Tag Archives: palin

Worst Governor Ever: Sarah Palin Tries, Fails to Win Over Constituent

If you thought Levi Johnston’s run for mayor would be the funniest story regarding Alaska politics all day on THG, we wouldn’t blame you. But think again! A woman from Homer, Alaska recently made a 30-foot sign to welcome her state’s former chief executive, Sarah Palin, to her hometown. Its simple message:

Maddow Guest Harris-Lacewell Describes Abortion Providers as ‘Termination Services’

That’s odd, those describing themselves as pro-choice usually aren’t this candid when it comes to abortion. On her MSNBC show Thursday night, Rachel Maddow spoke with Princeton professor Melissa Harris-Lacewell about Republican Senate candidates Rand Paul, Sharron Angle and Ken Buck opposing abortion, including for pregnancies conceived through rape or incest. Harris-Lacewell said this in response to a question from Maddow — MADDOW: So what would be the consequences of having a whole bunch of new sitting senators, elected to the US Senate, who are opposed to abortion not just in all regular cases but also cases in which the pregnancy resulted from rape or incest? HARRIS-LACEWELL:  Well, I mean, I think we’ve already seen the consequences of having a significant portion of even one party, even the party out of power, with a very strong anti-reproductive choice agenda. We saw it for example in the health care fight where somehow, you know, abortion became the central issue in a comprehensive health care reform bill, the central issue became controlling women’s right to choose, controlling women’s fertility, not giving women the ability to control their own, but having the government do it. So, I think clearly every time we move more aggressively against women’s reproductive rights, the more that we will see the consequences show up in everything from health care policy to, you know, potentially actually moving towards reducing the opportunities for women to, uh, you know, actually find healthy, safe termination services. As a conservative you get used to liberals euphemizing on abortion, to the point that when a left winger speaks with something resembling clarity, it’s enough to make you catch your breath. Naomi Wolfe, author of “The Beauty Myth” and “Fire With Fire: The New Female Power and How It Will Change the 21st Century” and as staunch a feminist as you’re likely to encounter, lamented her fellow pro-choicers’ tendency toward evasion in a widely read 1995 essay in The New Republic titled “Our Bodies, Our Souls: Rethinking pro-choice rhetoric.” Among the passages I’ve highlighted — At its best, feminism defends its moral high ground by being simply faithful to the truth: to women’s real-life experiences. But, to its own ethical and political detriment, the pro-choice movement has reliquished the moral frame around the issue of abortion. It has ceded the language of right and wrong to abortion foes. The movement’s abandonment of what Americans have always, and rightly, demanded of their movements — an ethical core — and its reliance instead on a political rhetoric in which the fetus means nothing are proving fatal. … Clinging to a rhetoric about abortion in which there is no life and no death, we entangle our beliefs in a series of self delusions, fibs and evasions. And we risk becoming precisely what our critics charge us with being: callous, selfish and casually destructive men and women who share a cheapened view of life. In the following pages, I will argue for a radical shift in the pro-choice movement’s rhetoric and consciousness about abortion: I will maintain that we need to contextualize the fight to defend abortion rights within a moral framework that admits that the death of a fetus is a real death … Many pro-choice advocates developed a language to assert that the fetus isn’t a person, and this, over the years, has developed into a lexicon of dehumanization. Laura Kaplan’s “The Story of Jane”, an important forthcoming account of a pre-Roe underground abortion service, inadvertently sheds light on the origins of some of this rhetoric: service staffers referred to the fetus — well into the fourth month — as “material” (as in “the amount of material that had to be removed …”) … In one woman’s account of her chemical abortion, in the January/February 1994 issue of Mother Jones, for example, the doctor says, “By Sunday you won’t see on the monitor what we call the heartbeat …” How can we charge that it is vile and repulsive for pro-lifers to brandish vile and repulsive images if the images are real? … We would be impoverished by a rhetoric about the end of life that speaks of the ill and the dying as if they were meaningless and of doing away with them