Thursday, March 5, 2026

Conspiracy Resource

Conspiracy news & views from all angles, up-to-the-minute and uncensored

Conspiracy

15 Times Celebrities Openly Admitted Their Wildest Beliefs, And I Have No Words

From flat-Earthers to moon-landing denial, conspiracy theories have never been limited to fringe corners of the internet. These days, even household names seem perfectly comfortable slipping on a tinfoil hat in their downtime.

Most recently, Kim Kardashian admitted she doesn’t believe the moon landing actually happened — a claim she backed up with an alleged Buzz Aldrin quote. Predictably, the backlash came fast, with NASA itself chiming in (more on that later).

15 Times Celebrities Openly Admitted Their Wildest Beliefs, And I Have No Words

Hulu/Disney+

And it made me wonder about all the other celebrities who’ve wandered into conspiracy territory. From B.o.B. getting into an actual rap beef with Neil deGrasse Tyson over flat-earth theories to Roseanne Barr amplifying QAnon talking points, plenty of famous faces have used their platforms to push some truly questionable ideas — many of which have been publicly debunked.

Related: People Are Sharing The Celebrities They Once Loved But Ended Up Losing All Respect For

So, here are 16 celebrities who openly shared their wildest conspiracy theories…and left the rest of us speechless.

1. Most recently, Kim Kardashian said that the 1969 moon landing “didn’t happen” during a recent episode of The Kardashians, where she’s speaking to Sarah Paulson. Kim explained that she read a quote from Buzz Aldrin about the scariest moment of his journey to the moon. “This girl says, ‘What was the scariest moment?’ And he says, ‘There was no scary moment because it didn’t happen. It could’ve been scary, but it wasn’t because it didn’t happen,” Kim said. Elsewhere, she said that the Apollo 11 mission was “fake” and that there are “a few videos on Buzz Aldrin talking about how it didn’t happen.”

Kim Kardashian in a glamorous fur-like outfit looks ahead, with their hair styled up and wearing elegant earrings

Aeon / Getty Images

NASA’s acting administrator Sean Duffy later refuted Kim’s claim on X. “Yes, we’ve been to the moon before… 6 times!” Duffy wrote. “And even better: @NASAArtemis is going back under the leadership of @POTUS. We won the last space race and we will win this one too.”

2. Despite an overwhelming amount of information suggesting otherwise, Kyrie Irving jumped off the porch in 2017 when he claimed to be a flat-earther (spoiler alert: he won’t be the only one on this list). He later apologized after the conversation sparked uproar, though he admitted that he enjoyed hearing people from both sides debate.

Person wearing a baseball cap and "Duke" t-shirt, smiling during a basketball event

Glenn James / Getty Images

3. For “Airplanes” rapper B.o.B., the flat-earth conversation resulted in a rap battle against…Neil DeGrasse Tyson. B.o.B. went on a spree on X, formerly known as Twitter, explaining why he believes the Earth is flat and why he feels NASA hasn’t been truthful about the world’s edge. Tyson eventually responded back on X before B.o.B. took their beef to wax on a song called “Flatline,” where he called Tyson out by name. In response, Tyson dropped a song called “Flat To Fact,” written and recorded by his nephew Stephen Tyson.

B.o.B on stage playing a string instrument, wearing a white shirt, beret, and sunglasses, smiling while performing with a microphone

Julia Beverly / Getty Images

Advertisement

Advertisement

Related: “It’s Always Fat People”: 28 Times Celebrities Said Some Really, Really Messed-Up Stuff That Just Flew Under The Radar

4. Ye (fka Kanye West) has made some egregious claims over the years, but one of the most insensitive and downright evil conspiracies he’s pushed was that Derek Chauvin didn’t actually kill George Floyd. During a controversial episode of the Drink Champs podcast, Ye spoke about Candace Owens’s documentary on BLM and said that the former police officer’s “knee wasn’t even on his neck like that.” He also said that “they hit [George Floyd] with the fentanyl.”

Person wearing sunglasses and a simple black t-shirt on a formal event red carpet

Matt Winkelmeyer / Getty Images

The Hennepin county chief medical examiner told the court that Floyd died from “cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement’s subdual, restraint and neck compression.” As a result of Kanye’s claims, Floyd’s family filed a $250 million defamation lawsuit against him and sent him a cease-and-desist letter.

