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Under the Influence with Terry O'Reilly

S9E25 - You Must Remember This: The Mandela Effect

Under the Influence with Terry O'Reilly

Apostrophe Podcast Network

Advertising, Marketing, Pop Culture, Business, Terry O'reilly, Cbc, Society & Culture, Under The Influence

4.8627 Ratings

🗓️ 18 June 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week we’re talking about the Mandela Effect. It is defined as “collective false memory.” That means many of us remember things incorrectly and we all remember them incorrectly the same way. From famous movie lines to song lyrics to details of traumatic events and even to famous commercials, we all think our memories are time-stamped videos of our lives. But they are not.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Did you know that if you subscribe to our But Wait, there's more option, you get a bonus story in every episode of Under the Influence.

0:10.4

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0:12.3

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0:19.8

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0:23.0

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0:24.1

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0:28.0

Just go to Apple Podcasts

0:29.9

and subscribe to Under the Influences,

0:32.2

but wait, there's more.

0:38.0

This is an apostrophe podcast production.

0:45.2

You're so king in it.

0:50.2

You're loving in an instant.

0:58.0

Your teeth look brighter than no, no, no.

1:06.0

You're not you when you're hungry.

1:14.6

You're in good hands with all teeth. You're in good hands with all. You're under the influence with Terry O'Reilly. At a 1998 Friars Club roast of Drew Carey, actor Abe Vigoda was in attendance.

1:39.1

A comedian got up to roast Carrie and said,

1:42.1

My only regret is that Abe Vagoda isn't alive to see this.

1:46.5

It got a big laugh. That's because most people thought Abe was dead. It all started in

1:53.4

1982. People magazine mistakenly printed that Abe Vagoda had died. A reporter was at the rap party for the sitcom Barney Miller,

2:03.3

which Vagoda was starring in at the time,

2:05.7

and noted that the late Abe Vagoda was sadly not in attendance.

2:10.5

That was news to Abe.

...

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