Crime As with traditional urban legends, many internet
rumors are about crimes or crime waves – either fictional or based on real events that have been largely exaggerated. Such stories can be problematic, both because they purport to be relevant modern news and because they do not follow the typical patterns of urban legends.
Medicine Some legends are medical
folklore, such as the claim that eating
watermelon seeds will result in a watermelon growing in the
stomach, or that going outdoors just after showering will result in catching a cold. Many
old wives' tales have grown around the identification of ailments, real and imagined, and the recommended remedies, rituals, and home-grown medical treatments to treat them.
Internet Internet urban legends are those spread through the internet, as through
Usenet or email or more recently through other
social media. They can also be linked to
viral online content. Some take the form of
chain letters and spread by e-mail, directing the reader to share them or to meet a terrible fate, and following a recognizable outline of hook, threat, and finally request.
Paranormal Paranormal urban-legend stories usually involve someone encountering something supernatural, such as a
cryptid—for instance,
Bigfoot or
Mothman, legendary creatures for which evidence is lacking but which have legions of believers. Research shows that people experiencing sudden or surprising events (such as a Bigfoot sighting) may significantly overestimate the duration of the event.
Marketing Companies have been accused of hiding "secret messages" behind their
logos or packaging, as in the case of the old
Procter & Gamble symbol, supposedly an occult figure that gave panache to the brand. (If the thirteen stars in the symbol were connected a certain way, it would show
three sixes in a row or looked at the 3 curls at the bottom they form the inverted 6s.) Similarly, a video of a Christian woman "exposing"
Monster Energy for using the
Hebrew letter vav ( ו ), forming the letter "M", to disguise the number 666 went
viral on Facebook. ==See also==