Yesterday I wrote about Fox News.
I find myself unable to resist writing about them again today after reading this story on HuffPost:
I really don’t have much of anything to say about it other than that with tongues in their journalistic cheeks HuffPost filed it under entertainment.
This could be the basis of a routine for Ingraham in a comedy club which might get some laughs from a drunken audience in rural Mississippi:.
Hey, forget about Prince Harry and Megan, how about those “royal wannabes” the Clinton family using their former positions for piles of cash? How about Monica Bill Clinton raking in the bucks after his disaster of a presidency?
What about that scam Clinton Foundation charity, Bill Barr should investigate them. Probably funded Hillary’s latest facelift. And how about that dumbbell Chelsea Clinton with a do-nothing job in the foundation and speaking of profiting off you last name we can't forget the know-nothing Hunter Biden.
Middle-class Joe went from being almost a pauper to earning more than 15 million bucks since leaving office. Talk about the the secret of success: Nepotism”
Talk about hilarious:
The brilliant Trump kids didn’t get rich off being in public office. They actually had made their money before the president was elected. It came from running something called a business.
I don’t watch Fox News and I know hardly any of you do either. I have seen clips of their opinion hosts and to call them clowns is really an insult to the craft honed by accomplished clowns. Let’s just say they are clowns who are as unfunny as John Wayne Gacy and Pennywise.
Sean Hannity, Tucker Carlson, and Jessie Watters who my Duty to Warn associate Dr. John D. Gartner's unfortunately decided to be interviewed by on his show all need the Surgeon General’s warning label.
Do you remember when in 2015 HuffPost made a decision to post articles about someone else under entertainment?
This is what Time Magazine had to say in 2015
On Friday, July 17, the Huffington Post announced that it would no longer cover Donald Trump, a candidate for President of the United States, as political news; instead, his campaign would go in the entertainment section. “Trump’s campaign is a sideshow,” wrote Huffington’s Ryan Grim and Danny Shea. “We won’t take the bait. If you are interested in what The Donald has to say, you’ll find it next to our stories on the Kardashians and The Bachelorette.”
The next day at an event in Iowa, Trump insulted Sen. John McCain, a former prisoner of war in Vietnam, saying McCain was only a hero “because he was captured.” Most of the major Republican candidates and the Republican National Committee condemned Trump’s comment with an eagerness and alacrity they would not have shown had Kim Kardashian said it.
The reason, of course, is that Trump has become a problem for them: a politicalproblem, not an entertainment problem. He’s claiming one of the limited spots in the upcoming debates and inflaming racial controversy by vilifying Mexican immigrants. His Nielsen ratings are not the issue here; his poll numbers are.
We can assume that Laura Ingraham, Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, or Jessie Watters will never end up as president. Or can we?