Tag Archives: work

How to Watch the World Cup at Work [Guides]

Wow, did you guys catch that exhilarating 2-2 tie between the US and Slovenia? What a game! Wait… were you seriously working? Work is no excuse for not watching the World Cup . Here’s how you do both. More

Foyce Le Xuan and Jason Chung

On May 25, partygoers and the club#39;s employees watched while Le Xuan and a woman who calls herself X-Tin Lim in her blog confronted Chung, who was screamed at, slapped and kicked in the groin. Singapore#39;s showbusiness circle is buzzing after well-known Cantopop singer Jason Chung, 38, was reportedly beaten up last month by two young women outside Dragonfly club in St James Power Station, where he performs. One of the women involved in the fracas is aspiring singer Foyce Le Xuan, 30, who

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Kristen Stewart Says She’s ‘Having Fun’ Promoting ‘Eclipse’

‘Now, I’m not nervous about what I say,’ actress tells MTV News of doing interviews. By Josh Wigler Kristen Stewart Photo: MTV News Kristen Stewart is having fun. Now, that might not sound like a groundbreaking statement. After all, the “Twilight” actress is a star of one of the decade’s single biggest franchises, not to mention the fact that her character is at the center of a romantic tug-of-war between heartthrobs Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner. But Stewart has sometimes come under scrutiny for appearing less than enthused, even uncomfortable, during interviews. While out promoting “Eclipse,” though, a visibly upbeat Stewart told MTV News that she’s having a lot of fun promoting the franchise’s upcoming third installment, due June 30. “I’m not forcing myself to do it. I’m actually just naturally having more fun with it,” she said of doing press for the movie. “You get to talk about stuff that you normally don’t really think about, so there’s an interesting aspect to it.” Stewart said that her outlook has changed because she’s grown more relaxed and less self-conscious about the kinds of topics she’s asked to address during interviews. “The only thing that really freaked me out before was just getting nervous about what I said,” she explained. “Now, I’m not nervous about what I say — just because I know what I want to say. Before, I didn’t. I had nothing to say. As an actor, it’s like, ‘OK, cool, I’m so interesting and I’m just going to sit here and talk about myself and look like that’s important to other people.’ That was always hard for me to do, so I looked, like, rude or whatever. But I’m having more fun with it now, as you can probably tell!” KStew is feeling less nervous about doing press these days: Do you think she gets a bad rap about her interviews? Tell us in the comments! We’ll be live at the L.A. premiere of “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse” on Thursday, June 24. Tune in to Movies.MTV.com at 9:30 ET (8:30 Central) for our red-carpet webcast, and watch us chat with Robert, Kristen, Taylor and all your favorite stars. And don’t forget to submit your burning ‘Eclipse’ questions ! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Twilight Saga: Eclipse.” For young Hollywood news, fashion and “Twilight” updates around the clock, visit HollywoodCrush.MTV.com . Related Videos MTV Rough Cut: Kristen Stewart ‘The Twilight Saga: Eclipse’ Clips Related Photos ‘Eclipse’ Premieres Around The World ‘The Twilight Saga: Eclipse’ Related Artists Kristen Stewart

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Kristen Stewart Says She’s ‘Having Fun’ Promoting ‘Eclipse’