as if it were a bracing demonstration of our personal independence. … After Harris-Lacewell’s brief lapse into candor, however, she reverted to form, blaming the economic downturn for what she decries as harsher criticism of abortion from Republicans ( click here for link to segment on Maddow site; Harris-Lacewell’s remarks quoted below start at 2:32) — HARRIS-LACEWELL: You’ve been doing a lot of history tonight and so I just want to pause and maybe do a quick history lesson here and remind your viewers that what’s happening is, we’re in a period of deep economic anxiety and often when America is in a period of economic anxiety, it starts looking around for individuals to blame. And sometimes the very best place to start asserting control is right in the middle of a woman, in her uterus. … the search for scapegoats also extending to the first minority candidate of either major party, thereby ensuring his defeat in November 2008. No, that didn’t happen either, nor does economic malaise account for shifting public sentiment against abortion (as embodied by Paul, Angle and Buck), a dynamic that long preceded the recession. (After I mentioned Harris-Lacewell’s remarks to a friend, he sent me a link to a great piece at The Onion, titled “U.S. Out of My Uterus,” that dovetails with Harris-Lacewell’s views.) In May 2009, eight months after the economic slump began,  Gallup found that more respondents described themselves as pro-life than pro-choice, and by the substantial margin of 51 to 42 percent — This is the first time a majority of U.S. adults have identified themselves as pro-life since Gallup began asking this question in 1995. The new results, obtained from Gallup’s annual Values and Beliefs survey, represent a significant shift from a year ago, when 50 percent were pro-choice and 44 percent were pro-life. Prior to now, the highest percentage identifying as pro-life was 46 percent, in both August 2001 and May 2002. Would less than a year of economic insecurity account for the shift? I suggest three other causes extending over the past decade, including one that occurred in the same timeframe as the Gallup polling — increased use of ultrasound technology that revealed unborn babies to their parents as never before, widespread revulsion and a Supreme Court ruling against partial-birth abortion, and finally, Sarah Palin. In a provocative Weekly Standard article in April 2009 titled “Honor Killing, American-Style,” Sam Schulman elaborated on the “reaction of horror — visceral, immediate, and continuing — to the Sarah Palin phenomenon of last fall” — We can understand it if we think of one particular affront that Palin presented to the best among us: flamboyant nubility. Sarah Palin decided to carry her Down Syndrome baby to term. Bristol Palin not only decided to give birth to her illegitimate baby, but may have been encouraged to do so by her mother. Babies are born in these circumstances every day. But in the judgment of our most worldly women and of our most persnickety men, these births, however commonplace, offend propriety. To have one such baby may be regarded as a misfortune; to have both seems like carelessness. The unapologetic fertility of this ordinary Alaska family became an obstacle that prevented many from thinking clearly about anything that Sarah Palin might have touched — John McCain, free trade, low taxes, the war on terror. A kind of honor-rage descended, and those whom it touched ran amok. And why not? In the language of honor, the fertility of the Palin women, mother and daughter, was shameless, and Palin didn’t have the decency to be ashamed. (emphasis added) That same Gallup poll found an even split among those most dug in on abortion — 23 percent opposed in all circumstances, 22 percent not wanting any restrictions. Thus, a majority of respondents fall into “the mushy middle,” as described by pro-choice defector Norma McCorvey, better known by the legal pseudonym of “Jane Roe” in Roe v. Wade. “McCorvey still supports abortion rights through the first trimester — but is horrified by the brutality of abortion as it manifests more obviously further into a pregnancy,” Wolfe wrote in her New Republic essay. ” ‘Have you ever seen a second-trimester abortion,’ she asks. ‘It’s a baby. It’s got a face and a body, and they put him in a freezer and a little container.’ ” A “mushy middle” that discerns a moral difference between the single mother with too many mouths to feed who contemplates abortion after unexpectedly becoming pregnant — and the teenage girl who wants a late-term abortion so she can fit into her prom dress. A broad swath of the populace leaning more toward the ever popular Palin and away from abortion apologists.

