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  • 2022-03-19 (xsd:date)
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  • No, These Shoes Weren't Worn by Spies To Foil Spy Hunters (en)
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  • For the last few years at least, an image has been circulating on the internet containing a bright yellow pair of shoes with lifted heels where the toes should go. The image was often shared alongside commentary that the shoes were warn by spies, who used them to throw would-be spy hunters off their trail: We were unable to locate the original photograph, but there is no evidence that the pictured shoes were worn by real spies, during World War II or any other time. We reached out to the International Spy Museum in Washington, D.C., asking whether the shoes look like anything that could have plausibly been worn by real spies. After consulting with museum expert staff, spokesperson Aliza Bran said in an email that it would be incredibly unlikely that the shoes would have been worn by a real spy: Fake History Hunter, a myth-busting social media user, traced the shoe image to a pair of shoes displayed in the German Shoe Museum, located in Hauenstein. The shoes, according to a sign accompanying them in the museum, were provided by a German shoemaker from the town of Pirmasens named Gerhard Wolf. The shoes, according to the sign, were made in response to complaining customers: We reached out to the museum with questions about the shoes, and will update this story when and if we receive a response. (en)
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