There is a bit of an inconsistency, and I'll do my best to explain it.
Stack Overflow has evolved rapidly over the last few years mostly through trial and error. At the original public beta, almost any question that was even remotely programming related was entertained, and many users had fun answering open ended questions.
We abruptly realized that questions that invite protracted subjective discussions were more of an administrative headache than a valuable resource to someone who is trying to get their job done and learn something. The rules shifted a bit in an effort to make the site more objective.
Not long after that, Stack Exchange 2.0 launched, allowing our community to create sites specific to a special interest. You can find the incubator here.
One of the first sites to launch was this site which was originally named not programming related, after the close reason we used to have when closing a question that dealt more with the dynamics of being a programmer rather than programming itself. Initially, the problem we had with users wanting fun more than knowledge transferred to that site, but the moderators brought it under control. They welcome somewhat subjective questions, but the question must invite thoughtful and reasonably concise answers.
A few questions remain on Stack Overflow that aren't at all a shining example of questions that should be asked, simply because the founding community cherishes these questions because they illustrate how, if not why we've evolved as a community. The questions remain locked, they gather no additional noise while demonstrating the metacognition that prevented us from becoming another Yahoo Answers.
In essence, what you are seeing can be ascribed to growing pains.