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Maddow Guest Harris-Lacewell Describes Abortion Providers as ‘Termination Services’

NPR Sneers Palin’s Fractured Lingo Shows She Avoids ‘Books and Periodicals That Have Semicolons’

From his usual perch on the NPR show Fresh Air, liberal linguist and Berkeley professor Geoffrey Nunberg  predictably sneered on Tuesday at Sarah Palin’s use of “refudiate,” and then her refusal to correct herself. He suggested she obviously doesn’t read enough. “You have to frequent the places the word hangs out in, the kinds of books and periodicals that have semicolons in them.” But he also tried to cover his tracks a little bit by suggesting eloquence is overrated in politicians: Palin could have picked up refudiate from someone else or come up with it on her own. The question is why she didn’t correct it along the way, before she got called on it and felt the need to defend it. After all, the course of our lives is strewn with abandoned misconceptions about words. I’m always struck by how tenacious these are. A word will go right past me five or 10 times before I suddenly have this duh moment. As in, duh, it has a ‘c’ in it. Or duh, compendious doesn’t mean comprehensive at all. But Palin apparently never had a duh moment with repudiate, probably because she hasn’t encountered it often enough. People don’t use it a lot in ordinary conversation – as in, I used to think Peter Frampton was cool, but I totally repudiate that now. You have to frequent the places the word hangs out in, the kinds of books and periodicals that have semicolons in them. [Note he places the emphasis on the second syllable of fre-QUENT. Thank you, Henry Higgins.] But not even Palin’s most ardent supporters would claim that she’s been a great reader. They prize her for her attitude and authenticity, not her erudition. Of course, there are other people who blanch at the thought of a head of state whose speech flows so far from the stream of literate English prose. Fair enough. But inarticulateness doesn’t preclude political competence – think of Dwight Eisenhower. As the linguist Mark Liberman put it in the LanguageLog blog, politics is not a vocabulary contest. And it’s a mistake to read too much significance into these slips and solecisms. Take the way the logotariat reacted to Palin’s use of verbage in place of verbiage during the 2008 campaign. It’s a very common error, and in its way a logical one. The i in verbiage doesn’t make a lot of sense if you think, as most people do, that the word is related to verb and verbal. It actually comes from the same root as warble. But in The New Yorker, James Wood took verbage as Palin’s own invention and called it a perfect example of the Republicans’ disdain for words. Verbage – so close to garbage, so far from language . That’s a pretty clever way for Nunberg to dull his Berkeley barbs and then stick Palin with another one. Nunberg realized there’s some political danger in smugness, even as he betrayed it: Where do you begin with that? With the remarkable condescension of garbage — so close to trash? Or with the insolence of imagining that faulty usage betrays stupidity and turpitude? One way or the other, it’s a form of smugness that transcends partisan lines. People on the right are just as quick to ridicule Obama and Biden for their mistakes. Yet the well-spoken aren’t necessarily wiser or better than the rest of us. Most of the horrors that the human race has had to endure in modern times were inflicted at the bidding of men who spoke in shapely grammatical sentences. Unfortunately, eloquence doesn’t come next to godliness. A devotion to language will have to be its own reward. Could we just celebrate that?

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NPR Sneers Palin’s Fractured Lingo Shows She Avoids ‘Books and Periodicals That Have Semicolons’

Ali Fedotowsky and Roberto Martinez: Still Together, Possibly Cast on Dancing With the Stars!

Following their somewhat surprising engagement Monday on The Bachelorette season finale and their emotional After the Final Rose reunion, we can happily report that yes, Ali Fedotowsky and Roberto Martinez are still together. We may not have seen the last of them on ABC, either. Amid recent breakups of Jillian Harris and Ed Swiderski, and more scandalously Jake Pavelka and Vienna Girardi, the idea of Ali Fedotowsky and her man making it to the altar will obviously have skeptics. But they’re off to a good start. Roberto hasn’t slept with half of Chicago during his sequestration period like Ed, nor is he insane, controlling and altogether phony like Jake. As for Ali and Vienna … we don’t have to explain. Ali and Roberto are moving to San Diego and planning a Spring 2011 wedding! The two certainly appeared happy and overjoyed to be reunited in their appearances on Jimmy Kimmel Live and Good Morning America last night and today. Will we soon see them on ABC’s other hit reality series? The new cast of Dancing with the Stars will be unveiled August 30 during (what else) Bachelor Pad . According to reports, both Ali Fedotowsky and Roberto Martinez have been asked to be on DWTS , a la Jake. We suspect one or more will accept that offer. As for the next Bachelor , what we’re hearing is that last night’s runner-up, Chris Lambton, can have the gig if he wants it. Not a surprise there in the least. With his classy exit on Monday’s Bachelorette finale , and having already cemented his place as a major fan favorite, it’s the IDEAL setup for The Bachelor . The question is whether he does it. Unlike Jake, poor Chris seems very genuine and does not seem hell bent on becoming famous. So will see … and hope! As for Ali and Roberto: Will they last? Vote below!

