Social media has a habit of trying to kill celebrities off before their time – Jeff Goldblum has had it happen to him several times, with Australia’s Richard Wilkins even announcing it on TV.
And British newspapers only on Monday reported that singer David Cassidy was dead, while the star lay in critical condition in hospital after suffering multiple organ failure at the weekend.
Now Aretha Franklin is the latest to fall victim to the hoax reports, but the singing superstar isn’t taking it lying down.
With Twitter awash with posts claiming that the 75-year-old had passed away, Franklin told friends that she was far from her deathbed.
https://twitter.com/ArethaFrankIinn/status/932871460808310784
Entertainment reporter Shaun Robinson tweeted that she had spoken to Franklin’s friends, who asked her to spread the word not the believe the news that the singer had passed away.
Good Morning, Everyone. I just spoke to one of Ms. Franklin’s family friends in my hometown Detroit. They spoke to Aretha moments ago and asked me to tell you please don’t believe this news that was trending. Have a good day. https://t.co/3LTyD4UlEH
— Shaun Robinson (@shaunrobinson) November 21, 2017
It’s not the first time that Franklin has ‘survived’ such an internet ‘killing’.
In 2011 there were reports she was fighting pancreatic cancer, but she told Robinson at the time that she had no idea where the story came from.
“I was sitting there reading the newspaper and it was saying someone in my family said that,” Franklin said in amazement. “No one in my family ever said that to anybody.”
The diva did announce in February that she was retiring from music, but that she had one final album in the works before she did so, and that she planned to open a nightclub called Aretha’s as a retirement project.
Fans were relieved to hear this time round that, yet again, the music legend was just fine. After all, she was on stage just at the beginning of this month, performing at the Elton John AIDs Foundation’s gala show in New York.
I was also victim of the hoax about the queen of soul. Thankfully she is very much alive!! #Aretha Franklin
— Leslie Marshall (@LeslieMarshall) November 21, 2017