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After Prince was found dead on 21 April 2016, several bridges and monuments in his home state were illuminated with purple lights to honor him. Not long after that, photographs began to circulate that purported to showing major landmarks across the world lit with purple in Prince's memory. While many of these images are authentic, others have been digitally manipulated or shared with misinformation. While the Chicago River has a reputation of changing colors every March for St. Patrick's Day, the city did not turn the river purple in honor of Prince. The above photograph was altered to turn a green river into a purple one: While a photograph showing a purple Niagara Falls is real, Prince was not the reason for the color change. Before Prince's death, the Niagara Falls Illumination Board announced that they would be turning the falls purple in honor of Queen Elizabeth II's birthday: Toronto's CN Tower also was lit purple on the same day, creating additional confusion, but both the tower and Niagara Falls were commemorating the Queen's birthday, not Prince's death. Flickr user Tony Webster snapped the above-displayed photograph on 21 April 2016, showing the Lowry Avenue Bridge in Minneapolis, Minnesota, lit purple for Prince. The Super Dome turned purple in 2014, when the musician performed a show during the Essence Festival in New Orleans. The city put on a similar display the day after the musician's passing. The Forum in Los Angeles, which hosted a memorable Prince concert in 2011, paid its purple respects to the musician. San Francisco City Hall: TRUE Los Angeles City Hall: TRUE The buildings washed purple for Prince weren't just venues he had played. San Francisco's and Los Angeles' City Hall buildings were also lit in his honor.
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