Facts over rumors
Congratulating someone on their first Father’s Day or Mother’s Day when they have never actually confirmed they have a child is one of the strangest things the internet does.
Think about it.
1. They don’t know you.
2. You don’t even know if there is a child because the parents have never confirmed it. And no, an article citing “trusted sources” is not the same as hearing it directly from them. Anyone can claim to be a source.
3. A woman can publicly support, comment on, and hype up her so-called friends, but not her own husband? That alone raises questions about what might be happening behind the scenes.
Then there’s the fact that she didn’t even spend Mother’s Day in the USA because she was in the Canary Islands working on a movie production. And we’re talking about the same person who deletes comments mentioning her supposed baby.
At some point, it becomes simple.
Either you had a child or you didn’t.
The endless hints, anonymous sources, deleted comments, and carefully crafted narratives only make people question things more.
The truth always finds its way to the surface. It may take months or even years, but it always gets there.
And if there’s one thing celebrity PR has taught us, it’s this: October always seems to be the month when the biggest stories magically appear.
So I can’t help but wonder what blind items, headlines, or “surprise” announcements will be waiting for us this October?
Thankyou for reading this post🤍









