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The Hollywood Gossip Caption Contest: July 8

Welcome to another edition of The Hollywood Gossip Caption Contest ! The goal is simple: Come up with the best caption(s) for the photo below! Our subject this week: Kendra Wilkinson, at her book signing. Yes, she has a book. What could she be saying or thinking? You tell us. Give it your best shot by leaving a comment or 10. We’ll announce the winner Friday . Good luck …

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The Hollywood Gossip Caption Contest: July 8

Portuguese Playboy Depicts Jesus Observing Sex Scenes

Marking the death of an atheist by depicting Jesus Christ in sex scenes might seem like a non-sequitur. Somehow, it made sense to the Portuguese edition of Playboy magazine. The magazine features an actor portraying Jesus in at least four pornographic photos, including the cover, where he cradles an apparently dead – and bare-breasted – woman. Another photo depicts Jesus watching a lesbian kiss, while another shows him observing a topless woman reading a book. The images are reportedly meant to commemorate the death of Portuguese author Jose Saramago. He wrote, among many other books, “The Gospel According to Jesus Christ,” which ” explored the psychological motivations  that led Jesus to become a prophet.” Saramago  later wrote  that the controversy around the book led him to move fromPortugal to the Canary Islands. It’s not the first time an international edition of the “men’s magazine” has caused a stir by depicting a Christian figure. In its  December 2008 issue , the Mexican edition featured a model dressed – barely – like the Virgin Mary The U.S. edition of the magazine raised the ire of political conservatives in 2009 when it published  an article by Guy Cimbalo  in which he described the violent sexual acts he wanted to commit against conservative women, calling the acts a “hate f***.”

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Portuguese Playboy Depicts Jesus Observing Sex Scenes

