PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2006-05-28 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Do These Photos Show a Home Filled with 70,000 Beer Cans and Boxes? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • In this example collected from the Snopes inbox in November 2014: Origins: Yow! Most of us would probably be hard-pressed to find the time to collect (or buy) as many beer cans as are pictured here, transport them to our residence, and distribute them in various rooms — never mind actually drinking that much brew. But that's what evidently happened here. According to Salt Lake City television station KSL, the above-displayed images were real pictures of an Ogden, Utah residence taken in 2005. Century 21 property manager Ryan Froerer was alerted by a Realtor to come check on a townhouse that the latter described as the sickest thing he's ever seen. Mr. Froerer found the residence possessed of a nauseating smell, its front door blocked by debris, the furnishings inside buried under mountains of beer cans, and rooms stacked to the ceiling with beer boxes. He snapped a few photos of the interior and e-mailed them to friends, pictures that worked their way around the world via the Internet. The 8-year resident of the building was apparently exceedingly fond of Coors Light beer, drinking a couple of dozen cans a day, every day, for the length of his residence, saving all the empties as well as the cartons they came in. (The townhouse was found to contain an estimated 70,000 empty beer cans which reportedly fetched a total of $800 when they were delivered to a recycler.) Despite his unusual behavior, the occupant of the townhouse was described as a reliable tenant who paid his rent on time, never complained, and maintained such a low profile that the local mail carrier thought the residence was vacant (although, for reasons not explained by news reports, the tenant had evidently deliberately shut off the water and heat to the townhouse). According to KSL-TV, the townhouse was cleaned up, and the former resident stopped drinking and resumed his former job. (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url