There are two types of questions:
1) "I am a senior in high school and I have wanted to be a doctor ever since the day I was born prematurely at 36 weeks. It was at that early pre-cognitive age that I recognized the importance of good pre-natal care, and how crucial a physician was to my well-being. I have been looking into becoming a physician since the time I left the hospital 1 week later and I really think there's nothing else I want to do in life. Tell me, what do I need to do to get to med school?"
2) "I am a junior in college and I can't decide on which medical school would suit my need the most. I have been doing volunteering work in (insert third world country here) every summer during college, and I really want to continue my work with the disadvantaged as a career. What medical school do you think looks favorably upon this and will best prepare me for the career I want to have?"
While those two are extremes, you can clearly see how a generic question on "how to get into med school" closer to 1 may seem repetitive and annoying to some. There are FAQs that answer those questions 20 million times over, and people need to do their homework if they want to get anywhere in life.