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Ripperology and nursery rhymes have one thing in common: a lot of outlandish, poorly-supported theories. Google any of your favorite childhood nursery rhymes and odds are you'll find at least one story about how it is actually a reference to some event from English history. Mary Mary Quite Contrary is allegedly about Mary Tudor, Jack and Hill Go Up The Hill is allegedly about a failed tax reform of King Charles I, etc.
In fact I read a theory about "do you know the muffin man" several years ago claiming it was a reference to a scandal in which a muffin seller was caught attempting to bribe a boxer into throwing a match - a muffin vendor would not have had such amounts of money so he was clearly an intermediary for somebody else. All of London, it was said, claimed that they did not know the muffin man.
I assume these theories are almost all incorrect - another similarity to Ripperology.
Muffinology —a sometimes obsessive interest in studying the crimes of the Muffin Man—is a subject of timeless interest that has suffered from confusion, exaggeration, and hyperbole for many centuries.
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