Garth Brooks’ unreleased demo secretly contains a hidden code that perfectly predicts every Super Bowl score for the next 20 years, data analysts say in shock discovery.
Country music superstar Garth Brooks has been dead for three years—or at least, that’s what the official records show. A curious technical analyst digging through the Library of Congress’ digital audio archives has uncovered a bizarre anomaly: Brooks’ 1992 single “The River” contains a subsonic frequency that, when isolated, spells out the exact GPS coordinates of his last known private residence and the date of his reported death—which was supposedly not until 2024. The analyst, who goes by the handle @GlitchFinderTech, says the pattern appears as a 3.7-second loop of mathematical precision embedded in the track’s stereo panning, matching a classified government format used for covert data transmission in the 1990s. “It’s like finding a secret message in the static of a country radio station,” the analyst posted on X. “The matrix is glitching hard with this one.” Fans are now claiming Brooks faked his own death in 2021 to escape a financial scandal linked to a never-released novelty song about aliens. The official Garth Brooks camp has not commented, but one source whispered the number 42 appears 42 times in the hidden data—and it’s exactly the same code used to program the world’s most popular karaoke machine. Shocking? You bet. Viral? Already is.