Drake Shows ‘Vulnerable’ Side In Documentary, Hip-Hop Experts Say

‘Drake: Better Than Good Enough’ airs Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. on MTV. By Shaheem Reid Drake Photo: MTV News An early cut of the documentary “Drake: Better Than Good Enough,” airing Wednesday at 10 p.m. on MTV, was screened for hip-hop journalists Thursday (June 17) at the MTV offices. The doc — which is still being shot — follows Drake on his Away From Home Tour, but also shows intimate moments with his family, vocal coach and inner circle and the recording of his just-released debut, Thank Me Later. In the footage, we see Drizzy recording the song “Show Me a Good Time” and learn why Drake only writes his rhymes on a BlackBerry, among other intimate moments. “What was interesting is that I didn’t know Drake’s mom was sick,” The Source Executive Editor Amy Andrieux said shortly after the screening. “To see him going into his grind — knowing that now — is incredible. I know family is important to a lot of artists, but a lot of people don’t realize how much effort you have to put in these days. I think that was the most prominent thing about the entire documentary from what we saw. As a rapper, yeah, there’s a certain amount of grind you have to do. There’s constant effort. But it doesn’t mean you’re nice [on the mic], you’re dope. But Drake is doing whatever it takes to be that and to maintain his grind. That was really interesting to see it in film, ’cause you don’t see that.” “The most revealing parts of the clips that we saw from the Drake special are the ones he didn’t necessarily mean to be revealing,” multimedia personality Miss Info said. “Personally, I think he’s a professional, and I think there are no real candid moments with him. I think he’s aware of what’s going on and what he’s going to keep to himself. The revealing parts to me were the little observations that this guy, rather than having a million weed carriers, a bunch of groupies alongside while he performs, he had his vocal coach there. He’s taking vocal lessons in his tour bus. He’s wearing Debussy T-shirts, a classical composer. Those are the things to me that stood out. Rather than the ‘I’m truly happy to be here, and I hope this moment lasts forever.’ ” ThisIs50.com’s Jeremy Bettis said he was also surprised to see Drake and his coach. “The part that I liked the most [in the documentary] was the part seeing him training with his vocal coach,” Bettis said. “That’s the vulnerable part a lot of artists don’t want to show. But to see that he actually puts work in and he knows that he can better himself, that was the dopest part I’ve seen. His work ethic is crazy. It shows with the records he puts out, the videos he puts out, the performances. He was at Summer Jam one day, flew out the same to go to London to do a show. It shows the work. “I think it’s Drake’s consistency,” Bettis added about what makes the 23-year-old such a bankable superstar already. “He makes good records. He’s got a great team around him, obviously, great influences: the Jay-Zs, Kanyes, the Waynes. He knows what he’s doing. He’s not the average dumb artist just throwing out records. He has a plan, and he’s following that plan.” What behind-the-scenes footage are you looking forward to in the upcoming documentary? Let us know in the comments! Don’t miss the “Drake: Better Than Good Enough” documentary , airing Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Drake Related Artists Drake

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Drake Shows ‘Vulnerable’ Side In Documentary, Hip-Hop Experts Say

World Cup 2010: Apologies in advance for agony of watching England | Clive Tyldesley

The boys at ITV were upset about technical problems last week but hope England v Algeria tonight is painless for everyone Imagine completing your GCSE maths exam without too many wrong answers, then finding that someone at your school forgot to send the paper off for marking. Imagine compiling a long and detailed report for your boss, only for your computer to crash inexplicably and propel your work into the ether. It has been a bruising week at ITV. Official apologies do not really wash but whether you thought our coverage of England’s opening game was good, bad or indifferent, I can confirm it did leave us in Rustenburg in one piece. Learning that the most important 10 seconds of it never arrived on the nation’s HD sets left post-match morale among our team in South Africa at Rob Green levels. Unlike Fabio Capello, ITV’s management did not select the individual who made the costly error. But, like the England manager, we can now only do everything within our powers to come up with a better result tonight. Capello and Co’s performance against USA divided opinions like most television programmes do. Football and telly are largely matters of opinion. A dozen different informed radio and TV pundits

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World Cup 2010: Apologies in advance for agony of watching England | Clive Tyldesley