Arianna Huffington Whines When PolitiFact Doesn’t Support Her Half-Truth

In today’s “Careful What You Ask For” segment, liberal publisher Arianna Huffington is crying at her website because the folks at PolitiFact didn’t back up her statement that Halliburton has defrauded American taxpayers of hundreds of millions of dollars in Iraq. Making this most delicious, Huffington asked to be fact-checked by the group! For those that have forgotten, the former outspoken conservative was a guest on ABC’s “This Week” on June 6 when she get into the following squabble with Liz Cheney (video and transcript follow with commentary, relevant section at 7:30): ARIANNA HUFFINGTON: Right here, we have the poster child of Bush-Cheney crony capitalism. Halliburton involved in this, and we haven’t said about that. They after all were responsible for cementing the well. Here’s Halliburton, after it defrauded the American taxpayer hundreds of millions of dollars — LIZ CHENEY: Arianna, I don’t know what planet you live on, but that’s not — HUFFINGTON: — it’s involved again. I’m living on this planet. You’re living in a planet that is — CHENEY: — it’s — Arianna, what you’re saying — HUFFINGTON: — continuing — CHENEY: — has no relationship to — HUFFINGTON: It is completely — CHENEY: No relationship to the effects — HUFFINGTON: — Halliburton was involved in this. How can you say it is not? TAPPER: Well, Halliburton was cementing the pipe. HUFFINGTON: How can you say Halliburton has no relationship? CHENEY: Her assertion that Halliburton defrauded the U.S. government — HUFFINGTON: It did. It did. CHENEY: It was Bush-Cheney cronyism is the left talking point — HUFFINGTON: It was — hundreds of millions of dollars in Iraq. CHENEY: Arianna, is absolutely not true. It is absolutely not true. HUFFINGTON: OK, I’m so glad Politifact is going to be checking this. I’m so glad. CHENEY: Good. On June 9, PolitiFact acceded to her request: In evaluating Huffington’s statement, we’re most bothered by her use of the word “defrauded.” Some of the overbilling in Iraq appears to have been done from haste or inefficiency, or even in a desire to please military officials in the field without regard for cost. Whether the waste in contracting constitutes fraud is still being examined. “It’s a lot money being spent in a region of the world where we don’t have a lot of infrastructure for accounting for how the money is being spent. It will take years before we fully determine how we spent the money,” said Todd Harrison, a senior fellow for defense budget studies at the nonpartisan Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. In ruling on Huffington’s statement, we find much in the public record to support her statement, most notably the Justice Department lawsuit. Certainly there have been hundreds of millions of dollars that Halliburton’s KBR attempted to charge the government that have been denied. Government audits of KBR’s work in Iraq will likely continue for some time, and we do not expect a final accounting on these fronts anytime soon. Huffington glossed over some of these points in her back and forth with Liz Cheney. There’s also much evidence that makes us believe that hundreds of millions of dollars were lost to waste and inefficiency, not deceitful fraud. So we rate Huffington’s statement Half True. Almost a month later, Huffington is whining about it at her website: Whenever I speak about the future of media, I get the most positive reaction when I talk about the urgent need to create an online tool that makes it possible to instantly fact-check politicians and commentators as they speak (a bubble pops up, containing the actual facts supporting or contradicting what’s been said). Truth 2.0. That’s why I had such high hopes when it was announced that PolitiFact.com, the Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking project of the St. Petersburg Times, was going to evaluate the truthfulness of statements made each Sunday an ABC’s This Week. It wasn’t going to be instant, but it was a step in the right direction. Then my dust-up with Liz Cheney on the show last month was given the PolitiFact treatment — and I saw firsthand why the pursuit of Truth 2.0 is going to be harder than we think. PolitiFact’s finding that my statement that Halliburton had defrauded American taxpayers of “hundreds of millions of dollars in Iraq” was “Half True” — after first documenting example after example of why it was completely true — was an object lesson in equivocation, and a prime exhibit of the kind of muddled thinking that dominates Washington and allows the powerful to escape accountability. Despite the ludicrousness of the Half True rating — and since I was in the final throes of finishing my new book — I let it stand, feeling that the absurdity of PolitiFact first making my case for me, then falling back on the safety of a split-the-baby conclusion spoke for itself. Then, over the weekend, I read this entry detailing PolitiFact’s readers’ reaction to the Half True finding. Rummaging through its Mailbag, PolitiFact quoted three readers who said I was right (while castigating the site for “rhetorical tap-dancing” and “falling victim to the ills of pious fairness”), one who said I was wrong, and one who thought Half True was “right on.” Because this kind of hedging-your-bets thinking runs rampant in our media and political circles, and allows the corrupt no-accountability status quo to continue wreaking havoc on our country — and with my book at the printers, and a long weekend on my hands — I’ve decided it’s worth returning to the scene of the crime to do a little CSI exam of the evidence and see what we can conclude from PolitiFact’s head-scratching conclusion. After equivocating her case, Huffington concluded: Which is why I’d like to borrow two of the busiest letters of the day, and take this BP: Beyond PolitiFact. In the end, this is not about me, or Liz Cheney, or even Halliburton. It’s about our accountability double standard. It’s actually not that complex, nor is it ambiguous. It’s plainly obvious and the American people know it. And the refusal of our political and media leaders to acknowledge it is contributing to the widespread anger and cynicism sweeping the country right now. As long as we allow truth backed up by a mountain of evidence to be, in the name of “pious fairness,” downgraded to Half True, that’s the way the planet we’re all living on is going to continue to operate. And that’s a fact. I guess she’s no longer “so glad Politifact is going to be checking” her!  In the end, Huffington asked PolitiFact to access the veracity of her statement. They complied, and came to the conclusion that she was only half right. And like a true liberal, she whined about it claiming that it’s an example of everything that’s wrong with the world. Don’t you love how the mind of a liberal media elite works?

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Arianna Huffington Whines When PolitiFact Doesn’t Support Her Half-Truth

Biden Wrong: June Data Shows 125,000 Lost Jobs, But Media Still Ignore Failure of Stimulus

