The Media Fellating Thread
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@george-k said in The Media Fellating Thread:
"It all happens within two hours, you know, literally," he said of the quick transition after former President Donald Trump left office. "They move everything out and move something in."
It is funny. One of the ministers left and was replaced. Pretty much at the same time the announcement was made, the new minister was in the office with all of his furniture already there and set up.
wrote on 18 Feb 2021, 01:30 last edited by@taiwan_girl I believe it was in McCullough's biography of Truman in which the move-in/move-out scenario was described.
It's remarkable that everything happens so quickly.
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wrote on 18 Feb 2021, 01:42 last edited by
The one singular thing the federal government does efficiently.
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wrote on 18 Feb 2021, 01:44 last edited by
My story was about a Taiwan minister so maybe that is one thing that governments all over the world do well. 555
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wrote on 7 Mar 2021, 23:16 last edited by
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wrote on 7 Mar 2021, 23:16 last edited by
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wrote on 8 Mar 2021, 00:54 last edited by Copper 3 Aug 2021, 00:59
Biden stimulus showers money on Americans, sharply cutting poverty and favoring individuals over businesses
Lucky for us that was Magic Money that fell from the sky.
Because if it had to come from someplace real it would hurt.
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wrote on 11 Mar 2021, 14:42 last edited by
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wrote on 16 Mar 2021, 12:31 last edited by
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wrote on 16 Mar 2021, 12:46 last edited by
No gaffes! Not even anything about oh, you know, that guy. He runs the place!
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wrote on 16 Mar 2021, 14:36 last edited by
Hard to gaffe, when you aren't expected to think.
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wrote on 16 Mar 2021, 17:22 last edited by
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wrote on 16 Mar 2021, 19:57 last edited by Loki
@george-k said in The Media Fellating Thread:
Hey Jennifer we already know where you stand from your articles. And itβs opinion not news, please donβt blur the lines.
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@george-k said in The Media Fellating Thread:
Hey Jennifer we already know where you stand from your articles. And itβs opinion not news, please donβt blur the lines.
wrote on 16 Mar 2021, 20:02 last edited by@loki said in The Media Fellating Thread:
Jennifer we already know where you stand from your articles
She's the "principled conservative," dontcha know?
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wrote on 20 Mar 2021, 21:48 last edited by
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wrote on 20 Mar 2021, 22:18 last edited by
@george-k said in The Media Fellating Thread:
Of course.
Kim Jung Un would smile at this "reporting."
So now they can say they reported it. LOL
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wrote on 25 Mar 2021, 11:17 last edited by
NBC, already lowering expectations:
Biden's first news conference offers opportunity β and risk
The president's audience is the American public, which will get to see how he handles scrutiny.
The big risk for Biden is that he could inadvertently knock his hyper-disciplined White House messaging machine off-kilter. But for a president who promised transparency, honesty and competence in government, an exchange with a full spectrum of television and print media offers the opportunity to draw a contrast with the frequent, freewheeling and often full-of-falsehoods interactions President Donald Trump had with reporters.
(gotta get that shot about Trump in, don't they, LOL)
His main audience is the public β White House aides will surely clip his highlights and distribute them on social media β but it will be the first time since he took office that Americans will see him tested by media intermediaries. In that way, it is Biden's most important shot to demonstrate that he will deal with scrutiny in a manner different from his predecessor's and with more honest openness.
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NBC, already lowering expectations:
Biden's first news conference offers opportunity β and risk
The president's audience is the American public, which will get to see how he handles scrutiny.
The big risk for Biden is that he could inadvertently knock his hyper-disciplined White House messaging machine off-kilter. But for a president who promised transparency, honesty and competence in government, an exchange with a full spectrum of television and print media offers the opportunity to draw a contrast with the frequent, freewheeling and often full-of-falsehoods interactions President Donald Trump had with reporters.
(gotta get that shot about Trump in, don't they, LOL)
His main audience is the public β White House aides will surely clip his highlights and distribute them on social media β but it will be the first time since he took office that Americans will see him tested by media intermediaries. In that way, it is Biden's most important shot to demonstrate that he will deal with scrutiny in a manner different from his predecessor's and with more honest openness.
wrote on 25 Mar 2021, 13:17 last edited by@george-k said in The Media Fellating Thread:
NBC, already lowering expectations:
Biden's first news conference offers opportunity β and risk
The president's audience is the American public, which will get to see how he handles scrutiny.
The big risk for Biden is that he could inadvertently knock his hyper-disciplined White House messaging machine off-kilter. But for a president who promised transparency, honesty and competence in government, an exchange with a full spectrum of television and print media offers the opportunity to draw a contrast with the frequent, freewheeling and often full-of-falsehoods interactions President Donald Trump had with reporters.
(gotta get that shot about Trump in, don't they, LOL)
His main audience is the public β White House aides will surely clip his highlights and distribute them on social media β but it will be the first time since he took office that Americans will see him tested by media intermediaries. In that way, it is Biden's most important shot to demonstrate that he will deal with scrutiny in a manner different from his predecessor's and with more honest openness.
I'd love to see Biden do a free-wheeling, off-the-cuff, sixty minute presser like Trump did on multiple occasions.
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@george-k said in The Media Fellating Thread:
NBC, already lowering expectations:
Biden's first news conference offers opportunity β and risk
The president's audience is the American public, which will get to see how he handles scrutiny.
The big risk for Biden is that he could inadvertently knock his hyper-disciplined White House messaging machine off-kilter. But for a president who promised transparency, honesty and competence in government, an exchange with a full spectrum of television and print media offers the opportunity to draw a contrast with the frequent, freewheeling and often full-of-falsehoods interactions President Donald Trump had with reporters.
(gotta get that shot about Trump in, don't they, LOL)
His main audience is the public β White House aides will surely clip his highlights and distribute them on social media β but it will be the first time since he took office that Americans will see him tested by media intermediaries. In that way, it is Biden's most important shot to demonstrate that he will deal with scrutiny in a manner different from his predecessor's and with more honest openness.
I'd love to see Biden do a free-wheeling, off-the-cuff, sixty minute presser like Trump did on multiple occasions.
wrote on 25 Mar 2021, 16:09 last edited by@jolly said in The Media Fellating Thread:
I'd love to see Biden do a free-wheeling, off-the-cuff, sixty minute presser like Trump did on multiple occasions.
The free world would collapse.