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Some of these are funny.
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=merron/media
By Jeff Merron
ESPN.com
The dumbest question in Media Day history came prior to Super Bowl XXII. You've probably heard the story. A mediot actually asked Commanders quarterback Doug Williams the following: "How long have you been a black quarterback?"
Can it get any worse than that? Probably not. Here's the thing, though -- the question was never asked. After Williams suffered through countless queries about being the first black QB to start a Super Bowl, Butch John, a reporter for the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, seemed to have had enough. So he said, "Doug, it's obvious you've always been a black quarterback all your life. When did it start to matter?"
John's statement and question were jokes. Most reporters there got it, and they laughed. And then it was printed. But it has been twisted around and repeated, in the form it takes in this story's first paragraph, ever since.
Still, media day has always been a rich repository of stupid questions, many of which are asked on purpose -- which some reporters either don't understand, or don't mention in their stories.
For example, Comedy Central usually shows up on media day. And, if you've ever watched that network's "The Daily Show," you know that they specialize in imitating real reporters and asking intentionally stupid questions. Such as, in 2000, when one of that network's "reporters" asked the Titans' Jevon Kearse about the religious symbol dangling from his neck: "What's the significance of the cross?"
Lots of sportswriters related that one to large audiences without knowing, or finding it necessary to reveal, that it was asked by Comedy Central.
Nickelodeon, the children's cable network, also sends folks to cover the Super Bowl festivities. And they ask the kinds of questions that, well, might appeal to kids. In 2000, one Nick producer asked Dick Vermeil to "show the kids your game face." Dumb? Kind of. But also intentionally fun. They even had a camera there to record the response.
When MTV's groundbreaking Downtown Julie Brown showed up at Media Day, she made it clear she was there to goof around. So nobody blinked when she asked Emmitt Smith, before the 1993 contest, "What are you going to wear in the game Sunday? "
But Comedy Central wasn't around in 1981, when someone asked of Raiders QB Jim Plunkett, "Lemme get this straight, Jim. Is it blind mother, deaf father or the other way around?"
And they probably weren't there in 1990, when a reporter asked Denver RB Bobby Humphrey, "Why do you take your earring off for the game?" Because, he replied, he preferred not to have a diamond "to be pushed through my ear to the middle of my brain."
Thurman Thomas, playing his fourth straight Super Bowl in 1994, was probably being serious when, to a reporter's query about how he got psyched up for big games, he responded that he "reads the newspaper and looks at the stupid questions you all ask."
http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=merron/media
By Jeff Merron
ESPN.com
The dumbest question in Media Day history came prior to Super Bowl XXII. You've probably heard the story. A mediot actually asked Commanders quarterback Doug Williams the following: "How long have you been a black quarterback?"
Can it get any worse than that? Probably not. Here's the thing, though -- the question was never asked. After Williams suffered through countless queries about being the first black QB to start a Super Bowl, Butch John, a reporter for the Jackson (Miss.) Clarion-Ledger, seemed to have had enough. So he said, "Doug, it's obvious you've always been a black quarterback all your life. When did it start to matter?"
John's statement and question were jokes. Most reporters there got it, and they laughed. And then it was printed. But it has been twisted around and repeated, in the form it takes in this story's first paragraph, ever since.
Still, media day has always been a rich repository of stupid questions, many of which are asked on purpose -- which some reporters either don't understand, or don't mention in their stories.
For example, Comedy Central usually shows up on media day. And, if you've ever watched that network's "The Daily Show," you know that they specialize in imitating real reporters and asking intentionally stupid questions. Such as, in 2000, when one of that network's "reporters" asked the Titans' Jevon Kearse about the religious symbol dangling from his neck: "What's the significance of the cross?"
Lots of sportswriters related that one to large audiences without knowing, or finding it necessary to reveal, that it was asked by Comedy Central.
Nickelodeon, the children's cable network, also sends folks to cover the Super Bowl festivities. And they ask the kinds of questions that, well, might appeal to kids. In 2000, one Nick producer asked Dick Vermeil to "show the kids your game face." Dumb? Kind of. But also intentionally fun. They even had a camera there to record the response.
When MTV's groundbreaking Downtown Julie Brown showed up at Media Day, she made it clear she was there to goof around. So nobody blinked when she asked Emmitt Smith, before the 1993 contest, "What are you going to wear in the game Sunday? "
But Comedy Central wasn't around in 1981, when someone asked of Raiders QB Jim Plunkett, "Lemme get this straight, Jim. Is it blind mother, deaf father or the other way around?"
And they probably weren't there in 1990, when a reporter asked Denver RB Bobby Humphrey, "Why do you take your earring off for the game?" Because, he replied, he preferred not to have a diamond "to be pushed through my ear to the middle of my brain."
Thurman Thomas, playing his fourth straight Super Bowl in 1994, was probably being serious when, to a reporter's query about how he got psyched up for big games, he responded that he "reads the newspaper and looks at the stupid questions you all ask."