The June jobs report was released July 2 showing a tiny decline in the unemployment rate to 9.5 percent, but a depressing 125,000 overall non-farm payroll jobs lost . CNN’s “American Morning” reacted with an appropriately downbeat report, but the onscreen chyron led with the better news — showing the lower unemployment rate rather than the job losses. Christine Romans also pointed out that it was the “best unemployment rate since July 2009,” though later in the segment she admitted the rate is still “horrible.” NBC’s Ann Curry offered a very brief report on the jobs data on “Today,” also highlighting the lowest unemployment rate “since last July.” The report also contradicted Vice President Joe Biden’s predictions of 100,000 to 200,000 jobs gained each month for the rest of 2010. This month, Biden is off by about 275,000 jobs On June 2, Obama declared the U.S. economy was “moving in the right direction.” The same day, Vice President Biden predicted 100,000 to 200,000 jobs would be created each month through 2010. That prediction,if it came true, would fall 5.2 million jobs short of Obama’s promise that the stimulus package would create more than 4 million jobs by the end of 2010. As of July 2, adding June job losses puts Obama more than 5.3 million jobs away from his promise. “American Morning,” “Today” and the immediate reaction on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” to the June numbers all ignored the failure of Obama’s economic stimulus packages. The federal government has thrown billions (the $787 billion stimulus package, not to mention Cash for Clunkers, the Big Three bailout and other measures) at the economy in an attempt to reverse the course of the recession and generate jobs, yet the unemployment rate still stands at 9.5 percent. But the news media have yet to retract their support for government spending. “American Morning” host Kiran Chetry mentioned other bad economic news and then repeated liberal New York Times columnist Paul Krugman who warned on June 28 that without additional stimulus the U.S. would go into a ” third depression .” “Some like Paul Krugman who say, if we pull back on stimulus and spending right now — austerity measures aren’t necessarily working in Europe — we’re going to be in more trouble,” Chetry said. Over on MSNBC Savannah Guthrie was also concerned that the recovery might not be able to “hold on” without further stimulus: “I think the real issue is, as some of these stimulus programs expire, for example the Cash for Clunkers or the housing tax credit that people were getting, as soon as those stimulus measures are taken away it seems that everything collapses,” Guthrie said. “So I think the question for economists and the question that the White House struggles with is: Where is the organic growth? And with Congress in no mood to do anything in the way of stimulus, any further stimulus, what do you do? Can this recovery hold on?” The reports continued the media’s unwillingness to remind viewers of President Obama’s promises about the stimulus package. When Obama was selling his massive spending proposal, the administration claimed the package would keep unemployment from rising about 8 percent. The news media have consistently ignored the failure of the stimulus to fulfill that pledge. On June 4 the news media spun the May unemployment report by emphasizing the Census jobs that “led to the biggest jump in jobs in ten years.” Like this article? Then sign up for BMI’s weekly e-mail newsletter, The Balance Sheet .

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Biden Wrong: June Data Shows 125,000 Lost Jobs, But Media Still Ignore Failure of Stimulus

Today Show Marks One Year Anniversary of Palin’s Decision to ‘Cash In’

