Where are you guys finding this information about Patsy's misspelling? Can someone post a link for me?
Thanks in advance! :blowkiss:
LOL!! Thanks for a good laugh, JMO8778!!!Oh Patsy probably thought she was going to that great Plantation in the sky ! If she hasn't figured it out yet,then she probably just thinks she's in a scene from Gone with the Wind,and Atlanta is burning.
I knew she 'mis'spelled, but agree it was NOT an accident.
According to Holdontoyourhat, most RDI's didn't even realize that Patsy misspelled the word advise (she spelled it advize), in both her left and right hand SAMPLE RN. I told him that there were probably one or two RDI's that didn't know that...including me. He doesn't believe me...so I am taking a poll. Did you guys know that Patsy misspelled advise (advize) in both of her sample RN's? If so...then WHY? Did she do it on purpose? (Which is MY guess), or accidently (which is what Holdontoyourhat believes).
Pocono Sleuther,
Nice to to know you are majoring, of course once you pass you will be able to give a post-mortem account of the staging in JonBenet's case, and why Patsy remained dressed in the clothes she wore to the Whites?
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Ames,
As a Journalist major for Patsy to misspell once is forgivable but not twice, that smacks of deliberation. Anyway the misspelling is consistent with other examples of misspelling in the RN. She probably did it as a fall back position if ever she was accused of authoring the RN in court.
Since the RN is fake, anything in it cannot be used to prove anything, other than it is part of the overall staging.
LOL!! Thanks for a good laugh, JMO8778!!!
:clap: :clap: I so totally agree!!!! :clap: :clap:
YW ! ..she probably said "Bye,ya'll!" on the way out.
i agree too.NEVER would a journalist misspell such a word!
Yeah, I know...that word is actually on the FOURTH grade level. A poster here said that, and I looked it up...and she was right. A FOURTH grade level!! My six year old, kindergartener can spell it. OH..but, a Journalism Major/College Graduate cannot? Yeah right. (BTW...I just asked my 16 year old if she could spell ADVISE and she laughed and said...a-d-v-i-s-e.) Poor Patsy must have been stupid.
How does it benefit PR then, to misspell advise deliberately? Does making herself appear like a bad speller help her fool investigators, when she already knew she misspelled 'business' deliberately (another 4th grade word that PR obviously knows how to spell) when writing the RN?
Why would PR want to look like the bad speller the RN author was, when she was demonstrating her writing for investigators? I still don't get the advantage PR would realize by deliberately misspelling 'advise'.
Not only that,but the 2 misspellings were only in the first paragraph of the RN.The RN author sure did get educated quickly.
...when they were dictating the note to her, for her to write it...in her head she said..."I need to pick a word that I know was spelled correctly in the ransom note...and misspell it on purpose, not once but twice." So during the dictation, when they came to the word ADVISE, she said to herself...IMO..."Okay, that would be a good one, because it actually DOES sound like it has a z in it."
Hey, I just noticed something. In the original RN, everybody that sees it, believes that the word attache has the accent mark over the e. GO BACK AND LOOK CLOSELY....above the e, (on the line above) is a y. The RN author put a hook on the end of their y's...like a backward check mark. You can easily see this in the RN. IMO...the "accent mark" above the e, in attache...is NOT an accent mark at all, but part of the Y that is above it. OKAYYYYY...in the sample RN, written by Patsy, she didn't put an accent mark over the e in attache, EITHER. What are the chances of THAT?