by Ross Petras
Contents
Title Page
Acknowledgments
Introduction
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y
About the Authors
Copyright
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks to everyone who helped make this book a reality, especially:
Bruce Tracy, Robin Rue, Kris Dahl, Paul Bresnick, David Gernert, and Susan Moldow—and, of course, to all of the people who contributed their favorite stupidities.
INTRODUCTION
We’ve all done it at one time or another—put our foot in our mouth.
No one is immune to foot-in-mouth disease. People from all walks of life say the wrong thing at the wrong time. Of course, most of us are lucky. When we say something dumb, there’s no television camera or newspaper reporter to capture our inadvertent blunders for time immemorial.
But those in the public eye aren’t quite so lucky. Their verbal gaffes are recorded in the paper, on air—and now in this book.
This is a collection of the stupidest, most ridiculous, funny, asinine, and sometimes frankly frightening quotes in history—anything from misstatements to doublespeak to good old-fashioned idiocy.
The 776 Stupidest Things Ever Said is an irreverent look at our pundits, celebrities, politicians, and social leaders and how fallible we all are—them for saying dumb things, us for paying too much attention.
We already have The Guinness Book of World Records, Bartlett’s Familiar Quotations, and innumerable books listing the best quotations from the best minds in history—from Tacitus to Goethe to Gorbachev. So now (to paraphrase Jimmy Carter), Why not the worst?
The quotes we’ve collected in this book come from a wide range of sources—from daily newspapers across the country to magazines, from television shows to private collections. Along the way, we noticed something interesting: like most things, verbal blunders seem to come and go in cycles. While we always relish hearing or reading them, some eras are riper with them than others.
There have been several Golden Ages (of sorts) of the quotable stupidity. An early Golden Age came in the late 1700s and early 1800s, with Anglo-Irish statesman Sir Boyle Roche leading the pack in the misstatement race. One hundred years later, another Golden Age emerged—focusing on gaffes committed in the British Parliament. Then came the early 1920s and the emergence of a wholly American gaffe-watch, caused in part by the tortured syntactical meanderings of President Warren G. Harding.
The early 1940s brought another Golden Age. This one, like the attention of the American public in general, centered around Hollywood and the blunders of those connected to the Great American Dream Machine. World War II and the Cold War brought about a lull of sorts in the appreciation of the verbal gaffe. Save for periodic breaks (such as during presidential campaigns), irreverence in general was out.
Then came the late 1960s and a completely new American ethos. The youth revolution swept the nation. Suddenly anything and anyone were fair game. Watergate brought this Golden Age to a peak. And we haven’t come off that peak yet. As Yogi Berra said, “It ain’t over till it’s over,” and it ain’t yet.
Just as there are Golden Ages of the verbal gaffe, there are the truly silver-tongued who have more of a knack for the inspired malapropism and verbal blunder than others. That’s why we’ve singled out a few people for special attention: the little-known Sir Boyle Roche, Yogi Berra, Sam Goldwyn, and, more generally, the chief perpetrators of incomprehensible doublespeak—bureaucrats and academics.
But most of this book is a cross section—quotes from people in sports, the arts, the government and the world of business, the famous and the not so famous. Some of the quotes make one think twice about the people in charge of our government, our corporations, our society. Some are clearly mistakes. And others are just plain funny.
And that’s really the bottom line. After all, everyone makes mistakes—so why not sit back and enjoy them? Read this book as a celebration of the verbal inanities even the best of us make … a celebration of our humanity. It is our hope that it will make even the most tongue-tied of us feel better about ourselves. If the best and the brightest can do it and go on to become presidents, kings, and generals, why not me?
A
On Accidence, Causes of:
… hazards are one of the main causes of accidents.
from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s booklet, “Safety with Beef Cattle,” 1976
On Actuality:
Things are more like they are now than they have ever been.
President Gerald Ford
On Adages, Modern interpretations of:
As Duke Ellington once said, “The Battle of Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Elkton.”
Babe Ruth on a radio show, garbling the adage by the Duke of Wellington that Waterloo was won on the playing fields of Eton
On Addresses:
If at any time I change my address when I notify you I hope you will be so kind as to change also.
letter from a reader renewing his subscription, received by the business manager of Motor News
On Adoptions, Reasons Why You May Be Excluded from:
It would seem from the interviews and reports that both of you have had few, if any, negative experiences when children yourselves, and also seem to enjoy a marital experience where rows and arguments have no place. Under the circumstances, [adopted children would not have sufficient exposure to] negative experiences.
letter from the Lancashire (U.K.) Social Services Department, on why foster parents Harry and Esther Hough were not qualified to adopt as they “exuded excessive harmony,” although they had already raised over forty foster children from birth to age eight
On Advice:
Life its own self, as Dan Jenkins said. Life its own self. Figure that one out, Norm. But what it means is, I have a lot more to learn from President Reagan.
