BBC Online Miss or monsieur prank revealed
The editor of a French
Internet site which ran a story saying the current Miss France was really
a man has said the article was just a joke, and he was surprised at the
media fuss.
Frederic Royer, editor of L'Examineur, said his website was purely satirical. "Everything is a joke on our page," he said.
On 8 January, L'Examineur ran an article claiming that the current Miss France, 20-year-old Elodie Gossuin, was in fact a 27-year-old man. The rumours spread like wildfire on the internet, eventually appearing in newspapers from Puerto Rico to the UK. According to the reports, Miss Universe competition organisers were checking on her sex at birth. Uncertain beginnings Mr Royer said he was unsure whether his story was behind the international media storm currently swirling around Ms Gossuin, although some newspaper reports cited a French Internet site as the source. "If it comes from us, it's worrying and it's serious," he said. "That would mean that people do not understand humour." On Wednesday, Ms Gossuin denied the gender rumours in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where the Miss Universe pageant is to take place on 11 May. Ms Gossuin, a 20-year-old nursing student from Picardie, said she laughed at the reports at first, but then started worrying that they might damage her chances of winning the competition. Angry attack The media attention sparked a furious attack on the internet by Genevieve de Fontenay, the head of the Miss France committee, who described the medium as an uncontrolled and terrifying source of misinformation. "This is imbecilic rumour, which undermines the dignity of Elodie Gossuin, was started by a deranged individual," she said. Mr Royer said that the furore sparked by the story on his site showed people's gullibility. "As soon as something is placed on an internet site, people take it at face value, without asking themselves any questions," he said. |
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Maintained by Francis F. Steen, Communication Studies, University of California Los Angeles |