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jpak

(41,757 posts)
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 04:51 PM Mar 2016

Christie’s shell-shocked look stirs mockery, befuddlement

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/christies-shell-shocked-look-stirs-mockery-befuddlement/2016/03/02/38c04e34-e099-11e5-8c00-8aa03741dced_story.html

TRENTON, N.J. — Was that really Chris Christie, the brusque, take-a-back-seat-to-no-one governor of New Jersey?

Christie’s seemingly shell-shocked gaze as he stood behind Donald Trump on Super Tuesday is generating befuddlement and mockery in his home state and beyond.

Conservatives and liberals alike have piled on.

His introductory remarks were so subdued and his appearance was so grave that many people joked on the Internet that he looked like a hostage reading a coerced statement. “Gov. Christie, blink twice if you’re in trouble!” one person tweeted.

<more>

That seriously creeped me out...
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Christie’s shell-shocked look stirs mockery, befuddlement (Original Post) jpak Mar 2016 OP
Is this before or after Trump kicked him off the stage and told him to go home? pipoman Mar 2016 #1
I keep thinking Randall Flagg and Nadine Cross phantom power Mar 2016 #2
OMFG Heddi Mar 2016 #4
not sure why that look surprised people Skittles Mar 2016 #3
Sgt. Gobbles? I'll say. Octafish Mar 2016 #5
His political career is now over. Kingofalldems Mar 2016 #6
anybody hear those jagoffs Halperin and whatever his name is absolutely slobbering over Christie, Gabi Hayes Mar 2016 #7
more like he sold his sole to the antichrist for his future. OOPS. pansypoo53219 Mar 2016 #8
This is what happens when you have crooked voting machines. Baobab Mar 2016 #9
It's the Same Look He Has SDJay Mar 2016 #10

phantom power

(25,966 posts)
2. I keep thinking Randall Flagg and Nadine Cross
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 06:40 PM
Mar 2016

And Christie is Nadine, if you see where I'm going with this.

Skittles

(153,160 posts)
3. not sure why that look surprised people
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 07:19 PM
Mar 2016

it looks like the look of people finally waking up the to the fact that Trump WILL get the nomination

 

Gabi Hayes

(28,795 posts)
7. anybody hear those jagoffs Halperin and whatever his name is absolutely slobbering over Christie,
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 07:45 PM
Mar 2016

squirming ecstatically, as if they'd just exited the orgasmatron over how valuable a campaigner he'd be for Drumpf: "He should make him his CAMPAIGN manager!" !!!!!! One of them actually said that. The other stuff was equally vomitous

and......remember what Eric Boehlert had to say about Halperin and ABC's The Note?

here:

Shill Wind
All of Washington's political reporters read ABC's The Note. That's why they keep missing the story.

By Eric Boehlert



In the spring of 2005, a story came along that was so important, so history-altering that it threatened to revive a killer press instinct that had been dormant for the previous four years. Of course, it helped that it was a Clinton-flavored scandal: That May, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's former campaign finance director, David Rosen, went on trial for his handling of a 2000 fundraiser staged in Hollywood to benefit Clinton's campaign for the U.S. Senate. Rosen was accused of hiding, or underreporting, $800,000 worth of costs. At the time, CNN political editor John Mercurio suggested that Rosen's funny money trial "reminds people of Whitewater" and the "sleazy side of the Clinton administration that [Hillary] and the president are both trying to forget."
Taking the lead in trumpeting the importance of the Rosen trial was ABC's The Note. An inside-baseball daily tip sheet for a readership it has dubbed the "Gang of 500" (politicians, lobbyists, consultants, and journalists who help shape the Beltway's public agenda), The Note is posted online every weekday morning and is widely viewed as the agenda-setter for the political class. On 14 different days between May 2 and 27, The Note posted cumulatively nearly forty links to Rosen-related articles, calling them "must-read." A typical Note entry came on May 10, highlighting "The opening and closing paragraphs in Dick Morris' New York Post column--perfectly explaining why the David Rosen story is going to be with us for a while."



On the day before the Rosen verdict, The Note listed "Waiting for the Rosen verdict" as the number-one priority among the Gang of 500. The next day, a federal jury acquitted Rosen of any wrongdoing. How did The Note handle this news about the trial it had hyped? By ignoring it. The next edition of The Note included a long round-up of must-reads from the Memorial Day weekend. Rosen's not-guilty verdict was not among them.

http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2006/0607.boehlert.html

and don't forget The Hunting of the President. You'll that in spades if/when she wins the nomination. Think Bush/Gore in terms of press coverage.

SDJay

(1,089 posts)
10. It's the Same Look He Has
Wed Mar 2, 2016, 08:47 PM
Mar 2016

when he ambles down to the freezer at 1 a.m. and discovers that someone has eaten the last ice cream sandwich without his permission.

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