic event transported humanity to an alternative universe, then cases such as the climate dialogue of 'The Empire Strikes Back' are explained as follows: we remember it differently because in our original universe it was different. Always according to this theory, it is not that the passage of time has ended up distorting our memory, but the irrefutable proof that the reality in which we live now is not what corresponds to us.

Parallel universe


Memories of the death of Nelson Mandela are not the only ones in which the Mandela effect has appeared. Other historical phenomena have caused the same effect. Another case in which the Mandela effect has appeared can be found during the massacre in Tiananmen Square in China in July 1989. On July 5, a Chinese citizen stood in front of a row of tanks, blocking his way . This scene, which would be photographed and recorded and subsequently broadcast in numerous media, would also cause surprise for many of those who lived the events, who say how the young man would not block the passage of the tanks but was overwhelmed by them, causing the death.


Mother Teresa of Calcutta was beatified, that is to say, turned into a saint, during the year 2016. This fact surprised many by believing that this event occurred in 1990, seven years before her death. Something similar happened with Mohamed Ali, who continued to live long after a large number of people took it for granted that he was dead. In fact, even far from historical events of great impact or real historical figures have occurred similar phenomena. Similar cases can be found in movies, music or theater. A very common example that can be found in most people can be seen in the Star Wars movie: The Empire Strikes Back. In one of the most famous and replicated scenes, Darth Vader indicates to Luke Skywalker that it is his father with the well-known phrase "Luke, I am your father". However, in the original version of the film we can see that the real dialogue is "No, I am your father", having replaced one text with another in the collective imagination.


In other occasions, simple confusions related to the pronunciation of certain words (there are people who swear and perjure that the salchicas brand used to be Oscar Meyer, instead of Oscar Mayer) can open the door to the kind of conspiranoic thinking that the forums of Internet seem to feed every day, when we really face a simple case of false memories on a global scale. At the beginning of the 20th century, only your closest environment and your psychologist knew what were the things of your childhood that you remembered otherwise. Now you can share them with the whole world, and it's rare that you will not find many traveling companions, convinced that it was Oscar Meyer of all time. Finally, convince yourself that this is not the timeline in which we live can be a way to escape reality. Events such as Brexit, the Donald Trump election or the rise of the extreme right in Europe are more acceptable when we conclude that they should not have happened in our original universe, but in this very corrupt one we jumped on a few years ago. In a sense, this is how nostalgia works: it transports us to a past where things were good and had a sense, as opposed to this crazy present that we have to live. That is, in the end, the key to the Mandela Effect.


Theories A clear example are the imitations inspired by Tom Cruise when he danced in the movie Ricky Business to the rhythm of Old Time Rock and Roll. The situation is always similar, anything that serves as a microphone, socks, underwear and, most importantly, a white shirt or sunglasses, as we see in the imitation of Ricky Martin for Lip Sync Battle.

However, reality is not like that. While Cruise actually sings a song by Bog Seger Old and is only in shirt and underwear, there are two relevant details. The shirt she wore was pink and she never wore dark glasses.


✓ Other examples are related to how we remember certain characters or names. For example, the Monopoly banker with a characteristic monocle, which he never actually carried. ✓ The way Looney Tunes is written, which many people attribute to what is written as Looney Toons sounds. ✓ Or the Pikachu tail, which never had the black tip, situations that we can allude to the culture that we constantly absorb, with constant different graphics, bad imitations or many other variables that generate this effect.


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