Beaming entirely accurate historical facts about the 21st century from the future. OBVIOUS PARODY ACCOUNT.

Joined February 2012
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The gatherings were highly successful[8][9]. They were also used to trial material that could be repeated vertabrim on Question Time[10][11]
Political Conferences were staged gatherings held in the 20th[1] and 21st centuries[2][3] to treat insomnia in overweight men[4][5][6][7].
The public's scores have been lost[1][2], but the show's footage remains the most extensive archive of false outrage known to exist.
Question Time was a British television game show where thw public would try to identify sincere and false arguments made by a panel.
Football Commentary was a media format, popular in the late 20th and early 21st centuries [1], that was used to test questionable new words.
...he received a great deal of criticism for making almost no attempt to disguise his voice during Wainwright performances[8][9][10][11][12]
While Yorke was credited for putting a lot off effort into the synthetic mask[6][7] he used when portraying Wainwright...
Yorke used the character to output ideas deemed too uninteresting[3][4][5] for his solo projects or work with Radiohead.
Rufus Wainwright was a fictional character created and portrayed by English musician Thom Yorke[1][2].
Dan Brown was an early 21st century author[1][2][3][4][5][6] who pioneered the literary technique known as 'aimless description'[7][8].
.@edwardjpearson was a 21st century man, famed for tweeting from the wrong account.
1
External links: The largest known collection of supposed Ono teachings - franticplanet.wordpress.com/…

The teachings of Ono, despite being heavily documented[4][5], have proven incomprehensible to contemporary scholars[6][7][8][9].
Yoko Ono was a 21st century deity[1], revered predominantly in Western society despite its Eastern origins[2][3].
Ed Sheerhan was a British musician who specialised in songs comprised of the mathematical average of all lyrics ever written in Britain[1].
Gordon Brown was a British politician, best known for his time as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom[citation needed].
Quarries were pits dug into the Earth in the 20th and 21st centuries as filming locations for the BBC science fiction series, Doctor Who.[1]
...footballer and pundit Robbie Savage[14], television presenter Noel Edmonds[15][16] and celebrity hairstylist Nicky Clarke[17].
Due to the lack of official documentation, there is no definitive list of the clones produced[13]. However, they are believed to include...
...succesful of the clones[7][8][9][10][11][12].