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Image credits: Superbia18 #14. I was the one asking the stupid question. When I was like 12 I was at a taco food truck at the county fair and my options were either a shrimp or chicken taco.
Breaking into the Game Industry argues that the adage (and the related one "the only stupid question is the one that is never asked") is only relevant for the classroom and that in the real world when you want to try to impress someone, there are many stupid questions one can ask. [10]
"Certain videographers like to ask dumb questions," Miles Diggs of 24/7 Paps told ET. "Totally out of the blue, 'What kind of pizza do you like?' and stuff like that."
The DMV has some good news (it's dumping more stupid questions from the license renewal test) and some not-so-good news (the 'virtual assistant' needs work).
No Stupid Questions [20] is podcast that is part of Freakonomics Radio, where Dubner and Angela Duckworth ask each other questions about a range of subjects. A film called Freakonomics: The Movie was released in 2010. [21]
I don't think that "stupid questions" exist. Just stupid answers are real. But that's, unfortunately, my opinion. So reading what I just wrote presents a paradox. It just seems that the more things you read and know and the more you get older... incredible paradoxes keep arising from everywhere!
And people can really double down on their stiffness when asked certain questions that — while interesting — can provoke uncomfortable memories from their family history or past relationships.
A pamphlet of Bertrand Russell's 1964 essay "16 Questions on the Assassination," which promoted conspiracy theories regarding the assassination of John F. Kennedy. "Just Asking Questions" (JAQ; known derisively as "JAQing off") [a] is a pseudoskeptical tactic often used by conspiracy theorists to present false or distorted claims by framing them as questions.