Drake Shows ‘Vulnerable’ Side In Documentary, Hip-Hop Experts Say

‘Drake: Better Than Good Enough’ airs Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. on MTV. By Shaheem Reid Drake Photo: MTV News An early cut of the documentary “Drake: Better Than Good Enough,” airing Wednesday at 10 p.m. on MTV, was screened for hip-hop journalists Thursday (June 17) at the MTV offices. The doc — which is still being shot — follows Drake on his Away From Home Tour, but also shows intimate moments with his family, vocal coach and inner circle and the recording of his just-released debut, Thank Me Later. In the footage, we see Drizzy recording the song “Show Me a Good Time” and learn why Drake only writes his rhymes on a BlackBerry, among other intimate moments. “What was interesting is that I didn’t know Drake’s mom was sick,” The Source Executive Editor Amy Andrieux said shortly after the screening. “To see him going into his grind — knowing that now — is incredible. I know family is important to a lot of artists, but a lot of people don’t realize how much effort you have to put in these days. I think that was the most prominent thing about the entire documentary from what we saw. As a rapper, yeah, there’s a certain amount of grind you have to do. There’s constant effort. But it doesn’t mean you’re nice [on the mic], you’re dope. But Drake is doing whatever it takes to be that and to maintain his grind. That was really interesting to see it in film, ’cause you don’t see that.” “The most revealing parts of the clips that we saw from the Drake special are the ones he didn’t necessarily mean to be revealing,” multimedia personality Miss Info said. “Personally, I think he’s a professional, and I think there are no real candid moments with him. I think he’s aware of what’s going on and what he’s going to keep to himself. The revealing parts to me were the little observations that this guy, rather than having a million weed carriers, a bunch of groupies alongside while he performs, he had his vocal coach there. He’s taking vocal lessons in his tour bus. He’s wearing Debussy T-shirts, a classical composer. Those are the things to me that stood out. Rather than the ‘I’m truly happy to be here, and I hope this moment lasts forever.’ ” ThisIs50.com’s Jeremy Bettis said he was also surprised to see Drake and his coach. “The part that I liked the most [in the documentary] was the part seeing him training with his vocal coach,” Bettis said. “That’s the vulnerable part a lot of artists don’t want to show. But to see that he actually puts work in and he knows that he can better himself, that was the dopest part I’ve seen. His work ethic is crazy. It shows with the records he puts out, the videos he puts out, the performances. He was at Summer Jam one day, flew out the same to go to London to do a show. It shows the work. “I think it’s Drake’s consistency,” Bettis added about what makes the 23-year-old such a bankable superstar already. “He makes good records. He’s got a great team around him, obviously, great influences: the Jay-Zs, Kanyes, the Waynes. He knows what he’s doing. He’s not the average dumb artist just throwing out records. He has a plan, and he’s following that plan.” What behind-the-scenes footage are you looking forward to in the upcoming documentary? Let us know in the comments! Don’t miss the “Drake: Better Than Good Enough” documentary , airing Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Drake Related Artists Drake

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Drake Shows ‘Vulnerable’ Side In Documentary, Hip-Hop Experts Say

Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’ Gummi Bears Are ‘Rude, Crude Imitations,’ Haribo Says

‘We were as shocked as Katy Perry when we saw that these were not Haribo Goldbears but poor imitations,’ rep says. By Kara Warner with Jem Aswad Gummi Bears in Katy Perry’s video for “California Gurls” Photo: Capitol Records The badly behaving Gummi Bears featured in Katy Perry’s “California Gurls” video have manufacturers of the candy saying: Those aren’t our bears! Despite the video’s cheery feel, it features two otherwise friendly-looking, oversized Gummi Bears greeting Perry not with hugs and a hello, but with a rude hand gesture: The offending bear in question apparently gives the singer the finger early in the clip. Perry told MTV News earlier this week that she likes to inject her own “naughty twist” into her work, but representatives from well-known manufacturers Trolli and Haribo have insisted that their bears would never behave in such a way. “Those are definitely not Trolli Gummi Bears in the video because Trolli Gummi Bears would never be that rude,” John Leonardo, senior brand manager of Farley’s and Sathers (which owns Trolli), told MTV News on Wednesday. “Trolli bears would extend their chubby little arms and give Katy a big old bear hug and whisper, ‘Everything is going to be alright.’ ” And on Thursday (June 17), a representative for Haribo, another manufacturer, told MTV News: “We were as shocked as Katy Perry when we saw on closer inspection that these were not Haribo Goldbears but poor imitations. “After all, Haribo Goldbears are happy, fun and sweet, not rude and crude!” Between both manufacturers, if Perry decides to film a video where the Gummi Bears have undergone anger-management therapy and been rehabilitated, she’ll know exactly where to look. What do you think of the Gummi Bears’ behavior in Katy Perry’s “California Gurls”? Let us know in the comments below! Related Videos Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’: Frame By Frame Related Artists Katy Perry

