Anyone remember the Denzel rumor that floated through our Southern Indiana area a few years back? Word on Scottsville Road was that Denzel Washington (yes, that Denzel) was moving to Floyds Knobs. Nobody knew exactly when he would arrive or where he was going to stay once he got here, but nearly everyone knew someone who knew someone who knew someone who knew all about it.
I first heard about Denzel joining our town during one of my regular Sunday dinners at Grandma’s house. My cousin, who worked part-time serving soft-serve ice cream claimed that she worked with a girl whose uncle worked with a builder who worked with a contractor who had talked to Denzel and that he was on his way. “He’s going to live here while he films a movie about the Carrollton County bus crash,” she told us.
We laughed. We made jokes about whether or not he would go to Sammy O’s or if anybody would recognize him buying DVDs at Target. And like most stories that circulate around the table over my grandmother’s cream corn and cucumber salad, we blew if off. But then the next Sunday came along and a few of us had heard the story outside of our Sunday dinner gathering from different people. By the third Sunday, the stories were rampant. The rumor was spreading across the Knobs like a strawberry vine run wild.
One story had him and his children behind closed doors at Floyd Central High School meeting with their administration. Another story had him gassing up a green hummer at the Sav-a-Step at the top of the Knobs. My favorite story was from someone who had talked to one of the local clergymen at the produce section in the New Albany Kroger who claimed he knew for certain that Denzel Washington would be moving to Floyds Knobs, Indiana soon. You have to believe a priest, right?
The rumor was harmless and made for lively Sunday dinner conversation topic even though it never came to be. In the end, after the buzz had died down, I got an email from a man who claimed to be the original contractor who had a role in the beginning of the Guess Who’s Coming to Floyds Knobs story.
The contractor told me in an email that it was his niece who had started the rumor after she heard that he had taken a meeting with a non-celebrity-someone from Hollywood who was looking around for a possible temporary living space. They did have a connection to Denzel Washington, but his moving to the Knobs was never a sure thing. The rumor had come full circle and the truth was that there was not going to be any actual Denzel sightings any time soon.
The interesting thing is how defiant some people were about what they knew. I talked to old high school buddies who assured me that Denzel was coming to town; they absolutely, one-hundred-percent KNEW it to be true. A check out attendant at the local grocery confirmed she had sold milk and eggs to Denzel’s wife. My doctor’s office had more than one nurse who had passed him on the road while driving to work.
The Denzel rumor was safe and fun and no damage was done in believing or spreading the idea that we could end up with a living, breathing, Oscar-winning celebrity in our midst. But not all rumors are as harmless.
When a rumor whips through the collective consciousness, it gains momentum and power and can easily influence the masses. It takes very little for a rumor to move from false to true. Consider the power a rumor has when it is broadcast on a national news channel. Millions of people hear a sound byte that turns into a thought that eventually manifests into an action and boom: the rumor is no longer just a rumor.
I imagine the only way to be safe is to safeguard yourself from what you read and see and hear. Don’t believe something to be true just because the news channel anchor with the high-ratings (or, dare I say, your clergyman) claims it to be real.
Unless, of course, you hear Denzel is moving here, then send me an email right away!
Amy Gesenhues is a freelance writer in Floyd County, Indiana. You can read her daily commentaries at www.AmyWroteIt.Wordpress.com or email her at amy@amywroteit.com.
Columns
GESENHUES: The rumor mill
- Columns
-
-
CLERE: Walkout is absurd
The walkout by Indiana House Democrats entered its third week yesterday as tensions continued to rise and misinformation proliferated.
-
LADD: New Albany has new energy
New Albany is evolving. Public art has become more prevalent in the downtown, drawing more locals and outside visitors to our community; bringing more publicity.
-
GESENHUES: The Susan G. Komen precedent
My mom is a breast cancer survivor.
I have walked many a mile in support of the cause and raised a sizable number of dollars for breast cancer research. The Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure initiatives are not lost on me. -
BEAM: Just smile
Whispers will soon abound outside of school as the corporation enters negotiations this summer with the teacher’s union over a new contract. Aides are not covered under the union.
-
HOWEY: Keeping Peyton in the Hoosier pantheon
The critics of keeping Manning suggest he would return to a team struggling to contend. I’m not buying that. The Colts were decimated for a second consecutive year with injuries, particularly on defense. With the top choice in each round, they can quickly reset, as San Francisco and Cincinnati did this year.
-
CUMMINS: How to live a stable life
Then I heard Newt Gingrich say that he will establish a colony on the moon by the end of his second term. I’d vote for him if he would go.
-
VAN HOY: What’s the point, anyway?
-
DODD: Taking shots with the mayor
-
NASH: We have to share the road
They are very predictable and almost every one of them say the same thing. They throw around words like “menace” and claim that the roads were meant for automobiles. It is always the same argument that bicycle riders don’t pay taxes and should be registered and be forced to get insurance just like cars.
-
STAWAR: Our family strategic plan
Objective 1: Consult tax professional to determine if contributions to job-seeking son, who has a college degree in fine arts, constitutes a charitable deduction (like supporting The Fund for the Arts).
- More Columns Headlines
-







