Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

Water sprinklers cause a rainbow to appear on the South Lawn of the White House, May 24, 2014 (AP) Water sprinklers cause a rainbow to appear on the South Lawn of the White House, May 24, 2014 (AP)

Water sprinklers cause a rainbow to appear on the South Lawn of the White House, May 24, 2014 (AP)

Grace Abels
By Grace Abels May 31, 2023

Rainbow disconnection: Roseanne Barr didn’t share conspiracy theory about arcs in the sky

If Your Time is short

  • There is no evidence the speaker in the video is actor Roseanne Barr. The same audio clip was posted in 2008 on YouTube and while the voice sounds similar to Barr’s, there is nothing to signal that it’s her.

  • Rainbows are caused by sunlight refracting and reflecting off water droplets in the air, not chemicals in the water supply. 

As the song goes: Somewhere over the rainbow, bluebirds fly. 

And misinformation does, too. 

A viral TikTok, claiming to be voiced by actor Roseanne Barr, describes a conspiracy theory that rainbows, the kind that form in a sprinkler on a sunny day, result from toxins in the air and water supply. 

"What the heck is in our water supply? What the heck is in our oxygen supply," says the voice over a clip of a misting fountain with a rainbow. "What is oozing out of our ground that allows this type of effect to happen … This cannot be natural." Text on the screen says "Roseanne Barr" and "conservative Republicans have officially lost their fking minds."

But we followed this rainbow to its end and found that it’s not true. The audio is from an old video shared online in 2008 promoting a similar conspiracy theory — and there’s no evidence the voice is Barr’s. 

Sign up for PolitiFact texts

@politifact Replying to @PolitiFact Someone tagged us in this video that alleges to be Roseanne Barr debating the natural causes of rainbows. The sound is repurposed from an old video, and there’s no indication it’s Barr. #rainbow #rainbowconspiracy #roseannebarr #science #factcheck #fyp #learnonTikTok ♬ Warm Nights

Although she is known for her sensational comments, there is no record that Barr doubts the veracity or frequency of rainbows in her backyard. She shared a photo of a rainbow on her Instagram account to celebrate her November 2022 birthday. 

Rainbows, besides being a fairytale staple, are a well-understood phenomenon caused by the refraction of light through water. When sunlight hits water droplets in the air, either after a rainstorm, on a foggy day or from a backyard mister, the different wavelengths of light are refracted and bent, causing them to show up as separate colors —– think Pink Floyd’s prismatic "Dark Side of the Moon" album cover

Featured Fact-check

The light then bounces off the water droplet and reflects the rainbow spectrum of light back where it originated. If the viewer is at the correct angle, the rainbow becomes visible.

It is this refraction and reflection that create the rainbows in the sky, not a chemical reaction, as the video claims. 

Some scientists speculate that climate change may affect the frequency and coloration of rainbows because of changes in rainfall patterns as well as air pollution, which can affect how light scatters. But these theories are not related to a tainted water supply. 

Despite the TikTok video’s colorful theory, there is no evidence that Barr made a video questioning the science of rainbows. We rate this claim False.

Our Sources

Sources

TikTok, May 30, 2023

Variety, "'Roseanne' Canceled After Star's Racist Tweets," accessed May 31, 2023

YouTube, "Sprinkler Rainbow Conspiracy," August 5, 2008

USA Today, "Inside Roseanne Barr’s history of offensive tweets," May 29, 2018

National Geographic, "Rainbow," March 17, 2023

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, "What Causes a Rainbow?" accessed May 31, 2023

Wikipedia, "The Dark Side of the Moon," accessed May 31, 2023

National Geographic, "More rainbows are in our future—and that’s a bad omen," November 29, 2022

Scientific American, "Think You Know Rainbows? Look Again," February 26, 2016

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Grace Abels

Rainbow disconnection: Roseanne Barr didn’t share conspiracy theory about arcs in the sky

Support independent fact-checking.
Become a member!

In a world of wild talk and fake news, help us stand up for the facts.

Sign me up