column_buckwolf
Will Ferrell Lives: Dead Wrong Death Rumors
In Other News, Paul McCartney and the Taco Bell Chihuahua Are Still Alive and Kicking
Will Ferrell was shooting a film in Canada on March 14, when a false report posted on a news web site claimed he died in a paraguiding accident. (ABC)
By BUCK WOLF
March 27 2006
Will Ferrell is not 36 years old, he's not a graduate of the University of California, and he's not dead. After a press release riddled with mistakes reported his death two weeks ago, the only ones grieving are the ones who sent flowers.In the latest celebrity death hoax, the 38-year-old comic reportedly died in a paragliding accident. The March 14 report, posted on the iNewswire Web site, was quickly withdrawn, but not before creating a small tremor in the Hollywood media.
"Not much to say other than we heard and read about it this morning and reacted accordingly," says Matthew Labov, Ferrell's publicist, who reported that Ferrell is in Canada shooting a movie. "There was no point in trying to track [the source] down as it was obviously a hoax."
It's unlikely we'll ever know who is responsible. INewswire says the story was posted by someone using a Web address that can't be traced. And Airtek Paragliding — the company Ferrell reportedly hired for a thrill ride — also claims it was punk'd.
"I have no knowledge of Will Ferrell paragliding," says Airtek president Josh Meyers.
And so, one more celebrity death rumor is put to rest, only until the next one comes along.
Abe Vigoda Suvives 25-Year-Old Death Rumors
You can blame the media, you can blame the Internet, and you can blame a society that is hopelessly obsessed with its stars. But the twisted tradition of death hoaxing has a long history.
And even when a star is actually dead, the details are so often twisted to make the story more dramatic.
Jerry Mathers — the cute kid on "Leave It To Beaver" — didn't die in Vietnam as many believe. Mathers, now 57, did serve in the Air Force National Guard during the war and in his 1998 biography, he says someone with his name did die in combat, and he's been explaining that in interviews ever since. If you need living proof, Mathers even makes an appearance in the new film "Larry the Cable Guy: Health Inspector."
Likewise, it was easy for the public to believe that 250-pound singer "Mama" Cass Elliot of the Mamas and the Papas died after choking on a ham sandwich. She actually suffered a heart attack.