成人快手

The Great British Bake Off is back for a 15th season, so naturally, we've been thinking about cake!

It doesn't often make the headlines, but when it does, you can be sure those stories go viral pretty quickly, after all, who can resist the temptation of cake? Sometimes though, it's fake news rather than cake news. Can you spot the difference?

Cake news or fake news?

1.
Mexico's alien corpse actually a cake?

You may have seen the stories online about two supposed "alien corpses" that were found in Peru and unveiled in Mexico. A clip showed an "autopsy" of the aliens, but when they were cut into, there were no organs in sight. Instead, it turned out that these E.T's were made of delicious Victoria sponge! Is this cake news or fake news? The truth is out there 鈥 tap below to find out what it is!

2.
Ex-Coronation Street star and baker in social media cake row.

A bakery in Yorkshire was reportedly approached by a PR firm asking them to bake over a hundred cakes for a TV star's birthday party. According to the owner of the bakery, they were offered exposure on social media instead of cash to bake the cakes. Tap below to find out whether this one is 鈥渃ake news鈥 or 鈥渇ake news鈥!

3.
Bread, brioche, and a revolution: Did Marie Antoinette really say "Let them eat cake?"

If you're a fan of Horrible Histories鈥 or just history in general鈥 you'll no doubt have heard of Marie Antionette who met her unfortunate end from execution by guillotine in 1793. But this article isn't about methods of execution, it's about cake, and Madame Antoinette is perhaps most famous for the line "Qu'ils mangent de la brioche", or for those of you who don't speak French, "Let them eat cake". But did she actually say it? Tap below to find out whether this one is French fact or French fake news.

4.
A slice of history: Piece of 182-year-old cake from Queen Victoria's wedding sells for 拢700.

Some things get better with age, like cheese, or Lionel Messi. Fruit cake also tends to improve with age, but waiting almost two centuries might be taking it a bit far! According to reports, an 182-year-old slice of plum cake from the wedding of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert sold at an auction in Devon for 拢700. But is there any right royal truth to this story, or have we got it royally wrong? Cake or fake - you decide!

5.
UK's quirkiest wedding venue is a 3-tiered cake.

Whilst we're on the subject of wedding cakes, how would you like to get married inside a giant one? If reports are to be believed, a new twelve metre tall wedding venue has popped up in Buckinghamshire. Shaped like a three-tier wedding cake, topped with golden-yellow frosting, the quirky venue will play host to weddings 鈥 the happy couple can even pose for photos as cake toppers atop the giant cake. But is this story cake or fake?

Did you guess correctly? Have a go at our monthly fake news quiz and remember to question what you watch and read online, double-check sources, and stick with reliable and trustworthy platforms before deciding to share posts.