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Ali Fedotowsky and Roberto Martinez: Still Together, Possibly Cast on Dancing With the Stars!

Bristol Palin Confirms: I Dumped Levi Johnston!

“It’s over. I broke up with him.” – Bristol Palin on Levi Johnston After shocking most observers, her own family included, by getting back together with the father of her 19-month-old son, the daughter of former GOP V.P. candidate Sarah Palin confirms that she’s broken it off with the dude again. They are now 0-for-2 at the whole engagement thing. Bristol Palin says that the relationship soured on July 14, the very same day they announced their marriage intentions to the world via Us Weekly . As luck would have it, that was the day she learned: That he might have fathered a baby with Lanesia Garcia (he didn’t) That Levi may also have been putting it to Briana Plum (unclear) BRIEFLY HAPPY TIMES : Failed engagements of 2010 and 2008, respectively . In any case, Palin tearfully told People about feeling heartbroken, humiliated and trapped while Levi acted cool . “There was no remorse,” she says. “The final straw was him flying to Hollywood for what he told me was to see some hunting show but come to find out it was that music video mocking my family,” she says. “He’s just obsessed with the limelight and I got played.” That will do it every time. Bristol Palin has already moved back into her parents’ home in Alaska. For her part, Sarah Palin said in a statement: “I wish for Bristol to be able to move forward in life with her same forgiving, gracious, optimistic spirit, but from henceforth she’ll know to trust but verify. Bristol is strong, she is independent, and she knows what is right for her son.” Bristol says she’s not giving up hope of two-parent home for Tripp … but this is most likely the last chance she’ll give that jackass Levi. “I have faith that I’ll find it. I know I need a man who’s going to be completely honest with me, someone who loves me and Tripp and wants to be with him all the time. I also want someone who has religious beliefs and a good family.” Ouch, that’s gotta hurt if you’re the son of a drug dealer. Levi may still be in denial over the whole thing, according to reports. TMZ claims Levi thinks the whole thing is nothing but a big “misunderstanding.” According to Levi’s manager, Tank Jones, Bristol doesn’t have her story straight and Levi believes that the two simply broke up over “misinformation.” Jones says Levi is definitely not the father of an illegitimate baby (well, a second one) and that he did not shoot a music video “mocking” the Palins. As for their 19-month-old son Tripp, Tank says that Levi Johnston will continue to co-parent with Bristol and “take care” of his financial obligations. Tank also notes that Levi is “not happy” about the split

All the Trash Levi Johnston Has Talked About His Future Mother-in-Law [Greatest Hits]

When he marries Bristol Palin next month, Levi Johnston will enter the most awkward family dynamic ever. Let us count the reasons Sarah Palin has to hate her son-in-law, with an exhaustive collection of Levi Johnston’s cruelest quotes about Sarah. More

Bristol Palin-Levi Johnston Engagement: Just For (Reality) Show?

Yesterday, we reported the joyous engagement of the previously-engaged, then estranged, then reconciled tandem from Alaska, Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston . It’s a wonderful thing, couples doing what it takes for love, for a child. But given who we’re talking about, there are cynics who suspect other motives at work. Seriously, when’s the reality show announcement? Next week? The week after? We stress again, this is just a rumor started by cynics. Yet it wouldn’t shock us. Think Bethenny Getting Married meets Northern Exposure meets the RNC! Gawker floats the following theory : “Within the next 4-6 weeks Palin’s PR people will releases news that Bristol and Levi will ‘star’ in a new reality show.” “All about young parenting. And yes, they will also work up to a wedding.” One they will remain abstinent prior to, of course. Because they’re like that. “This is part of the planned ‘story arc.’ Levi will be promoted as young, decent, salt of the earth guy. Bristol will be seen dealing with ‘challenges’ of young motherhood.” “Willow will be on a lot, maybe some Piper thrown in. They’ll attempt to boost rankings the first few episodes by having Sarah cameos, but the rest of the time will be a ‘conservative young marrieds who just happen to already have a baby’ theme.” Is such a scenario that crazy? Think about it. Levi’s on the hook for $1,700 a month in child support – or like $3,000 per month before taxes – a sizable sum even if he weren’t tied to the state of Alaska or lacking for a college degree. We’re just saying. The reality show would give him a salary, get the Palins get off his back, and get everybody on the same page as far as hyping the mythical exploits of Sarah Palin and her brood. Foolproof if you think about it. Reality show or not, will they last?

