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Claim: Hurricane Katrina survivor gives mistaken answer to an interviewer's question about the loss of churches in her area.
Example: [Collected via e-mail, 2005]
Variations: In the wake of the devastating tornadoes of April 2011, this joke was dusted off and sent around anew:
The tornadoes that hit Alabama were devastating. It did not spare the houses of worship in and around the area.
Origins: Urban
legends and jokes are often used as vehicles to pass along negative perceptions about members of other groups because the process of telling them provides an at-arm's-length way of communicating prejudices by framing them as the underpinnings of funny stories. Tellers retain deniability for the content of what is being expressed by shrugging off any implications of racism and maintaining they're merely repeating amusing stories.
One of the local television stations in Tuscaloosa aired an interview with a black woman. The interviewer was a woman from a Boston affiliate. She asked the black woman how such total and complete devastation of the churches in the area had affected their lives. Without hesitation, the woman replied, 'I don't know about all those other people, but we haven't gone to Churches in years. We get our chicken from Popeye's'. The look on the interviewer's face was priceless! In
Of course, there was no such interview in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina as the one described above. Jokes employing the
I agree. Burn all the Church's. I like Popeye's Chicken better anyway.
Black comedian George Wallace has presented the same bit of humor as a "Yo Momma" joke:
"Yo' mama is so stupid, when they told her they were burning churches, she said, 'That's alright, I eat at Popeyes.'"
Another 1997 telling of this joke attributes it to black comic Daran Howard:
"You know they're burning churches."
Last updated: 10 May 2011
"I don't give a damn, I like Popeye's!!" This material may not be reproduced without permission. snopes and the snopes.com logo are registered service marks of snopes.com. |
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