A good way to tell pretty quickly is sourcing. When you click on sites like those linked, check hard for sourcing. There are numerous supposed quotes from Wahlberg, but never any sourcing for those quotes. The church isn't mentioned, and witnesses who saw or heard the quote are never mentioned. It's intentionally vague. That helps it avoid some types of legal culpability, but also hits enough "keywords" that people who want to get mad will get mad. Most people clicking on sketch sites like this will probably never get past the first couple of paragraphs. By the end, it's pretty clear it's not true.AggieBucksJB said:
If this story is fake I wish the staff would take it off. I read the story thinking it could be real, I called my wife in and said "hey look at this" now I feel duped.
It's also sketch, because Wahlberg is an A-lister with a yuuuuuge history of not-good-stuff in his youth, which has been reported on time and again. If he said even 1/3 of this stuff, it would be all over every entertainment outlet in America.
