Thursday, April 23, 2009

Perez Missed the Point


When openly gay Internet blogger and solipsist Perez Hilton asked Miss California that loaded question during the Miss USA Pageant, he missed the point of her answer.

Hilton's question was direct, but not simple like, “Can you wear white after Labor Day?” It was political; it was ideological and had the potential to be inflammatory. And there’s no one that likes everything flaming than Perez. Here was the question he posed to Carrie Prejean: “Vermont recently became the fourth state to legalize same-sex marriage. Do you think every state should follow suit? Why or why not?”

Although the question is totally appropriate for the telecast, the potential for her answer to overshadow the Miss USA contest was undeniable.

And it did just that.

Prejean had a decision to make immediately. Did she compromise her morals and lie with a very PC answer or did she tell the truth without being confrontational and mean-spirited? She chose the latter and I have more respect for her today because of it.

I don’t agree with her on the issue of gay marriage, but I respect her for at least acknowledging that her answer wasn’t going to be popular. It was not a debate on Fox News or CNN; it was a beauty pageant for the love of Bert Parks. (Yes, I know he hosted the Miss America pageant, not Miss USA, but let me make my obscure, pop culture references).

Perez gave her 0 points, a goose egg, zilch for her answer and she plummeted in the contest scoring from being a lock to win the pageant to not even in the Top 5.

But what’s even more egregious to me is that Perez totally missed the point concerning her answer. Sadly, he’s not the only one as beauty contestants from the four states that do allow gay marriage have spoken up saying Miss California should have given more politically correct answer.

Are they serious?

I am tired of a small group of people dictating the rules of engagement. It physically drains me to live in a society where every word, sound bite or press release is packaged, processed and poised so conversations are vapid, opinions are scarce and people do express an opinion; it is (ironically) tantamount to violating someone else's rights.

Perez Hilton is a bully and ironically, the same thing he called Miss California on his web site.

If he doesn’t appreciate the fact that we should stand for what we believe (as he does with the issue of gay marriage and blogs incessantly on his site) then I guess he should just point the finger back at himself with the big fat label DUMB B%^&* on his forehead. Don’t worry, it would fit... with room to spare.

3 comments:

  1. I don't follow the Miss USA pageant anymore (and I get the Bert Parks nod), and I don't follow Perez Hilton - I didn't even know who he was till a young 20 something friend told me about him and I did a big "whatever." But I applaud this young lady for standing up for her beliefs, probably knowing full well that in this damn PC world, it would cost her a shot at the title.

    I'd take one of her over a dozen of PC soundalike contestants any day. I hope she sticks to her guns and doesn't wimp out and offer an apology next week or anything. Good for her. I don't care what your beliefs are - don't compromise them. She's the winner in my book.

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  2. I totally agree with you. Wish I could have written this myself. I could copy you but that would be plagiarizing. And since you're famous, I would get in trouble for that. Good work though.

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  3. I stopped following pageants when I was 18.. I'm 46. I found it interesting that the contestants were given some tough questions and expected not to voice their own opinion. I don't care for wannabe celebrities like him. Not everyone is going to agree and if we are forced to then I'm moving out of the US.

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