5. Terrence Howard publicly rejected basic arithmetic in favor of his own system of math that he calls “Terryology.” In an interview with Rolling Stone, Howard explained how he believes 1×1=2. “If one times one equals one, that means that two is of no value because one times itself has no effect. One times one equals two because the square root of four is two, so what’s the square root of two? Should be one, but we’re told it’s two, and that cannot be,” he told the publication in 2015 about an argument he had with a professor when he studied chemical engineering at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. He said he left school shortly after. “I mean, you can’t conform when you know innately that something is wrong.”

A person in patterned suit sits on a talk show set, attentively listening to someone off-camera

Warner Bros. Tv / Getty Images

6. Jaden Smith has pushed some very odd theories throughout his life. In one instance, he told HuffPost that he believed there was a real-life Wakanda where the technology was light-years ahead of anything we’re aware of. “I will keep it real broad and simple, real broad and simple. The technology that we’re currently at is not the maximum of the human capability,” he said, “and that there are places in the world where their technology supersedes what we see here on a daily basis. It’s made by humans, and it should be acknowledged, and it should be looked at because it could heal a lot of problems.”

Jaden Smith with unique hairstyle wearing a formal black suit and white shirt against a blue backdrop

Gilbert Flores / Getty Images

Related: These 15 Celebrities Were Huge In The ’90s, ’00s, And ’10s — I’m Positive I Can Determine Your Age Based On How Many You Know

7. We could have a whole standalone list of conspiracy theories President Donald Trump has pushed, but recently, he claimed that the use of Tylenol in pregnant women is linked to autism.

A person in a suit and tie stands in front of a flag during a formal event

Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images

Advertisement

Advertisement

The White House reportedly relied on the research of Dr. Andrea Baccarelli, the dean of Harvard’s School of Public Health, who was quoted as saying there’s a causal relationship between autism and Tylenol.

Professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Washington, Dr. Linda Eckert, told PBS that causal relationships are “quite hard to prove. … And the research on Tylenol has been quite reassuring overall. And there was actually many studies, several great studies that have looked at this. … the most recent one that is a very powerful study was done in Sweden, where they looked at over 250,000 individuals. And they also were able to look at siblings, where people had environmental and sibling relationships, genetics in common. When they accounted for these environmental and genetic risks, they did not see any association between Tylenol and autism. So that’s thought to be a very gold standard study.”

8. Another member of the Kardashian-Jenner clan, Kylie Jenner, also pushed a few conspiracy theories in her time. A decade ago, she brought back a fan-favorite from the ’90s: chemtrails. In a 2015 tweet, she shared an image that posed a series of questions about chemtrails, which Vox describes as “thin clouds that form after a reaction between temperature changes and water in the atmosphere when jet aircraft fly around.” But Kylie’s post suggested that the government was spraying chemicals into the sky, and it was having a negative effect on our health.

Kylie Jenner with pink hair in a fitted strapless dress poses, smiling, in front of shiny decor resembling dripping lips

Phillip Faraone / Getty Images

9. Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine was certainly at the forefront of right-wing conspiracy theories before the Trump administration normalized them. In 2012, the musician claimed that the Obama administration staged shootings to push their gun ban laws. “[Obama]’s trying to pass a gun ban, so he’s staging all of these murders, like the Fast And Furious thing down at the border; [the massacre in] Aurora, Colorado, all the people that were killed there; and now the beautiful people at the Sikh temple,” he said, per The Hollywood Reporter.

Musician with long hair playing an electric guitar while singing on stage, dressed in a black shirt and wristband

Sopa Images / Getty Images

He refused to apologize for the comments during a concert in Singapore and suggested that these events needed more investigation. However, he said that these were quotes from the executive director of Gun Owners of America, Larry Pratt.”

10. Rosie O’Donnell found herself in controversy over the years as someone who has been labeled a “9/11 truther.” She’s openly stated that she doesn’t believe the official story of the tragic incident.

Person wearing a baseball cap and sunglasses, holding a Sherrin football on a sports field

Mark Metcalfe / Getty Images

“I do believe that it’s the first time in history that fire has ever melted steel,” Rosie O’Donnell once told the New York Times. “I do believe that it defies physics that World Trade Center Tower 7 — Building 7, which collapsed in on itself — it is impossible for a building to fall the way it fell without explosives being involved.”