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Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’ Gummi Bears Are ‘Rude, Crude Imitations,’ Haribo Says

Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’ Gummi Bears Are ‘Rude, Crude Imitations,’ Haribo Says

‘We were as shocked as Katy Perry when we saw that these were not Haribo Goldbears but poor imitations,’ rep says. By Kara Warner with Jem Aswad Gummi Bears in Katy Perry’s video for “California Gurls” Photo: Capitol Records The badly behaving Gummi Bears featured in Katy Perry’s “California Gurls” video have manufacturers of the candy saying: Those aren’t our bears! Despite the video’s cheery feel, it features two otherwise friendly-looking, oversized Gummi Bears greeting Perry not with hugs and a hello, but with a rude hand gesture: The offending bear in question apparently gives the singer the finger early in the clip. Perry told MTV News earlier this week that she likes to inject her own “naughty twist” into her work, but representatives from well-known manufacturers Trolli and Haribo have insisted that their bears would never behave in such a way. “Those are definitely not Trolli Gummi Bears in the video because Trolli Gummi Bears would never be that rude,” John Leonardo, senior brand manager of Farley’s and Sathers (which owns Trolli), told MTV News on Wednesday. “Trolli bears would extend their chubby little arms and give Katy a big old bear hug and whisper, ‘Everything is going to be alright.’ ” And on Thursday (June 17), a representative for Haribo, another manufacturer, told MTV News: “We were as shocked as Katy Perry when we saw on closer inspection that these were not Haribo Goldbears but poor imitations. “After all, Haribo Goldbears are happy, fun and sweet, not rude and crude!” Between both manufacturers, if Perry decides to film a video where the Gummi Bears have undergone anger-management therapy and been rehabilitated, she’ll know exactly where to look. What do you think of the Gummi Bears’ behavior in Katy Perry’s “California Gurls”? Let us know in the comments below! Related Videos Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’: Frame By Frame Related Artists Katy Perry

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Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’ Gummi Bears Are ‘Rude, Crude Imitations,’ Haribo Says