George Bush, at the beginning of his presidency, when asked whether he was getting advice from his predecessor
On Advice, Not So Good:
Don’t cut off your nose yourself.
Casey Stengel
On Age:
Bruce Sutter has been around for a while and he’s pretty old. He’s thirty-five years old. That will give you some idea of how old he is.
Ron Fairly, San Francisco Giants broadcaster
On Agreeing:
And what is more, I agree with everything I have just said.
attributed to Piet Koornhoff, South African cabinet minister, ambassador to United States
On Agreements:
If I entered into an agreement with that man, I would be sticking my head in a moose.
attributed to movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn
On Air Pares, Free:
Gifts are positively corruptive…. [Free air fares] are harmless, or at least only potentially corruptive.
Lee Wilbur, staff aide on the House Appropriations Transportation subcommittee, explaining why it was okay for him to accept a free (first-class) round-trip flight to Spain
On Alliteration, Excessive:
Progression is not proclamation nor palaver. It is not pretense nor play on prejudice. It is not of personal pronouns, nor perennial pronouncement. It is not the perturbation of a people passion-wrought, nor a promise proposed.
President Warren G. Harding
On Ambassadors, Qualifications for Becoming:
This is the man who was not only the president of the National Council of Shopping Centers, but the International Council of Shopping Centers in 1986, and traveled around the world.
Senator Rudy Boschwitz of Minnesota in his recommendation for the appointment of Melvin F. Sembler to the post of ambassador to Australia, as quoted in Spy, May 1990. Sembler was appointed and confirmed shortly thereafter.
On Ambassadors, Reasons for Becoming:
I understand it’s a nice life-style. I love golf, and I understand they have a lot of nice golf courses.
Chic Hecht, former senator from Nevada, explaining why he would like to be appointed ambassador to the Bahamas. (Note: Shortly after saying this, Hecht did become ambassador to the Bahamas.)
On American Greatness:
That’s part of American greatness, is discrimination. Yes, sir. Inequality, I think, breeds freedom and gives a man opportunity.
Lester Maddox, ex-governor of Georgia
On Americans, Native:
Maybe we should not have humored them … [when they asked to live on reservations]. Maybe we should have said, “No, come join us. Be citizens along with the rest of us.”
President Ronald Reagan during a trip to Moscow, when a student asked him about U.S. treatment of Native Americans
On Americans, Native:
I don’t feel we did wrong in taking this great country away from them. There were great numbers of people who needed new land, and the Indians were selfishly trying to keep it for themselves.
John Wayne, actor who played mostly cowboys in the movies
On Americans, Native, Where Co Find:
Get some more from the reservoir.
supposedly said by movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn after being told that the Western film he was working on required more Native American extras
On Americans, Where Co Find:
Wherever I have gone in this country, I have found Americans.
Alf Landon (in America), during a speech in his presidential campaign against FDR
On Animals, the Reason for:
I believe that mink are raised for being turned into fur coats and if we didn’t wear fur coats those little animals would never have been born. So is it better not to have been born or to have lived for a year or two to have been turned into a fur coat? I don’t know.
Barbi Benton, ex-Playboy bunny turned actress
On Answers:
I think we’re on the road to coming up with answers that I don’t think any of us in total feel we have the answers to.
Kim Anderson, mayor of Naples, Florida
On Answers, Clear:
My position on Vietnam is very simple. And I feel this way. I haven’t spoken on it because I haven’t felt there was any major contribution that I had to make at the time. I think that our concepts as a nation and that our actions have not kept pace with the changing conditions, and therefore our actions are not completely relevant today to the realities of the magnitude and the complexity of the problems that we face in this conflict.
Nelson Rockefeller, governor of New York, when asked in a press conference for his position on the Vietnam War. When a reporter followed up with a question asking what he meant, Rockefeller answered, “Just what I said.”
On Applause:
They gave me a standing observation.
ex-Houston Oiler and Florida State coach Bill Peterson
On Appreciation:
You’re a parasite for sore eyes.
attributed to actor/director Gregory Ratoff
On Art, the Meaning of:
I juxtapose anticipated with anomalous imagery to create visual analogies. Discrepancy and contrast in scale are emphasized as I investigate perception and memory.
