"I wish I had an answer to that because I'm tired of answering that question"
About this Quote
Yogi Berra turns impatience into a punchline by answering a question with a complaint about answering it. The genius is how cleanly it short-circuits the usual athlete-interview ritual: the reporter wants a neat, quotable “answer,” and Berra gives them something better (or worse, depending on your job) a paradox that exposes the transaction. It’s not refusal exactly. It’s a performance of refusal, delivered in the same plainspoken cadence people expect from him.
The specific intent is defensive, but not hostile. Berra signals: I’ve been asked this too many times, I’m bored, you’re not listening, and the question itself has become the story. Instead of scolding the interviewer outright, he makes the question collapse under its own repetition. That’s why it lands: the line is a protest against canned media narratives, disguised as charm.
The subtext is also class-coded. Berra’s public persona was the unpretentious ballplayer, skeptical of fancy explanations. This “non-answer” asserts control without sounding like a press secretary. It tells the room: you don’t get access to my inner life on demand, especially not in prepackaged sound bites.
Context matters because sports media runs on loops: slumps, controversies, trades, “What’s your mindset?” Berra’s line anticipates modern celebrity fatigue with content churn. It’s an early, analog version of “I’m not doing this discourse today,” delivered with a grin that keeps everyone laughing while still drawing a boundary.
The specific intent is defensive, but not hostile. Berra signals: I’ve been asked this too many times, I’m bored, you’re not listening, and the question itself has become the story. Instead of scolding the interviewer outright, he makes the question collapse under its own repetition. That’s why it lands: the line is a protest against canned media narratives, disguised as charm.
The subtext is also class-coded. Berra’s public persona was the unpretentious ballplayer, skeptical of fancy explanations. This “non-answer” asserts control without sounding like a press secretary. It tells the room: you don’t get access to my inner life on demand, especially not in prepackaged sound bites.
Context matters because sports media runs on loops: slumps, controversies, trades, “What’s your mindset?” Berra’s line anticipates modern celebrity fatigue with content churn. It’s an early, analog version of “I’m not doing this discourse today,” delivered with a grin that keeps everyone laughing while still drawing a boundary.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|---|
| Source | Yogi Berra — attributed quote: "I wish I had an answer to that because I'm tired of answering that question." Source: Wikiquote entry for Yogi Berra. |
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