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Bristol Palin-Levi Johnston Engagement: Just For (Reality) Show?

Bristol Palin: Engaged to Levi Johnston!

Having recently rekindled their romance, Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston are now engaged – and not just to bolster her mom’s poll numbers this time! “We got engaged two weeks ago,” the daughter of Sarah Palin tells Us Weekly . “It felt right, even though we don’t have the approval of our parents.” Bristol Palin is 19 and Levi Johnston is 20. They famously called off their previous engagement weeks after welcoming son Tripp in December 2008. After an icy period of estrangement, nasty accusations and PR wars, they reconnected a few months ago while working out custody plans for Tripp. “I really thought we were over,” Levi said. “So when I went, I had no hope. I think we both just started talking, and then we took Tripp for a walk.” Bristol and Levi now and during their previous fake engagement . She says when Levi Johnston left that night, “we didn’t hug or kiss, but I was thinking how different it was. He texted me: ‘I miss you. I love you.'” “‘I want to be with you again’ … I was in shock.” Perhaps the most amazing part, if you don’t believe this is being embellished to sell magazines of course, is that the former Republican Vice Presidential nominee has been kept in the dark about the youngsters’ plans … until now! Says Bristol: “It is intimidating and scary just to think about what her reaction is going to be. Hopefully she will jump on board.” But will she? Sarah and Todd Palin said in a statement: “Bristol at 19 is now a young adult. We obviously want what’s best for our children. Bristol believes in redemption and forgiveness to a degree most of us struggle to put in practice in our daily lives.” Sounds like a thumbs-up to us … or not? Either way, congratulations to the young couple. We’re happy for them … but still, we gotta ask … Will Bristol and Levi last this time?

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Bristol Palin: Engaged to Levi Johnston!

Time’s Joe Klein Cheap Shots Palin: ‘She Doesn’t Know Anything’; Earns Creepy Chris Matthews Cackle

There’s something very tortuous about watching some of the talking heads assembled on NBC’s “The Chris Matthews Show,” especially when they try to dissect former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin like she is some alien life form. On the July 11 broadcast of his weekend show, Matthews and his panel analyzed Palin’s “Mama Grizzlies” ad spot and attempted to determine what Palin’s end goal was with the ad. And Time magazine’s Joe Klein attributed credit to Palin’s charismatic ability.   “The most important thing about Sarah Palin is that she’s a great stand-up politician,” Klein said. “I mean, when you hear her talk – this is not a woman who has sat in a room with a political consultant telling her how to pronounce words. It’s just her voice.” “There’s something in the inflection which is provocative,” Matthews replied. But then came the eventual expected cheap shot from Klein. Klein had once said Sarah Palin and Fox News host Glenn Beck should be tried for sedition on that same program and he didn’t disguise his disdain for Palin on this episode either. “But I think that’s balanced against the fact that she doesn’t know anything ,” Klein said. “And that’s a big problem.” Klein’s comments earned the trademark Matthews “ha!” However, CNBC’s Trish Regan advised her co-panelists not to underestimate the power of Palin when it comes to the women vote. “Experience does matter, but let’s not forget that if women are motivated, they can make a difference at the voting booth,” Regan said. “Look at 2008 – 10 million more women voted than men.” That wasn’t good enough for Matthews or Klein. They were already looking toward the Iowa caucus in January 2012, where the demographics are a little different. “You got to Iowa, one woman, evangelical Christian against four guys,” Matthews said. “I still think the shape of the field is important, right Joe?” “Right, especially in Iowa,” Klein replied.

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Time’s Joe Klein Cheap Shots Palin: ‘She Doesn’t Know Anything’; Earns Creepy Chris Matthews Cackle

CBS Host Admits Levi Johnston Apology ‘Highly Under-Reported’

