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Is Teresa Fidalgo Real or Fake?

Is the story of Teresa Fidalgo fake or real?

By Khan JohnPublished 10 months ago 7 min read
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Is Teresa Fidalgo Real or Fake?

Is Teresa Fidalgo Real or Fake?

Stories about any gruesome incident being posted online aren’t something new to the ears of people who have been using the internet for a long time. If you are a frequent visitor to the social media site, you must have come across plenty of stories that are related to unfaithful accidents. Some of them will be about the loss or grievance and at the same time, there will be plenty of these stories to scare people into doing some action. Here we are going to learn if the story holds any weight to it or not.

Stories like these will pop up out of nowhere without facts and basis, but the overwhelming support of these stories by millions of people from all the social media platforms will boost the viral appeal of these posts. Then this will convince more people to share the post with others based on what they read on the post or about it from their friends or online. Once a post like these gets created it will lead to the creation of many websites about the post.

Recently a story about Teresa Fidalgo blew up on social media. It was getting a huge amount of attention from many teenagers. As many articles were being written on the subject claiming for it to be true and genuine. But if you do deep research you are going to find out a whole new different story than what the post claims to be. Only then you will know what is the true intention behind the story, and the reason for the story to blow up the way it did on the internet.

This article will answer all the questions you have about Teresa Fidalgo’s post, and how it came to be. Only then will you have the informationṣ to see if the post is real or not.

Who is Teresa Fidalgo?

This is the message that you will when you see a post about Teresa Fidalgo -

"I am Teresa Fidalgo and if you don’t post this on 20 other photos I will sleep with you forever," the quote spammed at the bottom of thousands of Instagram pictures this week somewhat ambiguously warns.

"A girl ignored and her mom died 29 days later. You can even search me on google."

Stories that share the same structure happened multiple times on the internet. And all of it shares the claim too. Of course, people shared the post on many of their accounts but who is Teresa Fidalgo?

The question must be in your mind, finding the true origin of the story is difficult since the story is created or shared on social media, which will create thousands of websites to support the claim. None of it even knows what is the origin story behind the post.

The articles we do have about Teresa Fidalgo says that it is from a video that shares the same tone as the found footage movie genre. Here we have a group of friends driving in the mountains looking for fun, then in the middle of their drive, they pick up a hitchhiker named Teresa Fidalgo. Throughout the car ride, she stays silent, but when the car reaches a particular spot in the mountain. Then she points to a spot on the road where she died. Then in the video, the camera pans to the face of Teresa Fidalgo, as her face turns bloody red from the accident.

This is the Teresa Fidalgo story origin. Almost all the other ones are based on the conspiracy surrounding the woman. Now social media has amplified the story to a whole new degree.

The Story of Teresa Fidalgo:

The story is about a woman who died in some sort of accident in the middle of the road. It is from a found footage movie that we used to love back in the 90s. These kinds of tactics played well in the movie theater, and it is having a bigger impact on the social media scene. Many articles are being written supporting this fake story to extract support from people.

Don’t fall into these traps, people always push the idea of supernatural entities on people to get support emotionally and financially. It’s one of the oldest tricks in the book, since the viral post of Teresa Fidalgo, many articles have written supporting this claim, and at the same time, some articles outright debunk the story altogether. But people tend to spend their time supporting something that isn’t true than believing in the truth.

Is Teresa Fidalgo's story real?

Based on the facts that we have, no it is not. A simple common sense will debunk the story without reading an article on the internet. Why would a ghost get online to kill people? one might think having supernatural ability will make the ghost do the things it wanted to do without making people share a post on their Facebook account. Even if you go by the story, why would a 27 woman convince people to share a post online? If the woman is 27 years old, she wouldn’t even know the existence of social media, let alone using it to convince others to post the status.

You will see this post on every social media platform. The post makes it clear that it needs to be shared on the photos of different people, 20 to be precise. If you are prone to fall into one of these hit pieces, then you make sure to do enough research beforehand. Once you post these kinds of stories, you will leave a bad impression on people. As they will see you more gullible than before. Make sure to do enough research about the subject or any subject you see online. In this case, the story and the claim that it is making are all false. No evidence supports this claim.

In reality, the story doesn’t even come close to being truthful. The articles you do read supporting the story are fake, they are amplifying the story for it to be true, so they have other intentions in mind than getting the truth of the story. When you know the most prominent support for the message about Teresa Fidalgo is the video that was uploaded on the internet in the year 2003. You will know everything you read about this online sensation is fake and has no substance at all. If you are planning to share the post on your friend’s photos, then don’t. This will create more harm for the people, as they will start believing in whatever they read online.

Is Teresa Fidalgo a Fake?

Yes, all the evidence that we have right now points to the story to be fake. It doesn’t matter how many shares and attention the message is getting from people all over the world. When you get down to the face of the matter, it all comes from a video that was uploaded in the year 2003. There is no reason for ghosts to kill people 17 years later from a video that is in the found-footage horror genre. If you ever saw the Blair Witch project, you will know that this found footage recording shares the same tone as the movie did, when it was released. The movie after the real footage claim got tons of attention from people.

If you get online, you will see thousands of posts related to Teresa Fidalgo being posted every single minute. People somehow convinced themselves the story to be true without doing any background checks. The reason why that happened is because of social media. Whenever a post gets shared, it will get shared by other people with any proper verification.

When a story doesn't get properly verified, it tends to spread further than it originally designed. When it gets all the attention, then you will see plenty of blogs being written on the subject, then immediately get shared to support the claim even in the future. As you can tell this is how a story gets louder voices on the internet.

Conclusion:

Overall, based on the evidence that we have, the facts clearly show the story is fake. If you are reading any article or blog or status telling you to share the post, then don’t. You are not only sharing the post based on your fear but you will encourage others to do the same thing as you did. More people would then share the post based on how many posts mention the name of the post, in this case, it is Teresa Fidalgo. Whenever you see a post that shares the same tone as the one with Teresa Fidalgo, make sure to find the origin of the post. If it makes outrageous claims, then it is better to leave the post alone, then go down the rabbit hole. Any post that tries to convince you to believe in something that doesn’t exist, it is better to leave the group or post then engage in any way.

Read more articles on Vocal:

  • How did Teresa Fidalgo Turn Into a Ghost and Haunt People?

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About the Creator

Khan John

I write about NSFW AI Scene and everything that is happening in the AI NSFW including recent developments. Contact me : Twitter, or an email at: [email protected]

Sell Feet Pics on FeetFinder here.

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