To mark the one year anniversary of Sarah Palin stepping down from her duties as governor of Alaska, NBC’s Norah O’Donnell, on Friday’s Today show, recounted for viewers what the former vice presidential candidate is doing, namely “cashing in.” Accompanied by a “cha-ching” sound effect O’Donnell ran down Palin’s various TV and book deals. And while O’Donnell also noted Palin has been very effective stumping for GOP candidates in the primaries she was careful to note that the “polarizing” Palin had “limits to her appeal,” as she cited an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll saying 52 percent view her political endorsements negatively. Along with the poll and TV and book deals, O’Donnell also included “her teenage daughter’s tumultuous relationship with Levi Johnston,” and “her rage” at author Joe McGinnis “who’s moved directly next door to her Wasilla home ” as negatives. How exactly Palin’s “rage” at a writer/stalker moving next door to her family home could be seen as a limit to her appeal wasn’t fully explained. The following is the full segment as it was aired on the July 2 Today show: MATT LAUER: It was a year ago tomorrow that Sarah Palin made the surprise announcement that she was resigning as the governor of Alaska. And a lot has changed in the past 12 months. NBC’s Norah O’Donnell has details on that. Norah, good morning. [On screen headline: “‘Going Rogue’ Sarah Palin, One Year After Resigning As Governor”] NORAH O’DONNELL: A lot has changed. You know she may be the most controversial and polarizing figure in politics today, but she’s also helped elect some new stars in the Republican Party, while at the same time becoming a multi-millionaire. One year ago Sarah Palin shocked everyone, announcing she would resign as governor of Alaska with 18 months still left on her term. SARAH PALIN: It would be apathetic to just kind of hunker down and go with the flow. We’re fishermen. We know that only dead fish go with the flow. PAT BUCHANAN: If Sarah Palin was thinking about being President of the United States, she’s taking a real step backward. O’DONNELL: But if anything, Palin has surged forward. More visible- JAY LENO: Thanks for coming! How are you doing? O’DONNELL: And possibly more influential than ever. PALIN: How is that hopey-changey stuff working out for ya? O’DONNELL: Especially in recent Republican primaries, backing Tea Party candidates across the country and women like South Carolina’s Nikki Haley. PALIN: Nikki had the backbone to vote against taking the Obama stimulus money. O’DONNELL: Her power is fueled but her political action committee with a deep war chest and a vast army of Facebook and Twitter followers. ANNE KORNBLUT, THE WASHINGTON POST: She does still have a very loud megaphone when she tweets, when she’s on Facebook. She still has the power to affect a policy debate when she wants to. O’DONNELL: But there may be limits to her appeal. A new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows that 52 percent see her political endorsements negatively. And for Sarah Palin, the family dramas that captivated America during the campaign have continued. There’s her teenage daughter’s tumultuous relationship with Levi Johnston. PALIN: I hear he goes by the name Ricky Hollywood now. O’DONNELL: Her rage at an author who’s moved directly next door to her Wasilla home, where he’s writing a book about her. JOE MCGINNISS: She has pushed a button and unleashed the hounds of hell and now we’re out there slavering and barking and growling. O’DONNELL OVER “CHA-CHING” SOUND EFFECT: The national fascination with the Palins has not abated and Sarah Palin is cashing in, going from $125,000 a year to an estimated $12 million. There’s her blockbuster bestseller Going Rogue, on that deal, $7 million. Her own TV show on TLC, on that deal, $2 million. And an exclusive contract with Fox News channel, $1 million. And as for her speeches, she makes as much as $100,000 a pop and even those aren’t without controversy. PALIN: Got my water? Do I have my straws? I want my straws. And I want them bent, please. Thank you. At least that’s what I read in some of the lame stream media outlets, is that I was demanding straws. O’DONNELL: Well her next project is a new book called America By Heart. It’s due in November and she is also expected to be out there again on another book tour, Matt. And the crowds come out for her. LAUER: Oh and we continue to talk about her. There’s no question about it. Norah, thanks very much. O’DONNELL: You’re welcome. LAUER: Good to see you.

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Today Show Marks One Year Anniversary of Palin’s Decision to ‘Cash In’

Google and Small Bookstores Forming an Alliance in E-Book Market

Photo via GypsyFae A giant like Google moving into the e-book market usually spells disaster for small stores. Independent outlets typically don’t stand much of a chance when a huge company decides it wants in on the market. However, when it comes to e-books, the typical story might just be turned on its head — small stores and Google could use one another as an ally when it comes to digital books, a rapidly growing segment of the book mar… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Google and Small Bookstores Forming an Alliance in E-Book Market

‘Eclipse’: The Reviews Are In!

Some reviewers agree with one critic who praised the novelty of a blockbuster saga centered on ‘a girl’s primal dream of being desired.’ By Eric Ditzian Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson in “Eclipse” Photo: Summit Would it be an exaggeration to say “Eclipse” is the most polarizing film of the year so far? In one corner, you have the Twilighters lining up outside theaters across the country to be among the first to check out the latest romance-laden adventure starring Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner. Those fans will line up again and again before the weekend is over, likely bringing “Eclipse” an opening box-office haul to match, if not exceed, the $142.8 million that “New Moon” grossed in November. In the other corner, you’ve got the skeptics, the who-watches-this-crap haters and the bloggers taking to the Web to spew vitriol at every moment of teen romance “Eclipse” has to offer. There will be no d

Movieline at the Midpoint: 9 Dates That Will Shape the Rest of 2010

Wednesday and Thursday mark the midpoint of 2010 — and thus the midpoint of the year in movies and television. Rather than looking back — which we’ll get to throughout the next two days — here’s a chance to peak ahead at what wonderful pop culture nuggets await in the next six months. Open your Google calendar and follow along as Movieline brings you the 9 dates that will shape the rest of 2010.

