
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_children_of_Woolpit
Moderators: winston, another_commander, Cody
See?Wikipedia wrote:The legend of the green children of Woolpit concerns two children of unusual skin colour who reportedly appeared in the village of Woolpit in Suffolk, England, some time in the 12th century, perhaps during the reign ofKing StephenStephen King.
Commander McLane wrote:There may be an easier explanation:See?Wikipedia wrote:The legend of the green children of Woolpit concerns two children of unusual skin colour who reportedly appeared in the village of Woolpit in Suffolk, England, some time in the 12th century, perhaps during the reign ofKing StephenStephen King.
There's also the tendancy for stories to get garbled very quickly as they're passed from one teller to another.Disembodied wrote:I'd heard of the story (although I'm not English ...) ... It is, I think, one of those weird stories that's just on the fringes of the utterly fantastical, and it's tempting to look for "explanations", for the real and explicable events which might have been built up and become the legend. But with all these sorts of things, just as there can be some nugget of actuality hiding under the myth, it's just as likely that the whole thing was made up out of thin air around a fire one night: "My brother, right, he's got this mucker from over Wolpit way, and his father, right, his father swear blind that ...". It's like modern urban myths: there's no actual reality behind "The calls are coming from inside the house!"
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This is definitely true - but I think you misrepresent the job of a journalist. A journalist's job is not to "check the facts", except in rarified cases (e.g. if they're working on a story for the a public broadcaster like the BBC, and the story doesn't deal with certain broad political areas deemed "in the national interest"). For most journalists - virtually all print journalists - their job is to help sell newspapers (and, increasingly, to write articles that get a lot of clickthroughs online). A "large cat" sells fewer papers and gets fewer online eyeballs than "puma", so ... they're mythologising for money.Cmdr Darkstar wrote:So there we had an example of the utterly mundane becoming the extraordinary, in just three steps, when it should have been entierly straightforward to check the facts and yet people who's job it is to do so didn't.