And some fans even got in on the joke, with one writing, “Its the multiverse. Jane comes back as Black Widow. I saw it in the Avengers: Doomsday trailer!”
Another quipped that Jane’s X post was, “EXACTLY WHAT SOMEONE WHO PASSED AWAY WOULD SAY,” to which Jane responded, “Came back reptilian. You are on to me.”
As for the story from the Facebook page Star Nation, the post is still up and features a black and white photo of the Cowboys reporter with text that read, “Breaking News 1980 - 2025.”
All the attention seems to have been a bit much for Jane, who wrote on her Instagram Stories Dec. 21, “Reality is losing the plot lately.”
“I’m ready to go off grid on my animal rescue farm,” she added. “Even if fake, seeing your name in ‘obit form’ little too weird for even me.”
But Jane isn’t the only celeb to be the subject of a death hoax—keep reading for more.
The Blues Clues star doesn't have a clue how these rumors started. But even while he was still on the Nickelodeon series, there were false stories that he had died. And Steve, who is very much alive, has spoken about the toll this hoax took on his mental health.
"When a gazillion people you've never met tell you that you're dead, it's bad when you're severely clinically depressed," he shared on a May 2025 episode of Rainn Wilson's Soul Bloom podcast. "And there was nothing I could do about this rumor."
After Steve left the show in the early aughts, the rumors continued: "It was one of the most common things people would say to me was, 'I thought you were dead.'"
Days after a statement on her Instagram reported the rapper and her brother had died, Lil Tay confirmed her account was hacked.
"I want to make it clear that my brother and I are safe and alive, but I’m completely heartbroken, and struggling to even find the right words to say," she told TMZ. "It’s been a very traumatizing 24 hours. All day yesterday, I was bombarded with endless heartbreaking and tearful phone calls from loved ones all while trying to sort out this mess."
Yes, Queen Elizabeth II is actually dead.
But six months before her September 2022 passing, she got entangled in hoax when Hollywood Unlocked prematurely reported she died.
"I'm not a conspiracy theorist, and everything aligns with me feeling very confident, which is why I doubled down on it," the outlet's CEO Jason Lee told BuzzFeed News in February 2022. "Now if I'm wrong, I'll be the first one to go out there and say, hey, it's the first time I got it wrong and this is a big wrong, on to the next story."
Will the source behind these hoaxes please stand up?
Over the years, Eminem has been the subject of several false death stories, including one that started in August 2023 after an "R.I.P. Eminem" Facebook page caught attention.
"He joins the long list of celebrities who have been victimized by this hoax," his rep said in a statement obtained by The Sun. "He's still alive and well, stop believing what you see on the Internet."
The Seinfeld alum took to Twitter in 2014 to assure fans that he is "alive and well" after several fake sites reported he died in a car crash.
The Carrie star was none too pleased to learn some mischiefmakers spread false reports about her dying in a snowboarding mishap in 2013.
"I've had my loved ones calling crying to check and see if I'm alive," Chloë tweeted at the time. "Don't make this up. It's not real. I am fully alive and here. You're sick."
A fake RIP Jim Carrey Facebook page claimed the actor was killed in a plane crash in 2012. However, his rep assured E! News The Mask star is just fine.
The rapper put death rumors to rest when she tweeted in 2011, "I'm Great ppl 4 all who keep asking! Alive and well! Enjoy ya night tweeps!" The next day she added, "Yea Sadly sum1 was that miserable to make up such a cruel rumor! It Makes me work harder make em mad!"
After false rumors spread that the Oscar winner fell victim to a snowboarding accident in 2011, his publicist cleared the air by telling E!, "He is working on location in Atlanta currently."
When somebody created an "R.I.P. Jackie Chan" Facebook page in 2011, false rumors claiming the Rush Hour actor died became the talk of the social world. Unfortunately, he isn't a stranger to a death hoax as similar gossip had spread earlier that year.
After hearing reports he had fallen off a cliff in New Zealand and died in 2011, the actor took to Twitter to prove the hoaxers wrong. "I would love to meet the person who is starting rumors of my death," he wrote, "to show them how a dead foot feels up their ass."
In 2009, fake rumors spread that the rapper had been involved in a fatal car crash, leading "RIP Kanye West" to trend on Twitter. However, Amber Rose, who dated him at the time, set the record straight, tweeting, "This RIPKanyeWest topic is not funny and its NOT TRUE!"
After it was inaccurately reported that the Scrubs star died in 2009, he made a video to confirm he's OK.
"I'm alive," Zach said in the clip. "I'm here at Scrubs shooting the new Scrubs title sequence which is a little bit like dying, so I guess that was semi-accurate."
He even brought his costar Donald Faison in on the hoax.
"I was able to work out with him that if I do ever die," Zach continued, "I would like him to sing an R&B version of 'Wind Beneath My Wings' at my funeral."
That same year, there were untrue rumors that the Oscar winner went missing during a camping trip in California's Palo Verde Mountains. However, Matt just laughed off the comments.
"I haven't heard," he said on the Late Show With David Letterman at the time, per TMZ, "but I feel pretty good."
In 2009, a hacker posted a "sad day" message on the singer's TwitPic account.
"Britney's Twitter was just hacked," a follow-up post read. "The last message is obviously not true. She is fine and dandy spending a quiet day at home relaxing."
Things tend to happen in threes, so when rumors hit the internet that the Law & Order: Criminal Intent star died on the same day as Michael Jackson and Farrah Fawcett, fans were panic-stricken. But soon after, Jeff appeared on The Colbert Report to laugh off the fake story.
"No one will miss Jeff Goldblum more than me," he quipped. "He was not only a friend and a mentor, but he was also, um, me."
"This is completely not true," Cruise's publicist told E! News at the time. "Tom is not in New Zealand nor has he been there recently. This is erroneous and unreliable Internet garbage."
These rumors came in like a wrecking ball.
Miley spent the latter half of 2008 debunking false rumors, including one that a truck drove straight into her car and another that she was killed by a drunk driver. However, none of them were true and she's still just being Miley.
In 2007, a prankster wrongfully declared on Wikipedia that Sinbad, whose real name is David Adkins, died of a heart attack. However, a spokesperson for the website noted, "Somebody vandalized the page."
Meanwhile, a rep for the comic told Reuters, "Sinbad is healthy, well and enjoying life!"
"Not much to say other than we heard and read about it this morning and reacted accordingly," Ferrell's publicist told E! in an email at the time. "There was no point in trying to track [the source] down as it was obviously a hoax."
Back in 2001, a set of Texas DJs caused a nationwide panic when they reported the then-couple were in a car accident that left the *NSYNC alum in a coma and the pop princess dead. However, their reps slammed the false gossip.
"There is no truth to the rumor circulating around the world that Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake were involved in a car accident on Tuesday in Los Angeles," a rep from their label at the time told E!. "Spears and Timberlake are in great health."
A conspiracy theory claimed the Beatles member died in 1966 and was replaced by a look-alike. However, Paul has denounced the rumor many times, including in a Saturday Night Live skit where the now-late comedian Chris Farley asked him about the hoax and the musician confirmed, "Yeah, I wasn't really dead."
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