A lot of tabloid headlines are purposely misleading… and here’s a recent example.
I used be a HUGE Garth Brooks fan (still like his music, most of it) and was very saddened that his marriage to his first wife didn’t work out because I thought it was a great testimony to working things out instead of heading to court. Anyway, a recent headline said that his current marriage (to Trisha Yearwood) was in “crisis” and that his ex-wife was “caught in the middle”.
Okay, I admit it, I read the article. Guess what? The “crisis” was that there had been some tension regarding Garth’s daughters acceptance of Trisha BEFORE they were married. Not an unusual thing with children of divorce, as I understand it. He apparently made it clear that if it came down to a choice between a life with Trisha and his daughters’ happiness, he would side with his daughters and end the relationship. His ex-wife being “caught in the middle” turned out to be that she had never talked bad about Trisha to the girls and counseled them to give her a chance.
Not half as lurid as the headline suggested. And the events all took place BEFORE he remarried, which meant that the news was, what? A couple years old? I thought it meant that he had decided he truly loved his ex-wife after all and that his marriage to Trisha was on the rocks as a result.
So, who knows just how true any of that tripe really is anyway? My biggest peeve about these birdcage liners is how they just LOVE to slap photos of celebrities’ cellulite on the front cover. Honestly, who wants to look at that anyway?
But did anyone catch the headline on the final issue of “News of the World”? “Buy it today, sell it on eBay tomorrow!”
The sad thing is, a lot of people probably did!