53 bicycles: A lateral thinking puzzle

reply to SpoilerVirgin:

Did the general public need to send away to get the report? No

Was it in some public location that was easily visible? Yes

Was it printed in a comic book? No

Was it available in print? Yes Or in some other medium? No

Was there a single copy of the report that many people could see? Were there a lot of individual copies?

Was the report available free? Was there a cost?

Was the content of the report on a single page or image? Was it multiple pages?

Was it on paper?

reply to SpoilerVirgin:

Was there a single copy of the report that many people could see? No Were there a lot of individual copies? Yes

Was the report available free? Yes Was there a cost? No

Was the content of the report on a single page or image? Yes. Was it multiple pages? No

Was it on paper? Yes

Was it a claim about a world record?

Was it a claim about something being the biggest or “most” of something?

Was it on a billboard?

Was it on a radio ad?

reply to Mahaloth:

Was it a claim about a world record? No

Was it a claim about something being the biggest or “most” of something? No

Was it on a billboard? No

Was it on a radio ad? No

Was the report available from the Mom & Pop store that discovered the lie?

Was it available from retail stores in general?

Was it available from some other kind of business?

Would the people who obtained it have referred to it as something other than a report?

Is it currently sold on EBay as something other than a report?

reply to SpoilerVirgin:

Was the report available from the Mom & Pop store that discovered the lie? No*

Was it available from retail stores in general? No, not retail stores in general.

Was it available from some other kind of business? Just select locations

Would the people who obtained it have referred to it as something other than a report? Yes

Is it currently sold on EBay as something other than a report? Yes

  • Beware of facts assumed but not proven

++++

Hate to go to work now that a breakthrough may be close, but oh well. I will be back to answer anything else tonight unless someone puts all the facts together and solves it first.

Is it currently sold as something that we would consider written material - a pamphlet, flyer, map, book, drawing, sheet music, calendar, etc.?

Is it currently sold as something that we would not generally consider written material, but that in this case has writing on it - a cereal box, clothing, a container, jewelry, etc.?

Is it currently sold as something that we would not generally consider written material that is itself the report?

Is the “report” an image rather than something written?

Is the “report” an object rather than something written?

Can we get a clarification on this point? This was confirmed in post 3340 but when I asked what I thought was the same question (Was the lie was about the location of a particular piece of land?) I got ‘No’ as an answer.

Just to clarify, the report was a lie when written but became true later, correct?

Did the lie becoming true have to do with:
changing national borders?

changing state borders?

changing county borders?

changing town borders?

creation of a new tow, county or state?

anything that would change a map?

the land in question being in a different town/county/state/nation than previously thought?

Aha, I have the answer- but I won’t reveal it, as I got it through Google more than anything else. I think that ‘Yes’ is a fair answer to the question ‘Was the lie about the location of a particular piece of land?’ but I can see there’s some ambiguity there.

Biotop- was this puzzle inspired by a recent movie?

Are the copies of the report now considered collectibles?

Did the mom-and-pop store ever relevantly buy items from their customers?

Is this a change in land due to geological changes?

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**Reply to SpoilerVirgin **:

Is it currently sold as something that we would consider written material - a pamphlet, flyer, map, book, drawing, sheet music, calendar, etc.? **Yes **

Is it currently sold as something that we would not generally consider written material, but that in this case has writing on it - a cereal box, clothing, a container, jewelry, etc.? **No **

Is it currently sold as something that we would not generally consider written material that is itself the report? **No **

Is the “report” an image rather than something written? **both **

Is the “report” an object rather than something written?** No **

I do not think the lie is about the location of a particular piece of land. The site location was never in dispute.

reply to Regallag_The_Axe:

Just to clarify, the report was a lie when written but became true later, correct? **Yes **

Did the lie becoming true have to do with:
changing national borders? **No **

changing state borders? **No **

changing county borders? **No **

changing town borders? **No **

creation of a new tow, county or state? **Yes **

anything that would change a map? **Yes **

the land in question being in a different town/county/state/nation than previously thought? Yes

Did an oil company put out a report claiming they got their oil from the USA, but were really getting it from Canada? And then…it turned out later the land(off shore perhaps) was actually in USA territory?

Or vice versa, switching Canada and US?

I found out about the movie googling the details later. I was unaware of it when I posted the puzzle.

When answering your question, I was thinking about the physical location of the land, to which everyone agreed. But I yes there is ambiguity… which is often the case with these kind of puzzles. I tried to answer as best I could.

It would be interested to know how you googled it. You must have figured out the general nature of the lie to do so, right?

**reply to Chronos **:

Are the copies of the report now considered collectibles? I suppose so. But most anything old is collected by someone.:stuck_out_tongue:

Did the mom-and-pop store ever relevantly buy items from their customers? **No **

**No **