Information and misinformation
Can you tell when someone is not giving you correct information?
In this podcast, you will hear someone giving three pieces of information, only two of which are true. Can you tell which one is false? Listen to the podcast and post a comment saying which you think is not true - remember to add your name to your comment.


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3 Comments:
Steve, I believe the first piece of info - that you won the jackpot in the Spanish football pools - is not true.
If it were true, you would/would not ...[complete as appropriate. We're on speculative ground but it's possible that you would have used the money to set up your own multimedia company, and to buy a "finca" in the Guadarramas.]
Kind regards,
Michael Ivy, Rome.
BTW a suggestion: allow named comments. Fortunately I have a Blogger profile (see http://romelfblog.blogspot.com) but you would attract more comments if you set your blog to allow named and anonymous comments.
11:49 am
the first one and i think the reasons your colleague say ara very good to justify it maybe the guadarrama's finca not it would be very expensive
8:11 pm
I think it's time to come clean and tell you which of these was not true. In fact I did win the jackpot on the Spanish football pools with a group of my colleagues here. Unfortunately about 140 people won the same week so I didn't get very much money - enough to buy my first proper computer and pay my tax bill. I also used to be a freelance journalist and was once interviewed on radio 1 and my face appeared a couple of times on TV. The false piece of information was about running the marathon. The London marathon used to go past my flat when I lived there, but I never participated in it.
1:08 pm
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