8 Celebrities Who Held Bizarre And Eerie Beliefs

Elise Feyrer

We seem to have reached a point in celebrity culture when holding bizarre, easily disproven, and perhaps harmful ideas or cultish beliefs is practically expected. There was a time when people would pay to see or hear about the extraordinary things celebrities did. There were times when we did buy some of their items.
They can still be held up in the same manner of adoration, but now they must also be outspoken weirdos. Take away the oddball label, and we're just talking about "successful people." Not to let you wait anymore, scroll down to see the list of the eight celebrities who held eerie beliefs.

1. Lady Gaga Got The Idea Of "Born This Way" From Her Weird Beliefs

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"Born This Way" singer believes women are born differently than science implies. Don't label her a pseudoscientific quack. She's "perpetually lonely" because she fears sexual activity will rob her of creative inspiration (via her vagina). Lady Gaga's theory seems solid. One feels bad for her. She's wrong, except. Evian should forsake its water-based approach and start bottling women's vaginas.

2. Kyrie Irving Believe The Earth Is... Flat

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Kyrie Irving has backed off his flat Earth ideas, but he doesn't confine his convictions to History Channel. Irving thinks the Fed ordered the JFK hit, and the CIA killed Bob Marley. If Irving helps the Brooklyn Nets make the playoffs, supporters won't care if he says Oprah and Cap'n Crunch conspired to take over Venezuela for a Nazi moon colony. Lmao!!

3. M.I.A Thought World Governments Manipulated Google And Facebook

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MIA thought these companies work with governments because of their importance in public debate and data gathering. But controlled by world governments as big corporations? Incomprehensible. This is a "New World Order" plot. It says a cabal is seeking to create a dictatorial world government. Problem? Along with a lack of proof, the hypothesis lacks internal logic.
As it gains attention, more people, companies, organizations, and governments become involved. That seems like a consensus, not a "cabal." Let's give the devil credit. If M.I.A. is true that the CIA built Google and Facebook to eavesdrop on people, there's an easy fix. They're useless. Doable? True. Don't connect. Still, "Paper Planes" rocks.

4. Randy Quaid Thought Hollywood Tried To Kill Him

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Randy. Let's give him a break and assume the best intentions. Let's give him the benefit of the doubt and assume that there is a shadowy group of people paying hitmen to target Hollywood's A-listers to... well, it doesn't matter, so let's just give him that. What's the deal with Randy Quaid? How does he know he's on the list if he does? Were they ever his comrades, and was he an assassin? Is this person a secret agent? Could Randy Quaid be John Wick? All we hear is Randy, Randy, Randy.

5. Alicia Silverstone Thought We Should Follow Birds' Actions

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A toddler shouldn't be fed a mouthful of mashed fava beans. Alicia Silverstone disagrees. Mayim Bialik, Hollywood's super genius, also did this with her kids. They chewed their kids' food first and spit it into their mouths. If birds eat it, we should too, right? Mammalian. Not us! Do these sentences refute this practice? True. Bialik and Silverstone can achieve anything. It's strange, though. There's no evident benefit other than allowing newborns to eat hard-to-swallow foods until they get teeth.

6. Rob Lowe Thought A Legend Almost Killed Him

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He believes a legend almost killed him. During filming for The Lowe Files, he and his crew searched for a "wood ape" in the Ozark Mountains. Lowe swore an unseen legendary beast threatened him and his crew at their secluded camp. Rob Lowe should return to the American woods in 2020, "The Year the Earth Went Nuts." He must uncover the elusive race of enormous hominids and either normalize relations or challenge one of them to a death match utilizing 1950s motorcycle gang weapons like pipe wrenches and chains.

7. Alice Walker Believes David Icke's Hypothesis (Lizard People Control The World) Is Right

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Since 1991, when he declared himself the messiah on the Wogan TV show, David Icke has peddled bizarre conspiracy theories. Icke believes a group of shape-shifting reptilian-human hybrids is influencing significant world events to enact a sinister plan for world dominance.
According to Icke and his followers, reptilian beings might be substituted for "Zionists." Walker and Icke agree here. It's the Jews again! Anti-resurgence Semitism seems so telegraphed and bland that it baffles sensible individuals with enlightenment beliefs. But. For an author whose lifework is discussing the historic misery of her people, it's tragic that she so quickly blames another community, especially one that has been so deliberately mistreated and tormented (and who continues to suffer the scourge of anti-Semitism today).

8. Terrence Howard Thought Maths Is Wrong

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How do we know that one plus one equals two (or, by Terrence's reasoning, one)? Because it was taught to us in class? Suckers! Star of "Empire" Terrence Howard offers a fresh lesson for the general public.
According to "Terryological" reasoning, 1+1=2. That's exactly right. 2! Want evidence? All right, Terrence, get at it. His question: "How can it equal one?" Since there is no effect of multiplying by itself, the value of two is nullified if one time one equals one. Since the square root of four is two, multiplying one by itself yields two. What is the answer to this riddle? Needs one. But we've been told two, and that's wrong.