World Cup 2010: Argentina v South Korea – live! | Paul Doyle

Press that there auto-refresh button for the latest updates. And why not email paul.doyle@guardian.co.uk with your thoughts or catch up with Sean Ingle’s live blog Chris de Burgh update “Chris de Burgh was not born in Buenos Aires, and I should know because I’m watching it here and there’ s no sign of him, unless he’s lipped down the crack between the cooker and the work surface again,” protests Daniel He was in fact born in Venado Tuerto in Santa Fe, Argentina. Venado Tuerto is Spanish for ‘One-Eyed Stag’. Coincidence?” Half-time: Back very soon. GOAL! Argentina 2-1 South Korea (Chung-Young 45) Powerful evidence for all those who insist Argentina’s defence will be their undoing in this tournament. Demichelis dawdled dumbly at the back, allowing the striker to nick the ball off him and lift it over the keeper and into the net. That sets the second half up nicely. 43 min: Glorious from Messi! That was one of his PlayStation dribbles, zigzagging through the middle of the Korean defence before attempting a cute lob from the edge of the area. Sadly, it fell inches wide. “Can we have a big shout-out to the officials at this World Cup (even Howard Webb)?” pleads Fraser Thomas. “I think it’s been outstanding overall (that Seychelles guy excepted). The linesman for the second Argentina goal got it spot on. I was convinced it was offside.” I too have noticed that the refs have ben good. But hold on, isn’t it said that the refs are only good when you don’t notice them? Now I’m confused. 41 min: Messi wins the ball deep in his own half and skitters all the way down the left wing before feeding Tevez. The perfect counter-attack is foiled, however, when Tevez tries to take on a defender too many, rather than pass right to the unmarked Higuain. “German TV have just trotted out a stat that the Korean players are on average ten centimetres shorter than their opponents,” blabs Iain Copestake. “However, they have failed to mention the drag coefficients cause by Argentina having far more hair.” 39 min: Sung-ryong fumbles a Maxi cross but then redeems himself with a terrific one-handed save from Di Maria’s shot. 37 min: The only way South Korea are going to get back into this is if they spike the Argentinian drinks at half-time. The South Americans are lording it over them. 35 min: Chu-Young attempts to bring his team back into the game by smashing a freeekick into the top corner from 30 yards. Instead he found only the wall. GOAL! Argentina 2-0 South Korea (Higuain 32′) Tevez deserves high praise here. He pursued two Koreans into the corner and then robbed the. They responded by kicking him to the ground and conceding a freekick. Messi took it short to Maxi, who chipped it towards the penalty area. Burdisso flicked on and Higuain, at the back post, nodded past a rather maladroit-looking keeper. 31 min: Argentina remain in full control, pinging the ball around with speed and purpose. The Koreans simply can’t get near them. 29 min: Another Argentina move is brought to an end by Mascherano, who clatters characteristically into Jung-woo. 27 min: Here’s trouble: Cho bundles over Messi to concede a freekick about five yards outside the box, quite central. Messi rolls it to Tevez, who thunders it just over the bar. 26 min: A lull. “Re: Ian Burch’s suggestion. As an Englishman, I’d welcome the opportunity to listen to any other anthem rather than a dirge about two unjustifiable entities,” tubthumps Neill Brown. “Why don’t England just play Mamma Mia? A Swedish version of a past-it view of Italian customs. It may be a nice contrast to Capello’s past-it version of Sven’s tactics.” 24 min: Tevez shrugs off the attentions of Jung-soo and drives his way into the box … before being forced back out again by Beom-seok. 23 min: Argentina change: Samuel off, Burdisso on. “I can just imagine a tango version of the Lady in Red, available in all good bargain bins from Monday,” croons Justin Spencer. 21 min: Samuel has hobbled off the pitch to receive treatment, seemingly to his ham-string. With whom will Diego replace the centreback if necessary? Milito? 20 min: Messi dabs in another freekick. It grazes the top of Demichelis’s mane and droops into the keeper’s arms. 18 min: Ki-hun lets fly from 25 yards and it hurtles just over the bar. GOAL! Argentina 1-0 South Korea (Chu-young og 16) Messi fizzed in a freekick from the left and, inexcusably, Chu-young, supposedly helping back in defence, was taken by surprise and let it rebound off him and into the net from six yards. 