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Movieline at the Midpoint: 9 Dates That Will Shape the Rest of 2010

NewsBusters Interview: Greg Gutfeld, Author of ‘The Bible of Unspeakable Truths’

Greg Gutfeld is a rare breed. A conservative former magazine editor turned host of Fox News late night talk show “Red Eye,” Gutfeld masterfully mixes keen political insight and scathing critiques of contemporary Amerian culture with a healthy dose of humor. His new book, “The Bible of Unspeakable Truths” fits that MO perfectly. Gutfeld dissects thousands of “unspeakable truths” ranging from “for twenty million dollars, you’d sleep with MIchael Jackson (even now)” to “speaking truth to power means ‘shouting at people who remind me of daddy'” to “squirrels are just sexier rats.” For avid “Red Eye” fans, the style of comedy will be familiar. Those who have yet to enjoy an episode will be fans by the time they put the book down. Occasionally vulgar, often provocative, and always funny, Gutfeld’s absurd style has the potential to disarm even the skeptical, and then bombard them with political and cultural insights profound in their simplicity and logic. Greg was kind enough to grant NewsBusters an interview. In it, he discusses writing for the Huffington Post, his view of “Red Eye,” and his own political transformation (full audio and transcript below the fold). NEWSBUSTERS: Now before you were at Red Eye, you were a blogger at the Huffington Post of course, so I thought you could just give us the inside scoop on what it was like working there as somebody who obviously has some conservative leanings. GUTFELD: I can’t really answer that question because I never worked for Arianna. I was living in London, working for Maxim, just posting at the Huffington Post, so there was no real relationship, at all. So it wasn’t a job. I wasn’t being paid. It was completely differently–it was a lot of fun, taking potshots at a group of self-absorbed semi-celebrities, you can’t get any better than that. But, yeah it wasn’t in any way–you can’t compare it to working at Fox News, because this is real work. NB: Right. That rather than blogging, you mean. GUTFELD: Yeah, yeah. NB: So when you left, was it a clean break? I know there were rumors, well I don’t know if they were rumors, but there were petition sites trying to get you off Huffington Post. Was it sort of, “Greg, we would appreciate it if you would stop writing for us?” GUTFELD: No, not at all. It was just based on me not having the time anymore to do it. And they were always pretty good about posting my stuff until later when they started kind of disappearing off the front page. But I had just gotten to the point where I — writing for free is only something you should do as an idle pursuit. You shouldn’t devote a lot of time to that, unless you’re trying to write a book for yourself. But writing for free for somebody else — unless it helps promote you, and promote a product — it’s kind of pointless, you know? NB: Right, yeah. GUTFELD: All of a sudden I’m working 70, 80 hours a week, why am I writing for the Huffington Post for free, it made no sense. NB: And now, of course, with Red Eye, it’s sort of — I hope you won’t take offense to me making this analogy, but it seems to be filling a niche that the Daily Show and the Colbert Report filled on the left a little while ago, and it’s turning into that rare breed of comedy that consistently appeals to conservatives. So do you see Red Eye as that sort of brand, as some weird hybrid between comedy and news, or is it all comedy, or is it a news show? How do you see it? GUTFELD: The best way to describe it I guess is a mixture of inexperience and honesty. You can’t compare the show to — you can’t say it’s like a conservative equivalent of the Daily Show or the Colbert Report because, you know, they’ve got a million people working on their staff and they’ve got amazing sets. It’s a pretty impressive atmosphere. We’re, as we’ve said before, we’re like the sandwich you make at 3 am. We started this gig not having any idea what we were doing, and it was obvious when you watched the show how…embarrassingly bad we were. But it’s a rule that I learned from the people at Fox News, they tell you, you do something over and over again and you’re going to gradually get better. You may not notice it, but just by incremental amounts you get better and better. Sometimes you get worse, and then you get a little better, and then you get a little worse, and then you get a little better, but over time, all of a sudden you’ve done like 800, 900 shows, and it’s like, gee whiz, maybe I can do this stuff. The conservative, I guess, sensibility, that’s just my sensibility. That comes through in my writing, and so naturally in Red Eye that would come through there. But Andy Levy, you know he’s the libertarian with a conservative bent, and that creates that other element to it, and then Bill of course is just a reprobate with no morals whatsoever, and that adds the liberal balance. So what you have, it wasn’t orchestrated to be that way. It’s like a band in a way. We came together and we created something that we didn’t know what it was going to sound like. And it turns out it sounds pretty good, I guess. NB: Well and there wasn’t really anything like Red Eye when it came on, and now you have a show at 3 am that very often beats out CNN’s prime time ratings, which I guess these days isn’t saying that much, but hey for a show at 3 am that’s quite an achievement. GUTFELD: The thing that’s kind of interesting about our story is that we created a core audience, a valuable audience of really smart people that are willing to stay up and watch it, or DVR it, which I would imagine is what more and more people are doing. We have a really dedicated, intense troop of people following us, and that’s something you don’t see in a lot of shows. Again, it’s like, you know, taking a big, horrible band like the Black Eyed Peas, which probably has a lot of generic fans, versus a band that’s not as big or not as famous like LCD Soundsystem but has a dedicated following. You know, it’s that kind of thing. NB: So moving on to the book. One thing that I found interesting that you said in there, and obviously you went to UC Berkeley, and I don’t know where you were in your transition from left to right but you mention that you were in high school, you were a brazen liberal. Actually, could we start with you briefly telling it? It’s a great story in the book of how you sort of made that transition that I think people would love to hear. GUTFELD: