Tag Archives: john f kennedy

SHOCK & AUCTION: Cuban Missile Vices

Our good friend Celebrity Sleuth is opening up his personal vault at auction next month, and we’ve got the inside scoop! He wrote a new piece for us detailing some of the great, one-of-a-kind items you can expect to find at auction, and he’ll be bringing us more every Monday and Thursday until the auction goes live in December! Hit the jump for more pics and info…

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SHOCK & AUCTION: Cuban Missile Vices

Gift Guide: Which Good Boy or Girl Will Get Lee Harvey Oswald’s Coffin?

With few exceptions , this year’s Movieline Gift Guide has emphasized largesse of the imagination over that of the wallet. But the rare occasion to combine both — along with a devout interest in only the most macabre U.S. history — proves even more irresistible. With this in mind, anyone up for buying Lee Harvey Oswald’s original casket?

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Gift Guide: Which Good Boy or Girl Will Get Lee Harvey Oswald’s Coffin?

Ed Schultz, Clueless as Usual, Angered by Allegedly Unprecedented Criticism of First Lady

Is Ed Schultz determined to make his mark as the dumbest man in media? Hardly a day passes without the lib radio host and MSNBC action hero providing more fodder for the premise. On his radio show Monday, Schultz rushed to the defense of first lady Michelle Obama for criticism of her winging off to an opulent Spanish resort hotel during — as Schultz and other liberals oft remind us — the worst economy since the Great Depression. Here’s Schultz defending Mrs. Obama after first talking about a campaign ad that mocks House Minority Leader John Boehner as an out-of-touch elitist golfer ( click here for audio) — I think the Democrats, as far as setting the tone, I don’t know why the White House isn’t all over this. I think that the criticism that Michelle Obama is getting for being overseas is absolutely disgusting. She is the first lady of the United States, the assumed ambassador, someone who can do nothing but goodwill for America and its allies and its image in the world. And I think it’s important. I’ve never, ever seen a story like this where the first lady is criticized. This is a great chance for the White House to go on the offensive. It is true that Michelle Obama’s overseas and she’s not running for anything, but she’s not on the golf course 119 times the way John Boehner is. Then again, Boehner isn’t bringing 70 Secret Service agents in tow on the public dime when he hits the links (his office denies that Boehner has golfed anywhere near as often as alleged by Blue America). Schultz claims he’s “never, ever seen a story like this where the first lady is criticized.” The sentiment of a Democrat, no doubt, but surely not a democrat. I’ll attempt to jog Schultz’s memory with the first obvious example that comes to mind. Just out of curiosity, Ed, did Hillary Clinton undergo much criticism in the eight years she was first lady? (I remember it well, from back when I was a Democrat). Unless Schultz was also in a coma during the decade before that, surely he recalls that first lady Nancy Reagan withstood similar slings and arrows during her husband’s two terms in office. Nancy Reagan and her astrologer — ring a bell? How about Mrs. Reagan’s “Just Say No” campaign against drug abuse, the one liberals raved about? Any of this strike a chord? If Schultz were an inquisitive sort, he might be familiar with what is arguably the closest parallel to Michelle Obama’s vacation in Spain and its cost in political capital to her husband — then-first lady Jacqueline Kennedy yachting in the Mediterranean with — wait for it — her future second husband, Aristotle Onassis. As described by Laurence Leamer in his 2001 book, “The Kennedy Men: 1901-1963” — The president clearly would have preferred not to have his wife sailing around the Mediterranean with Onassis, but there was no other luxury yacht in the world like the Christina, and he figured it was just the tonic that Jackie might need before facing the rigors of re-election. To keep up a pretense that the journey had some other purpose than amusement, and to watch over his wife, he asked Franklin Roosevelt Jr., his undersecretary of Commerce, and his wife, Suzanne, to go along. Kennedy was consumed enough by the idea of his wife going off with the Greek magnate that while staying at the Carlyle Hotel on September 20, he doodled on a notepad ‘Jackie-Onassis.’ … Jackie sailed off on October 5 from Athens, along with a crew of sixty, including two coiffeurs and a dance band. The ship had hardly left port when the previously sacrosanct Jackie became the subject of criticism. Was it ‘improper for the wife of the president … to accept [Onassis’s] lavish hospitality?’ asked Congressman Oliver Bolton, an Ohio Republican. With his re-election campaign less than a year away, Kennedy was attuned to even the most subdued criticism. He knew that the Republicans would attempt to create an image of the White House, in the words of the GOP national chairman, as a scene of ‘twisting in the historic East Ballroom … [and] all-night parties in foreign lands.’ ‘Well, why did you let Jackie go with Onassis?’ Kennedy was asked at a private party while the boat sailed the Aegean, bad publicity traveling in its wake. ‘Jackie has my blessing to go anywhere that will make her feel better,’ he replied, leaving the matter at that. … Jackie’s European sojourn had created headlines that might please a king, but not a democratic leader — ‘Mrs. Kennedy Aegean Island-Hopping,’ ‘Jackie Follows Script as Hollywood Wrote It,’ ‘Jackie Sails in Splendor.’ Betty Beal, a Washington social columnist, reported that Jackie’s European trip had caused ‘complaints … to pour in from all quarters and it may hurt politically.’ Marianne Means, a Hearst columnist and reporter, wrote: ‘During her three years in the White House, she had consistently refused all invitations to appear with the president at political functions and most public events, outside the realm of the arts. She did not once accompany him last fall as he campaigned for Democratic congressmen up for re-election. And she has never traveled with him on any of his trips around the country.’ Jackie had a radiant popularity all her own that would help create the almost frenetic excitement that would translate into votes next November. In 1960 Kennedy’s advisers had thought Jackie might be a liability; in 1964, in a close campaign, she might prove a crucial asset. Later that fall, Mrs. Kennedy decided to accompany her husband on a campaign swing for the first time since 1960, to Texas where JFK sought to broker peace between feuding Democrats.

