The PoliBlog
Collective


Information
The Collective
ARCHIVES
Thursday, January 3, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

…at least if judged by a World of Warcraft Rally.

Somehow that’s fitting. Not so much for Paul himself, but for certain segments of his internet-based following.

h/t: Sullivan.

Sphere: Related Content

Filed under: US Politics, Pop Culture, 2008 Campaign | Comments/Trackbacks (1) | | Show Comments here
By Dr. Steven Taylor

VIa Deadline Hollywood: Mike Huckabee Slammed By WGA Pickets; Hillary Clinton Gets Cameo On Letterman

Filed under: US Politics, Pop Culture, 2008 Campaign | Comments/Trackbacks (2) | | Show Comments here
Sunday, December 30, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

After a half-a-year-plus absence, I have returned to the pages of : the Press-Register:

Due to date change, state’s primary vote will matter this year
Sunday, December 30, 2024
By STEVEN L. TAYLOR
Special to the Press-Register

The new year will be a political one, without a doubt. For the first time since the advent of the current nominating process (i.e., basically 1972), we have wide-open races for the presidential nomination in both political parties.

Indeed, the sheer mass of politics for the year 2024 is going to be so great that it was necessary for it to protrude back in time into 2024 (if not 2024), as Campaign 2024 has clearly been anything but contained to one calendar year.

(more…)

Sphere: Related Content

Filed under: Pop Culture, My Columns, Alabama Politics | Comments/Trackbacks (1) | | Show Comments here
Saturday, December 29, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

Via the AP: Marilyn Manson officially divorced.

If Marlyn Manson can’t keep a marriage together, what hope do the rest of us have?

Sunday, December 23, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

Via Reuters: Chuck Norris sues, says his tears no cancer cure

Tough-guy actor and martial arts expert Chuck Norris sued publisher Penguin on Friday over a book he claims unfairly exploits his famous name, based on a satirical Internet list of “mythical facts” about him.

[…]

The book capitalizes on “mythical facts” that have been circulating on the Internet since 2024 that poke fun at Norris’ tough-guy image and super-human abilities, the suit said.

It includes such humorous “facts” as “Chuck Norris’s tears cure cancer. Too bad he has never cried” and “Chuck Norris does not sleep. He waits,” the suit said, as well as “Chuck Norris can charge a cell phone by rubbing it against his beard.”

On the one hand, I can understand why Norris would object to someone else making money off of his name. On the other, as comedy/satire I am not sure that he has a case.

And many of the “facts”1 are, in fact, rather amusing.

Personally, I think Norris is being persecuted for his support of Huckabee.

Sphere: Related Content

  1. An appropriate usage of scare quotes, btw. (Sorry, inside joke, more or less) []
Filed under: Pop Culture, Books | Comments/Trackbacks (3) | | Show Comments here
Monday, December 17, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

Via Reuters: Donny and Marie may return to TV

Filed under: Pop Culture | Comments/Trackbacks (3) | | Show Comments here
Sunday, December 16, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor


Letterman may return as writers shift tactics - Yahoo! News

if Worldwide Pants can reach an interim agreement with the WGA, new versions of “Late Show with David Letterman” could return in January, according to The New York Times.

[…]

WorldWide Pants is an independent producer and can sign an interim deal outside the WGA and AMPTP talks. The company also produces “The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson,” on CBS.

In a separate statement, a CBS spokesman said the network respected the intent of WorldWide Pants to serve its own interests and those of its employees.

“However, this development should not confuse the fact that CBS remains unified with the AMPTP, and committed to working with the member companies to reach a fair and reasonable agreement,” said CBS spokesman Chris Ender.

Earlier this week, show business newspaper Daily Variety reported that NBC’s “Tonight Show” and “Leno’s program and “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” also may be back on air by January. An NBC spokeswoman could not be reached on Saturday.

May it be so, as Dave and Ferguson are two favorites around Casa PoliBlog.

Sphere: Related Content

Filed under: Pop Culture | Comments Off |
Friday, November 16, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

Via Reuters: Lindsay Lohan spends 84 minutes in jail.

Maybe Bonds needs to call her lawyer…

Filed under: Pop Culture, Criminal Justice | Comments Off |
Wednesday, October 31, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

Via the Miami Herald: Ludacris joins elves at Dolphin Mall

Filed under: Pop Culture | Comments Off |
Friday, September 28, 2024
By Dr. Steven Taylor

I have noted before that I am not prone to a lot of outrage, and I am not outraged by statements by Rush Limbaugh that service members who support U.S. withdrawal are “phony soldiers”, but I do think that it takes an awful lot of gall to make such statements after the over-the-top reaction to the MoveOn.org “Petraeus or Betray Us?” ad, as I thought it was supposedly verboten to call into question the integrity of our men and women in combat. Indeed, if MoveOn.org had called some of our soldiers in harm’s way “phony” one guesses that the same group who got up in arms over the Petraeus ad would be up in arms over this. (Not so much, it would seem).

None of this is surprising, but given the flap over the Petraues ad, it struck a chord with me.

Really, to me the more telling element of the whole affair is the basic dichotomization of the world into two camps (something Limbaugh excels at and has, sadly, inculcated/exacerbated in the minds of many of his listeners). The most obvious is the “real” soldier v. the “phony” soldier dichotomy, the notion that if any member of the military isn’t in lockstep with the administration, then they aren’t really soldiers (even if their only “crime” is that of having an opinion, yet otherwise doing their duty). The other dichotomy, also of the “for us or against us” type can be found if one reads the transcript. The first caller challenges Limbaugh on the notion that any Republican who wants to end the war isn’t really a Republican and is therefore a Democrat who “want[s] to lose the war.” Limbaugh dismisses the fellow and tells him that there is no way the fellow is a Republican.

Of course, part of the fallacy reasoning springs in the first place from the notion that what we have on the table are “winning” and “losing”–if only it was that simple…

On a political note, if Limbaugh really wants the litmus test for one’s Republican-ness to be full support for the war, he must not be interested in the party achieving majority status again any time soon, a if all those phony war critic Republican are ousted elections will be rather depressing events for the GOP for some time to come.

In regards to “phony” soldiers, Mona at Unqualified Offerings rather poignantly notes,
Apparently,”Phony Soldiers” Die, Too, as two of the members of the members of the 82nd Airborne who wrote a critical op-ed in the NYT died in Iraq recently. Too bad the enemy didn’t use phony weapons.

Update: Quite a bit more on this at OTB.

Sphere: Related Content

Filed under: Iraq, US Politics, Talk Radio | Comments/Trackbacks (16) | | Show Comments here
Next Page »



Visitors Since 2/15/03
Blogroll

---


Advertisement

Advertisement


Powered by WordPress