I know I'm the only one who still reads Parade magazine. So I assume I'm also the only one who notices the incredibly stupid questions that are occasionally selected in the Personality Parade column. Of course, almost all of the questions are inane -- that goes with the territory -- but these questions rise to a level of idiocy that almost has to be intentional an the part of the editors.
From a May 30 feature about Kristin Chenoweth, the Broadway musical star who made her mark with soaring vocal work as Glinda in Wicked. The initial question: "Some readers have asked if you did your own singing when you appeared recently on Glee."
To which Chenoweth was forced to give this answer: "Oh, wow. Well, I was trained in voice and I have a master's in it, so, yeah."
From April 11: "I've heard that First Lady Michelle Obama has 17 assistants who cost the public more than $1.5 million a year. I've also heard that Laura Bush had only one assistant. True? Answer: Not true. This subject has produced a lot of mail. In fact, Mrs. Obama has a staff of 24, with a total payroll in the vicinity of $1.5 million. Mrs. Bush had a staff of 25, at a similar cost to taxpayers. "While every First Lady approaches the job differently, the duties, obligations, and opportunities for the office of the First Lady have increased dramatically over the years," a highly placed White House source explains."
From May 23: "Wasn't there a TV show called V in the 1990s, also based on human-alien interactions? Is there a connect between it and the new V on ABC?"
From May 9: "With Pope Benedict XVI much in the news lately, I wonder: Has there ever been an American pope?"
Although I suppose the hardest thing to believe among all this is that Personality Parade still gets any questions at all, given that burbling fountain of information called the Internet.
Sunday, May 30, 2010
Parade of Ignorance
Posted at 2:15 PM
Categories: Media Weirdness
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2 comments:
I have often thought they planted their own questions. I'll see some celebrity quote or random factoid in the media, and a couple of months later, there it is again as the answer to a question.
I think that Kristin Chenoweth's actual answer -- before editing -- was, "No duh!"
You may also notice that the publication date of questions asked about a celebrity are often very near said celebrity's special television appearances, movie openings or recording release. Such a wonderful coincidence!
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