Yeah, you know what happened, in high school I already knew that the best way to win is just to make jokes. And the debate in high school was about nuclear power, or actually I think it was about nuclear weapons – mutually assured destruction. And I was, being a lefty, against nuclear weapons. This other guy Jeff, who was really smart and ended up being a really good friend of mine, was pro-nukes. He knew what he was talking about. I didn’t, but I didn’t care. I figured all I had to do was act cool in the debate, make fun of Jeff, and just undercut the whole debate, and I would win. And I was right. But while the debate was going on, Jeff had convinced me that I was wrong, and not only convinced me, but convinced me that my entire world view was wrong, that I was shallow, that I was lazy, because the way he laid out his argument was so completely — it literally changed my mind right there, and I think at some point I went — I was able to get somebody to call me out of class so I could actually escape from the debate. Some kind of phony reason, like I had a problem at home. I can’t remember how we did it. I might have gone to the bathroom and then told somebody to call the principle’s office and say there’s an emergency. I did something really sleazy to get out of it. And then I still won, because I came back and I was more popular than Jeff was. But in my heart I knew Jeff was right. NB: So is that an allegory for our current politics in that it’s the popular kids, the smooth talking kids who get the most attention, who get listened to, while the gets with the best ideas sort of fall by the wayside? GUTFELD: I think it has a lot to do with it. I think that — I wrote something on Obama last year, or it might have even been before he was elected. The people who elected him elected the messenger, but they didn’t elect the message. I compared him to a really likable character actor. Everybody wants to be around him, he seems nice and comfortable, and he’s a popular guy. NB: And you have, since then arrived at, if I’ve got this right, what you call in the book your “run from Godzilla” theory of politics. Can you flesh that out a little bit? GUTFELD: Run from Godzilla is basically the idea that if something’s coming, something big and cumbersome, and bulky is coming at you, run away. And that’s how I feel about government. You should be getting as far away as possible from anything that’s trying to be that intrusive in your life. There’s nothing that they can do that you can’t do better. With the exception of, you know, sustaining a military. I know I can’t do that. The problem with conservatives and the benefit of conservatism is that you don’t want to be in power. You’re supposed to only go in for a short period of time and get on with your private life, and build a successful private business and take care of your private family. You’re not interested in the public life, and the problem is it’s almost like you give up the ball and the game because of that. NB: That seems like it’s almost anachronistic, this notion of the non-career politician. Do you think that’s coming back at all? GUTFELD: I don’t know, because it really is — we were just talking about this today: how many politicians refuse to leave, even when they’re, you know, they’re not well. In other jobs, if you were sick you’d take time off and these guys don’t. I think they have become addicted — I know they have become addicted to the feel of power. They love it. They wouldn’t know what to do if they went home. They’ve gotten so used to hearing their own voice and feeling important that they can’t go back and run a business. I’m trying to remember who said this. David Asman said that it used to me somebody was really successful, and then entered politics. Now they enter politics to be successful. It’s more about making a career off that. NB: So you don’t think — one group of people who you hit hard in the beginning of the book are people who in your words, “mean well.” And they may mean well, but that sort of feeds this attitude where everybody wants to feel good, but nobody’s really doing good. And that sort of leads to — and since this is for NewsBusters, I have to ask you about your theory on media bias — you say that the media don’t lean left, they lean towards people or things that they think mean well. Can you explain that? GUTFELD: Well, meaning well means someone’s going to intrude in your life. And they know better than you do. Doing well — actually doing something good — is actually boring, but meaning well is everything you’ve ever seen in a made for TV movie after school special. And inevitably it always involves some earnest jackass trying to ruin your life. That’s liberal politics right there. So as long as you preach the meaning well theories — it’s the equivalent of throwing money at a homeless person even though you know that money is just going to buy a bottle of malt liquor, which I would do if somebody threw money at me — it’s all these things that make the person feel better about themselves. These actions, however, have no real effect on life. It just makes you feel good. And they just go, “oh we mean well.” It’s like somebody taking that one day a year, on Thanksgiving, to go feed turkey to the homeless, and somehow that changes the world. But all it is is making them feel good. It’s all about feelings, it’s not about thinking. Remember, there was that craze called tough love. All tough love was was just common sense, with people going, “you know, maybe we shouldn’t feed into all these self-obsessed, conceded self-esteem crazed kids. Maybe we should treat them like kids, and they called that tough love. Well that wasn’t tough love, it was just normal love. That’s how you raise decent people. NB: So just very generally about the book, it reminded me of that sort of Red Eye paradigm, that mix of comedy and politics that you do so well. And there were times where I find myself saying, wait a minute, is Gutfeld serious, does he really think this? Does he really want people to be doing this? For instance, reinstating the draft so we can show kids what a real day’s work is, things like that. GUTFELD: I think you might have conflated two unspeakable truths there. There was something about the draft, and then there was something about child slave labor. All I’m trying to do is point out a feeling that one has about today’s society using absurdity. Of course I don’t want child slavery. But you look at people and you go, “god you know, these kids shouldn’t just be wearing the iPods, they should me making them.”