Sura Ruth, photographer, in a press release about a show of her photographs
On Art, Why Artists Get involved In:
I paint paintings because I can’t get the experience in any other way but there are many more experiences that are equally satisfying to me and equally inept at answering all my questions, but hover in exactitude in describing themselves and defying me to define their logic.
Julian Schnabel, in his memoirs, CVJ: Nicknames of Maitre D’s & Other Excerpts From Life
On Arc Critics, the Infallibility of:
Rembrandt is not to be compared in the painting of character with our extraordinarily gifted artist, Mr. Rippingdale.
John Hunt, nineteenth-century art critic
On Arting:
In terms of arting, where the reference condition is not fixed or even known conceptually but rather something coming to being, what can we hope through our formative hermeneutic movement? To make the “otherness” of the arting process more other, more “objective” in a newer sense and less “subjective” in the older sense, so that the arting process itself speaks more purely?
Kenneth R. Beittel, professor of art education at Penn State University, in Art Education, as reported in Edwin Newman’s Strictly Speaking
On Artistic Appreciation, Fascist:
Culture is necessary, but it must be alive and not too much of it.
Virginio Gayda, official in Fascist Italy
On Artistry:
When it comes to ruining a painting, he’s an artist.
movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn, on an abstract artist
On Assimilation by a Vice-President:
My fellow astronauts …
Vice-President Dan Quayle, beginning a speech at an Apollo 11 anniversary celebration
On Athletes, Unusual Talents of:
Arnie [Palmer], usually a great putter, seems to be having trouble with his long putt. However he has no trouble dropping his shorts.
golf broadcaster on the air during a tournament
B
On Bad Deals:
My dear Mr. Wallis, just read Sea Wolf You told me in your office that it would be a 50-50 part (the role of Leach). I am sorry to say it is just the opposite.
George Raft, actor, in wire to Hal Wallis, producer
On Baseball:
Half this game is ninety percent mental.
Danny Ozark, manager of the Philadelphia Phillies
On Baseball Fans, Nude:
Would the fans along the outfield please remove their clothes?
Tex Rikards, public address announcer at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn, New York, after fans had used the top of the outfield fence for their coats
On Basic Language Instruction:
In the case of the first possessive, the pattern is: Basic form of the first possessive, (or corresponding possessive form if modified by a possessive adjective in English) plus dative of the third person “his” form of the second possessive plus definite article plus third person “his” form of word possessed, to agree in number and case according to its form and use in the sentence.
Hungarian: Basic Course, publication of the U.S. State Department
On Beards:
I’ve been traveling so much, I haven’t had time to grow it.
Bob Horner, Atlanta Braves third baseman, on why he hadn’t grown a beard
On Being in Two Places at One Time:
No refreshments shall be supplied to any member after the above named hours, and none shall be supplied for consumption off the club premises except to a member on the premises at the time.
By-law in a private social club rulebook
On Being Shot Through the Right Temple:
Isn’t it a blessing of God it didn’t hit him in the eye?
an elderly woman, when she and two others found a dead robber on the road, shot through the right temple
On Being There:
Well, sir, I met you this morning, but you did not come; however, I’m determined to meet you tomorrow morning, whether you come or not.
a challenger to a man who didn’t show up for a scheduled duel, reported by nineteenth-century British writer J. C. Perc
y
On Believability:
Anything that man says you’ve got to take with a dose of salts.
movie mogul Samuel Goldwyn
On Birds, Communist:
The lark is exclusively a Soviet bird. The lark does not like the other countries, and lets its harmonious song be heard only over the fields made fertile by the collective labor of the citizens of the happy land of the Soviets.
from a novel by the not so noted Soviet novelist D. Bleiman
On Birds, Strange Abilities of:
A man could not be in two places at the same time unless he were a bird.
Sir Boyle Roche, eighteenth-century M.P. from Tralee
On Birth:
I called the doctor, and he told me that the contraptions were an hour apart.
Mackey Sasser, New York Mets catcher, on his wife’s labor
On Blacks vs. Whites:
It is just not accurate to believe that blacks were confined somehow to the lowest-paying jobs; rather, there was some tendency for blacks to be congregated in certain units which had a variety of characteristics including, in some instances, a somewhat lower average pay than some units where there might be a heavy concentration of white employees.
Ben Fisher, special assistant to the president of United Steelworkers of America, in New Times
On Blame: