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| - A rumor circulating online in January 2025 claimed that a racist 90-year-old white woman named Margaret confronted former NBA star Shaquille O'Neal in a supermarket and told him to "go back to Africa."
For example, several Facebook posts told the story, which originated from various YouTube videos. One such video posted by the Max Story YouTube channel on Dec. 30, 2024, displayed the title "A 90-Year-Old Racist Woman Tells Big Shaq, 'Go Back to Africa' — His Response Stuns the Crowd."
In the video, a narrator claimed the elderly white woman accused a person referenced as "Big Shaq" of blocking a supermarket aisle. She allegedly said to him: "These days, they let anyone into supermarkets. The staff must not care." She added: "Throw him out. People like him don't belong here. Send him back to Africa." Then, "Big Shaq" supposedly explained how her words hurt him. The woman responded: "I'm sorry. Thank you for teaching me such a valuable lesson today. You are truly a remarkable person," ending the video with an inspirational tone.
However, the entire story was fiction. According to a Google search, no news media outlet reported on the alleged incident. Additionally, the video's narrator never mentioned when or where the purported confrontation occurred, the name of the alleged supermarket nor O'Neal's full name (the video just referenced "Big Shaq.") The video's thumbnail image depicted O'Neal, but the first two minutes of the clip showed a completely different person.
A man who appears in the first two minutes of the video does not resemble O'Neal.
The video displayed the YouTube-provided label for "altered or synthetic content," a disclaimer to tell viewers that the clip features narration, scripting, editing and visuals generated by artificial intelligence (AI) tools.
Further, on Dec. 15, 2024, the Black Struggles YouTube channel published a very similar video titled "Racist Woman Tells Black Man 'Go Back to Africa' — His Response Leaves the Crowd Speechless!" The clip also features AI-generated elements, including a narrator telling virtually the same story about a racist woman supposedly confronting a Black man in a supermarket. In that video, the narrator calls the man "Darrell," not "Big Shaq." The clip has received nearly 600,000 views as of this writing.
Comments under both videos indicate that some users believe the incidents truly occurred and that the videos' message inspired people. For example, under the video from the Black Struggles YouTube channel, one user wrote: "Wonderful story to remind people to question the hate they have been taught."
We have previously reported on similar YouTube videos about O'Neal; clips that also share made-up stories and use elements generated by AI. For example, one such false story claimed that a 5-year-old boy approached O'Neal at a Los Angeles diner to tell him about his father abusing his mother.
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