I am not sure whether Cecil Adams is a real person, or merely a title for a group of people. The website does say that Cecil Adams is a man and hints that he worked as a Chicago Reader journalist before he started (presumably) the website called The Straight Dope, because the column caught the attention and fascination of some readers. The Wikipedia article about Cecil Adams hints that Cecil Adams is an old American man of Irish ancestry. But on the Straight Dope website, it appears that “we” (the people who work for this group) do not know who this person is, despite that Cecil is the main person behind all these answers. I am beginning to think that Cecil Adams is a title for a group of people who collaborate, research, and answer questions for the public. This group holds one entity: Cecil Adams. At the same time, this group uses wit and humor to pretend that Cecil is a real person.
On the other hand, it is possible that Cecil Adams may be a pseudonym of a Chicago Reader journalist, who does not want his real name on the Internet. Yet, he tries his best, under this pseudonym, to do heavy amounts of research in order to answer each question in a witty manner.
I admit that I find the answers rather amusing, such as the “Why is the raven like a writing desk?” riddle.
SDMBKL, welcome to SDMB. Cecil Adams is a nom de plume used for The Straight Dope column and web site. The person currently writing under that name is Ed Zotti. Of course, that’s just my opinion, man.
Cecil Adams is real, and Ed Zotti is his editor. It takes a man almost as smart as Cecil to transcribe some of his output into something fact-checked and publishable.
Cecil may be a pseudonym for a man also named Cecil Adams, but he is such an intensely private person this is difficult to verify.
Strangly enough, the number of “authentic photos of Cecil” surfacing has dropped greatly since the advent of cell phones and digital cameras, leading one to suspect that many if not all of the prior spate of “Cecil Photos” are bogus.