On Friday’s CBS Early Show, fill-in co-host Erica Hill confessed Levi Johnston’s apology for making false statements about the Palin family was “highly under-reported.” During the ‘Early Wrap’ segment, Hill told a panel of media pundits: “My favorite story of the week, which was highly under-reported…is that Levi Johnston came out and said….Some things he said about the Palin family were not true.” It’s interesting that Hill used the phrase “under-reported,” when CBS did not cover Johnston’s admission at all since he made the statement in a Tuesday interview with People Magazine. Meanwhile, the network, and the Early Show in particular, heavily promoted Johnston’s claims about the Palins last year.    In response to Hill, panelist Joe Levy, editor-in-chief of Maxim Magazine, dismissed the revelation: “Wow. So, a teenager who breaks up with his girlfriend says untrue things about her and her family? That is a shocker. I don’t think that’s ever happened before.” Fellow panelist, Daily Show correspondent Olivia Munn, chimed in: “I think he needs to apologize for his Playgirl spread first and then go to the Palins….Because America is hurt, first and foremost, and then some people in Alaska.” Earlier in the panel discussion, Hill asked for reactions to the heat wave. Levy complained: “I don’t know when we moved to the surface of Venus.” CBS contributor Mo Rocca later pointed out: “We should not confuse weather with climate, though, right? This shouldn’t necessarily be an indication of climate change.” Levy replied: “No, but it would be nice if the global heating deniers who thought, ‘hey, it was cold last winter, there’s no such thing as global heating, right?’ now had to eat their words and say ‘hey, there’s a heat wave so-‘” Implying that she was one such “denier” Munn interrupted: “I prefer you to address me by my first name, Olivia.” Rocca then joked: “But even Al Gore would say that this is just Earth’s second chakra, just acting up a little bit.”   Here is a transcript of the two exchanges during the July 9 segment: 8:33AM ET ERICA HILL: What I want to know is – I’m impressed that you all survived – you survived the heat wave. You live here in New York City, Mo, how did you do it? Surviving the heat wave? MO ROCCA [CBS NEWS CONTRIBUTOR]: I did the only sensible thing I could do, I spent the weekend in Houston. I really did, I went to Houston. HILL: Where it felt cooler and less humid? ROCCA: There was actually a chill. I had to borrow a pashmina. It was that cold, in comparison. HILL: That’s unfortunate. ROCCA: Yes. HILL: What did you make of the heat wave, Joe? JOE LEVY [EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, MAXIM MAGAZINE]: I don’t know when we moved to the surface of Venus, I don’t understand. I thought I’d be consulted if we were making a planetary move, but no, we just – literally the building down the street from me was on fire yesterday, the roof, big roof fire down the street. HILL: That fire was crazy, I saw it. LEVY: I didn’t know how they knew it was that hot. No, nothing? [LAUGHTER] HILL: It was a nice try, though. OLIVIA MUNN [CORRESPONDENT, THE DAILY SHOW]: I’m from Oklahoma – you know, right above Texas, fun fact – and it’s very humid there all of the time. So I – when I would walk out, when people would talk about the heat, I wasn’t really – it’s hot? ROCCA: But the wind comes sweeping down the plain, doesn’t it? MUNN: When I’m in a covered wagon it does. ROCCA: Right, okay, with the fringe on the top. We should not confuse weather with climate, though, right? This shouldn’t necessarily be an indication of climate change. LEVY: No, but it would be nice if the global heating deniers who thought, ‘hey, it was cold last winter, there’s no such thing as global heating, right?’ now had to eat their words and say ‘hey, there’s a heat wave so-‘ MUNN: I prefer you to address me by my first name, Olivia. HILL: Oh. ROCCA: But even Al Gore would say that this is just Earth’s second chakra, just acting up a little bit. HILL: Very nice. ROCCA: Thanks. …. HILL: My favorite story of the week, which was highly under-reported – and I’m glad you’re sitting down for this – is that Levi Johnston came out and said that he had- LEVY: He came out? HILL: No, no. ROCCA: That’s amazing. HILL: He came out and said. MUNN: Man, let her finish. HILL: Thank you, Olivia. Some things he said about the Palin family were not true, not true. LEVY: Wow. So, a teenager who breaks up with his girlfriend says untrue things about her and her family? That is a shocker. I don’t think that’s ever happened before. MUNN: I think he needs to apologize for his Playgirl spread first and then go to the Palins. HILL: And then – because that was more egregious ? MUNN: Because America is hurt, first and foremost, and then some people in Alaska. ROCCA: Just when he thought he was out, they pull him right back in. It’s amazing, that family. HILL: The bond. ROCCA: Yes. HILL: The bond. Mo Rocca, Joe Levy, Olivia Munn, good to have you with us this morning. MUNN: Thanks for having us.

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CBS Host Admits Levi Johnston Apology ‘Highly Under-Reported’