![]() ![]() History of Fruit of the Loom’s Logo /JGxkIHmHRx That, or we’ve been transported from another dimension in which the cornucopia was indeed present. No incarnation of the brand’s logo ever included a cornucopia, so everything we’ve ever known is a lie. Hinton decided to dig a little deeper, unearthing a history of the Fruit of the Loom logo dating all the way back to 1893. The ‘real’ logo just doesn’t feel right to me,” he wrote. “The Fruit of the Loom logo has never had a cornucopia in the background!! This is another mind-bending Mandela Effect. The ‘real’ logo just doesn’t feel right to me. The Fruit of the Loom logo has never had a cornucopia in the background!! This is another mind bending Mandela Effect. Twitter user gave us another crazy example of the Mandela Effect last Friday when he pointed out that the Fruit of the Loom logo, which features various fruits in front of a bit of green foliage, definitely doesn’t have a cornucopia, despite people very much believing it did. The Mandela Effect is named for the false memory some people share of Nelson Mandela dying in prison in the 1980s, when in reality he died in 2013. How about spelling Looney Tunes as Looney Toons? You get the picture. ![]() Remember thinking the Berenstain Bears were actually the Berenstein Bears? That’s the Mandela Effect. If you’re not familiar with the Mandela Effect, it’s basically when your brain creates false memories, making you think you’ve seen, heard, or known certain things that are in fact completely untrue.
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