11. This list wouldn’t be complete without including a few COVID-19-related conspiracy theories. In 2021, Nicki Minaj shared an anecdote about her cousin’s friends that made her hesitant to get the COVID-19 vaccine without further research. “My cousin in Trinidad won’t get the vaccine cuz his friend got it & became impotent. His testicles became swollen. His friend was weeks away from getting married, now the girl called off the wedding. So just pray on it & make sure you’re comfortable with ur decision, not bullied,” she tweeted.

Person in a pinstripe gown with floral sleeves and headpiece poses on a crowded red carpet event

John Shearer / Getty Images

Advertisement

Advertisement

Her comment eventually made its way to the White House, warranting a response from Dr. Anthony Fauci. Furthermore, Trinidad’s Health Minister Terrence Deyalsingh shut down Nicki’s claims. “As we stand now, there is absolutely no reported side effect or adverse event of testicular swelling in Trinidad…and none that we know of anywhere in the world,” Deyalsingh said.

Related: 11 Totally Unfiltered And Careless Moments From Celebrity Kids That Live In My Mind Rent-Free

12. Ted Nugent has been at the forefront of climate change denial, and has even gone as far as claiming it’s a “scam.” “You have to have sh*t for brains to believe this global warming bullsh*t,” Nugent said on his Spirit Campfire podcast. “If you believe it, you have sh** for brains. While you were sleeping, someone opened your skull and took a dump inside your skull.” In that same episode, he said that people “have to be mentally ill to believe in electric vehicles.”

Musician on stage with a guitar, wearing a cowboy hat and sleeveless shirt, arms outstretched, with drum set in background

Scott Legato / Getty Images

13. Roseanne Barr boldly embraced QAnon conspiracy theories in 2018. “President Trump has freed so many children held in bondage to pimps all over this world. Hundreds each month. He has broken up trafficking rings in high places everywhere. notice that. I disagree on some things, but give him benefit of doubt-4 now,” she said in a now-deleted tweet.”

An individual with long hair looks towards the camera with a serious expression, wearing a collared jacket

Steven Ferdman / Getty Images

Months prior, she also tweeted, “Who’s Q?” before asking QAnon to reach out to her directly.

14. Elon Musk has used X to push a number of conspiracy theories since buying the platform. In 2023, Musk co-signed a post on X that read, “Jewish communities have been pushing the exact kind of dialectical hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them. I’m deeply disinterested in giving the tiniest shit now about western Jewish populations coming to the disturbing realization that those hordes of minorities that support flooding their country don’t exactly like them too much.” In response, Musk wrote, “You have said the actual truth.”

Person in a suit and cap, arms crossed, in a room with flags and a presidential emblem

Kevin Dietsch / Getty Images

According to CNN, the conspiracy theory accuses the Jewish community of wanting to reduce white majorities in Western countries by bringing in undocumented minority people to reduce white populations.

15. Hercules star Kevin Sorbo was among those who appeared to be in denial about those who stormed the Capitol on January 6. When someone posted a photo of some of the people who swarmed the Capitol with the caption, “Do these look like Trump supporters? Or Leftist agitators disguised as Trump supporters…” Sorbo, a staunch Trump supporter, wrote in response, “They don’t look like patriots to me…”

A person in a blue blazer and floral shirt at a formal event

Jason Kempin / Getty Images

Advertisement

Advertisement

This led to Lucy Lawless, his former costar, calling him out. “No, Peanut. They are not Patriots. They are your flying monkeys, homegrown terrorists, QAnon actors. They are the douchebags that go out and do the evil bidding of people like you who like to wind them up like toys and let them do their worst, ” she tweeted.

Also in Celebrity: “He’s Just Green Flags All Over”: People Can’t Stop Talking About Brendan Fraser’s Reaction To A Director’s Wardrobe Malfunction

Also in Celebrity: 21 Times Celebs Had Hidden NSFW Or Just Plain Wild Details In Their Red Carpet Looks

Also in Celebrity: 37 Times Celebs Showed Off More Skin Than Usual On The Red Carpet, And Left Little To Our Imagination

Read it on BuzzFeed.com

***
This article has been archived by Conspiracy Resource for your research. The original version from Yahoo! can be found here.