View Full Version : who else but CNBC
MissDee
11-21-2008, 11:51 AM
would run this.. and they say the media's not left-wing biased. LOL
<EMBED src=http://www.youtube.com/v/X0r7TJUTn1c&hl=en&fs=1 width=425 height=344 type=application/x-shockwave-flash allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always"></EMBED>
Bet they were really hoping she would field dress the bird right there herself for them. lol
:laugh:
Mad Mike
11-21-2008, 01:38 PM
How the hell did they think that it got from the farm to krogers any way?
dontpmme2002
11-21-2008, 08:07 PM
For some reason the losing party's VP candidate gets more ink than the president-elect.
ChrisC
11-21-2008, 11:31 PM
But Mrs. Palin seems to like them. Plus it keeps her in the spot light for 2012!
Apophis
11-22-2008, 03:38 PM
For some reason the losing party's VP candidate gets more ink than the president-elect.
Kinda like Paris Hilton. It's called being an Attention Whore. Wait til she starts dancing at Club Chubby with the babe from My Name Is Earl. Sure, she's dumber than a bag of hammers, but even I might buy a $5 beer to watch her dance to Jump! Jump! in a camo string bikini.
BTW, I think someone got CNBC mixed up with the media counterpart of Faux News: (P)MSNBC. Unless Sarah somehow manages to buy a share of stock, like that cute little gurgling baby on the E*Trade commercials, I don't see CNBC wasting any time reporting on her playing with creatures... that have brains about the size of her own.
dontpmme2002
11-23-2008, 06:37 AM
Everybody in politics wants attention--it's an integral part of getting votes. The thing is, Palin doesn't spend millions of dollars for 30 minute infomercials on all the major networks and yet everybody still sits around and talks about her more than Obama.
MissDee
11-23-2008, 09:36 AM
Everybody in politics wants attention--it's an integral part of getting votes. The thing is, Palin doesn't spend millions of dollars for 30 minute infomercials on all the major networks and yet everybody still sits around and talks about her more than Obama.
Of course- the liberally biased press was scared ou tof their panties by her presence when she arrived on the national scene. Before she arrived it was practically a given that McCain would lose. Gov. Palin brought the election close, despite the economic conditions that favored the dems, McCain's own lackluster staff running the show, and their desperate efforts to demonize Palin herself because she actually lives those values that were the antithesis of everything the left holds to. That kind of example is very hard to ignore in comparison to the disingenuity of the democratic candidate- they realized that she had the ability to bring back t enthusiasm for the core values of conservatism, and they did their utmost to denegrate, marginalize and dismiss her during the campaign. now that it's over, she's a still a threat in the same way- that she can and probably would re-energize the republican party, and might even run in her own right in 2012. They feel compelled to keep trying to push her down in the opinion of the public. Hopefully, that sort of thinking will backfire in a big way come the next mid-term elections and for the next presidential run.
MissDee
11-23-2008, 09:41 AM
BTW, I think someone got CNBC mixed up with the media counterpart of Faux News: (P)MSNBC. Unless Sarah somehow manages to buy a share of stock, like that cute little gurgling baby on the E*Trade commercials, I don't see CNBC wasting any time reporting on her playing with creatures... that have brains about the size of her own.
by the way, I first saw this on CNBC- all the "Nut Bag Corporation" channels share their stuff between them, including reporters like Andrea Mitchell. It was produced by MSNBC as the tagl of the video says, but bottom line is that they are all owned by General Electric- a company who, through their misguided and corrupt CEO, loves to sell technology to our enemies, even in war time. All the rotten apples fall to form a ring around the trunk of the tree, as it were. :laugh:
Speaking of stocks, CNBC's financial programs and their chief financial correspondent is the one who suggests that everyone dump their stocks and put their money in a matress. Real way to go to promote the economy, don't you think?!
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