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NewsBusters Interview: Greg Gutfeld, Author of ‘The Bible of Unspeakable Truths’

Miley Cyrus: Tamed by Eminem and Drake!

Miley Cyrus has made it painfully clear for weeks now: she simply cannot be tamed. But while this may be true in her wardrobe choices , the singer was cut down to size on the music charts last week. Her latest album, “Can’t Be Tamed,” finished third in sales, behind Eminem’s “Recovery” and Drake’s “Thank Me Later.” It was expected that Eminem would lead the way, but not by this wide of a margin. His new CD had the biggest opening week of any in 2010, moving over 753,000 copies. As for Miley? She has to be disappointed, as “Can’t Be Tamed” sold just 106,000 albums. That’s an astounding 250,000 fewer than Cyrus’ 2008 effort, “Breakout.” Miley’s fans will surely complain about our biased coverage now and make up excuses for their favorite artist. And that’s fine, that’s their right and we admire their passion. But numbers don’t lie : recent poll results show 70% of respondents laugh at the idea of Cyrus as a role model; moreover, her new CD actually sold fewer copies than her previous CD sold in its second week of release. As we’ve been saying all along, is it possible Miley’s new image may have gotten her attention, but turned away her fan base? Might she have been better served by slowly evolving as an artist, as opposed to pulling every transparent, cheap trick in the book just to prove she’s changed? These are questions Miley, her handlers and her cult-like followers will need to consider carefully.

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Miley Cyrus: Tamed by Eminem and Drake!