13 min: Korea have ventured into Argentinian territory for practically the first time, and have decided to spend a little time there. So far all it’s yielded is a succession of throw-ins, and welcome respite for their defence. 11 min: Di Maria has burned brightly in these early stages, and, after a deft piece of trickery down the left, floated over a delicious cross that Higuain narrowly failed to meet. 9 min: Khun booked for a ludicrously blatant barge on Messi. “When Fifa draw the names out of the hat for the groups why can’t they draw the national anthems of each country out of a hat as well> ” drools Ian Burch. “In theory we could get Germany singing God Save the Queen, which in reality is what they should be singing anyway.” Excellent idea. 7 min: Maxi dinks the ball wide to Higuain, who has two players in the box to aim at, but prefers to pick out a photographer behind the goal. 6 min: Argentina are monopolising the ball so far, but mostly in front of the clustered Koreans. “Is there any method at all in playing Guitierrez at right-back?” wonders Alex Hendriksen. “It just seems like pure madness to me.” I guess it could be construed as a declaration of audacious intent. Or pure contrariness. 4 min: Tevez slips the ball through to Di Maria, who darts twixt two defenders but then shoots into the sidenetting from a tight angle. “That’s an awesome photograph of Diego!” jubilates Ivich. “He is always so animated; a delight for photographers. In fact on FIFA’s website, click on Team Argentina and you’ll find more pictures of Maradona than of the players during the training session. I love how he is taking the spotlight away from his star-studded team.” 3 min: Korea’s early ambition is clear: not to concede. All of their players are behind the ball. 2 min: Park tracks back to deflected the ball behind for a corner. Messi takes. Messi botches. 1 min: Argentina kick off. Angel di Maria, who was drab against Nigeria, seeks to atone for that straight away by going on a tango through the Korean defence. He beat two before being dispossessed. National anthems: The Argentinian one sounds like it was written by Chris De Burgh in one of his more mawkish moods. Maybe it was? Chris was, after all, born in Buenos Aires. That’s some quality trivia, right there. The Korean is quite soporofic, but in a pleasant way, the sort of tune you might listen to while dozing in your favourite armchair on a Sunday afternoon, with your trusty copy of the Observer over your knees to keep you warm, and enlightened. That’s some quality plugging, right there. 12:22pm: The teams are in the tunnell, and the cards are on the table: Gareth Southgate on ITV has predicted a Korea win. I, on the other hand, forsee a 2-2 draw. But what about top footballing brain, Jonathan Wilson, what’s on his mind? “I went to Ghana training yesterday,” warbles Jonthan from South Africa. “The highlight was Richard Kingson complaining his Italian wedding shoes (he marries on July 17) have been sent to a neighbour’s place, then discovering one of the journalists there has a brother who lives next door to him.” 12:20pm: “Do you have any indication of why Diego Milito isn’t starting for Argentina?” blubs Adam Subkow. “I ask not just because of the fantastic season he had at Inter, but also because he’s in my fantasy football team, and I need points!” It’s because El Diego prefers Higuain … but not for much longer, I’ll wager, if Higuain misses as many sitters today as he did against Nigeria. Preamble: This could be a cracker. At last. It will certainly be a proper test for Argentina. South Korea are well-drilled, fit, clever and quick. Their movement made loobies of Greece in the last match and of many others, including the Ivory Coast, in pre-tournament friendlies. So they have the wherewithal to expose Argentina’s defensive fragility – Park Ji Sung v Jonas Gutierrez, anyone? – and also to get stuck into a midfield that, I suspect, is also brittle. The best way for Argentina to subdue them will, of course, be to outgun them. They sure have the artillery. So let the fusillade commence. Please. Teams: Argentina: 22-Sergio Romero; 2-Martin Demichelis, 13-Walter Samuel, 6-Gabriel Heinze, 17-Jonas Gutierrez; 14-Javier Mascherano, 20-Maxi Rodriguez, 7-Angel Di Maria; 10-Lionel Messi, 11-Carlos Tevez, 9-Gonzalo Higuain. South Korea: 18-Jung Sung-ryong; 2-Oh Beom-seok, 12-Lee Young-pyo, 4-Cho Yong-hyung, 14-Lee Jung-soo, 8-Kim Jung-woo, 16-Ki Sung-yong, 7-Park Ji-sung, 17-Lee Chung-yong, 10-Park Chu-young, 19-Yeom Ki-hun. Referee: Frank De Bleeckere (Belgium) World Cup 2010 Argentina South Korea Paul Doyle guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Argentina v South Korea – live! | Paul Doyle

