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October 25, 2008
Why Should Any Voter Trust Her When The McCain People Do Not?
Andrew Sullivan, the single most valuable aggregator at this time in this political season, pointed to it and said it first. But read the CNN story and be amazed
A second McCain source says she appears to be looking out for herself more than the McCain campaign.
"She is a diva. She takes no advice from anyone," said this McCain adviser. "She does not have any relationships of trust with any of us, her family or anyone else.
"Also, she is playing for her own future and sees herself as the next leader of the party. Remember: Divas trust only unto themselves, as they see themselves as the beginning and end of all wisdom."
Posted by dpoland at October 25, 2008 03:15 PM
Comments
I won't bother with the actual article at hand, because it isn't shocking. The end is nigh and people in the campaign feel better and better about conveying stuff like this to the press.
But I agree on Sullivan. 100%.
Posted by: Kristopher Tapley
at October 25, 2008 03:49 PM
I thought that was pretty obvious on her first introduction to the country by McCain, afterward he tried to kiss her and she looked like she wanted to jump off the stage. She may not have school smarts or know much about running the country, but she does have street smarts and knew from day one the McCain bandwagon was not going to be her ticket to the White House, she would have to make it happen on her own.
Posted by: martin
at October 25, 2008 04:01 PM
She's got balls.
Posted by: EOTW
at October 25, 2008 08:03 PM
If she does, who really had all those kids?
Posted by: frankbooth
at October 25, 2008 08:51 PM
Jon Hamm rocked SNL tonight. I have hated that show for so long that I didn't even want to watch htis, but as a rabid fan of MM, I had to and glad I did. He pwned the whole show, loved the MM sketch, especially his great speech about the hula hoop. That reminded me of the greatness SNL once had so easily in its grasp. Even the cheesier stuff was funny: the pedo sketch, the Jon Hamm's John Ham sketch, Finger in Butts. Stupid? Juvenile? Yes, but funny because how he sold it. I have no interest in Coldplay at all, so I gladly turned up the second Kinks album when they showed up(4 times??? Geesh). Let me know when he hosts again.
Posted by: EOTW
at October 25, 2008 10:24 PM
Mad Men is already one of the greatest series of all time, each episode worthy of multiple viewings and multiple interpretations.... Love it.
Posted by: Jerry Colvin
at October 25, 2008 10:43 PM
I have no idea why, but I got this weird feeling while watching SNL tonight. Hamm was born to play a superhero. If they were going to make Iron Man next year. Hamm would be better than Downey.
If they seriously want to make a great Superman movie. Cast a Superman that has some age, that has natural gravitas, and can convey the emotions of Supes very few actours can.
So... John Hamm for the new Superman film.
Posted by: IOIOIOI
at October 26, 2008 12:43 AM
The Vincent Price sketch was the best; Hamm's James Mason was dead-on.
Posted by: LYT
at October 26, 2008 12:44 AM
Why Cousin Sal kept John Hamm out of his fantasy league, is beyond me.
Posted by: IOIOIOI
at October 26, 2008 01:28 AM
Fellas, as he said on SNL: My name is spelled Jon without an H and Hamm has 2 m's. How dumb do you feel now? Great stuff. And yes, he'd make a great superhero (Green Lanterm?). He really is a great actor, last week's MM was his completely. the way he can be both of his personalities, go between them effortlessly with just a change in his voice, body language is almost breathtaking.
Posted by: EOTW
at October 26, 2008 02:01 AM
I have said for awhile that Jon Hammm is the only choice for Captain America, especially one who existed first in the 1940s. But yes, he could easily play any super hero who needs a possess a certain manly gravitas that so many of today's male stars lack. He wouldn't be right for The Flash, but he'd make a kick ass Steve Rogers or Green Lantern.
Posted by: Scott Mendelson
at October 26, 2008 07:19 AM
Scott: Hamm might look a bit odd with Steve Roger's colouring, but I can definitely see him pulling it off even with the blonde hair. I could also see him being a phenomenal Hal Jordan. He does pull off a guy that can handle fear really well.
Posted by: IOIOIOI
at October 26, 2008 07:41 AM
Jon Hamm is one of the few actors who could effectively play Superman *and* Batman, he can do charming, stoic and he can do brooding, complex and ruthless.
Now BATMAN is already taken and thriving (even though I am not 100% sold on Christian Bale's take), so I would love to see a retro or period piece SUPERMAN with Hamm.
Posted by: Spacesheik
at October 26, 2008 08:20 AM
"I have no idea why, but I got this weird feeling while watching SNL tonight. Hamm was born to play a superhero."
Are you telling me there are people who DIDN'T think this the very first time they laid eyes on Hamm in Mad Men?
Posted by: yancyskancy
at October 26, 2008 09:54 AM
Err ... who has the incentive to badmouth their own campaign ten days before an election? Most likely disgruntled campaign advisers who were sidelined after their tactics failed. It was made public early in the week the campaign was taking a different approach with Palin, letting her off the leash, after attempts to control access failed so miserably.
Posted by: henrysdream
at October 26, 2008 10:20 AM
Thanks for saving me the trip to IMDB to figure out who the hell Jon Hamm is, everybody.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at October 26, 2008 01:54 PM
It's not our fault that you do not watch a show that's better than most movies to come out this year.
Posted by: IOIOIOI
at October 26, 2008 07:47 PM
It's pretty telling how thin the talent has been for years at SNL that so many of the actual actors from MM had to be tapped to play their parts.
Years past, the show had a nice backfield of 2nd and 3rd tier actors, but now it's just extras.
Also, anyone else get the feeling the writers spend a lot of time on punditkitchen.com? The bit about licking the sandwiches was used on a McCain pic this week.
Posted by: RoyBatty
at October 26, 2008 08:33 PM
IOI, why it's nobody's 'fault' and I don't know why you find it necessary to get angry.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at October 26, 2008 10:39 PM
James Wolcott isn't a fan either IO:
"At its draggiest Mad Men is like some square's idea of Douglas Sirk, a graduate thesis with its head stuck in a fishbowl. "
Posted by: christian
at October 27, 2008 11:53 AM
Meanwhile, Christopher Hitchens tears Palin a new one.
Posted by: Joe Leydon
at October 27, 2008 01:57 PM
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