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Ed Schultz, Clueless as Usual, Angered by Allegedly Unprecedented Criticism of First Lady

CNN’s Rick Sanchez: Nixon/Kennedy Debate Took Place in 1962?

Rick Sanchez stumbled again on-air on his CNN program on Monday, getting the year of the famous Kennedy-Nixon television debate wrong by a margin of two years. Sanchez, who was trying to describe South Carolina Democratic senatorial candidate Alvin Greene’s first public speech as the “converse” of the debate, initially guessed 1962 as the year of the debate , but then broadened his answer to ” early ’60s ” . The anchor, who misidentified the Galapagos Islands as Hawaii during CNN’s live coverage of the February 27, 2010 Chilean earthquake, and “joked” that it was too cold in Iceland for volcanoes on April 15, brought on correspondent Jessica Yellin to discuss Greene’s speech. Twenty-one minutes into the 4 pm Eastern hour, Yellin mentioned how she had “talked to the audience [at the speech] beforehand….Every single person I spoke to was a skeptic before, and almost all of them said they’d vote for him afterwards or support him.” This detail surprised Sanchez, who then launched his comparison between Greene’s speech on Monday and the historical Nixon/Kennedy debate: RICK SANCHEZ: Really!? YELLIN: Yeah- SANCHEZ: You know, this is like the converse of the Nixon thing. Remember how people watched the speech there after Nixon- YELLIN: Right. SANCHEZ: Debated Kennedy- 1962? Nineteen-sixty- anyway, early ’60s . Yellin smiled and nodded uncomfortably after her CNN colleague gave that wrong answer, but didn’t explicitly correct his gaffe afterward. Sanchez continued with his recollection of history: SANCHEZ: When Kennedy debated Nixon, everybody who was in the audience said- oh, my God, Nixon killed him- just destroyed him, wiped the floor with him. Yet, everyone at home said- no, Kennedy won that by a mile, and it’s because they could see Nixon’s perspiration, and the camera goes in so tight, and you saw the stubble and the- you know, the five o’clock shadow- YELLIN: (unintelligible) (laughs) Right. SANCHEZ: Well, we were watching this guy here on television and he did come across- jumpy, nervous, jittery, inexperienced, and sweating like he was- like, sweating too much. YELLIN: Right. You know, it was- SANCHEZ: Is that what’s going on here? The CNN anchor, who sparred with this author after the Iceland “joke” back in April, did get a kick out of a Tweet I made after correspondent Brooke Baldwin spilled her secret about her recent engagement, ” stealing [his] thunder ,” as I put it. Sanchez read and displayed my Tweet on-air after a commercial break. Here’s looking at you, Rick!

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CNN’s Rick Sanchez: Nixon/Kennedy Debate Took Place in 1962?

Kennedy Picture — A Fake?

TMZ received an email from someone who said the photo we posted showing a man appearing to be John F. Kennedy on a yacht with naked women was actually a photo from a 1967 Playboy photo shoot.We have contacted Playboy and a rep says the photo did … Permalink

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Kennedy Picture — A Fake?