Earlier today, rumors took over, well, pretty much every social media outlet there is, claiming that the tiger blood had stopped pumping through Charlie Sheen’s veins and that the actor had, in fact, passed away. Well that is not true, he is alive and well. Hit the jump to read the rest of the story.
Funk Flex
And as crazy and left-field-originating as that sounds, this is Sheen we’re talking about, after all. If we’ve learned anything this past year, it’s that when it comes to the former Two and a Half Men star—who, in addition to many other talents, has gained a reputation for cheating death on numerous occasions—anything is possible.
So, did the goddess collector finally realize his own mortality or was this all just one big hoax? Is Charlie Sheen really dead? This rumor is…
So false! Obviously. Though this would be a hell of a way to break the news to his fans.
Reports of Mr. Sheen’s demise have been greatly exaggerated,” the actor’s rep told E! News.
And the proof seems to be in the pudding tweeting: though Sheen has yet to directly address the death rumor, which has been trending all morning on various social media sites, he has been filling up his Twitter page with his trademark, um, wit. So rest assured: the warlock is alive and well.
“Warlock: long nap…very much alive,” he tacked on to a tweet earlier today.
So what started the rumor in the first place? And why didn’t it involve him falling over a cliff in the outskirts of New Zealand, the usual death site for hoax celeb killings?
Well, because this wasn’t a choose-your-own-adventure style death hoax, where you simply plug in a celeb’s name, generate a story and watch it spread like wildfire across the Internet. This was slightly more thought out.
Over the past day, headlines about Charlie Sheen’s death, most starting with “RIP!” or “Breaking News” began to spread across Twitter and Facebook, and more or less pegged Sheen’s cause of death to cardiac arrest or simply (and vaguely) stated that he died in his house. Unfortunately, once one clicked on the links, per Mashable, the user was taken to a cloned YouTube page—clicking on any part of the page resulted in malware infecting the user’s computer and spreading the scam on their Facebook profile.
So, the good news: Charlie Sheen isn’t dead. The bad news: if you thought that he was, you’ve probably got a computer virus.
Ah well. Can’t always be #winning.