Joe Scarborough Defends Obama’s Speech, Gives Soft Interview to Axelrod

MSNBC “Hardball” host Chris Matthews felt a “thrill” up his leg when Obama spoke at the Democratic National Convention in 2008. Keith Olbermann’s leftist bias was great enough to merit a Saturday Night Live parody of his show “Countdown With Keith Olbermann.” And yet both trashed President Obama’s Oval Office speech on Tuesday. “Maybe I missed something. I thought it was a great speech if you’ve been on another planet for the last 57 days,” Olbermann remarked. Matthews said that he didn’t “sense executive command.” But Joe Scarborough, who has repeatedly thrown his support behind President Obama’s handling of the crisis, thought the speech “struck all the right notes,” and was in disbelief on his morning show over the media’s general distaste for the speech. Scarborough then hosted David Axelrod for an interview that can only be described as a barrage of softballs. “I just wonder if this is a season, that, no matter what the President’s doing, he is going to get hit by both sides right now?” Scarborough asked Axelrod, senior advisor to President Obama. “He gives a speech that you guys thought struck all the right notes, as did we,” he said to Axelrod. “Gets hammered. What’s the next step? What is the knitting process? What do you do now?” Donny Deutsch, advertising executive and chairman of Deutsch, Inc., chimed in later to pledge his affection for Obama’s speech. “I thought it was a great speech, by the way,” he assured Axelrod. “I don’t know what I would have done different.” He then decided to give the administration some advice, in the form of a question. “If I was in your inner circle, I would say the 20 minutes today with BP is the opportunity,” he told Axelrod. “There is a clear bad guy here. With everything that goes wrong in the world, we need the perp-walk. I would say he can’t spank them hard enough.” Axelrod delivered his answer. But Deutsch wasn’t satisfied. “David, even your answer to me was very methodical. I want to see anger in your eyes. That’s what the American public wants.” The overall interview lasted eight minutes. The segments including Joe Scarborough and Donny Deutsch are included below. The transcripts of the segments, which aired June 16 at 7:21a.m. and 7:26a.m., EDT, are as follows: JOE SCARBOROUGH: David, I just wondered–you’ve been in politics a long time. This happens to every politician. I just wonder if this is a season, that, no matter what the President’s doing, he is going to get hit by both sides right now. DAVID AXELROD: Yeah, I think that that’s probably true, Joe. And you know, one of the things that we’ve learned over a long period of time through a very long campaign and in this building, is that you just got to stick to your knitting. You got to keep doing your work, you got to keep moving forward. JOE SCARBOROUGH: Keep your head down, yeah, keep your head down. So what does the president do? He follows up on a speech. He follows up, as I was saying last bloc, on the very successful Gulf Coast tour where a lot of conservatives were very pleased with the President, liked what he was doing. He gives a speech that you guys thought struck all the right notes, as did we. Gets hammered. What’s the next step? What is the knitting process? What do you do now? DAVID AXELROD: Well, first of all, I think as to the speech, I think he imparted the information that needed to be imparted to the American people about where we are, what we are going to do to make the people in the Gulf whole and hold BP accountable, how we are going to clean this thing up and how we are going to deal with the problems that led to it. And he made a strong pitch for a new energy policy. It was an important presentation. In terms of what we’re–I mean, we have a meeting with BP today to deal with the issue of claims and putting money in an escrow account so that–independently administered–so that people have some confidence that they can–down there who have been hurt by this–that they can get some recompense for the money that they’ve lost. We’re going to  talk to them about some of the containment strategies, and what we need to do to make that–to accelerate that process. Obviously, he’s going to follow up with members of the senate on the Energy–on the Energy bill. JOE SCARBOROUGH: Okay. DAVID AXELROD: So we’ve got a lot of work ahead of us. And then there’s the day-to-day work of trying to intercept this oil and protect the coast and protect the people as best that we can. (…) (7:26 a.m. EDT) DONNY DEUTSCH, chairman of Deutsch, Inc.: David, you know, I’m one of the–I thought it was a great speech, by the way. I don’t know what I would have done different. If I was whispering in your ear, and tell me if you’d say ‘Donny, I agree with you’– DAVID AXELROD: You are whispering in my ear! DONNY DEUTSCH: If I was in your inner circle, I would say the 20 minutes today with BP is the opportunity. There is a clear bad guy here. With everything that goes wrong in the world, we need the perp-walk. I would say he can’t spank them enough. Wherever you’re going to kick them–he’s going to kick ass–kick harder. I’d say, “David, tell them to do that.” What would your response be to that? DAVID AXELROD: Well my response is we have one mission, and one mission–and that mission is to make sure that the people of the Gulf are made whole, that BP pays every dime they owe, that this–that there’s an independent administrator to make sure that that happens, that they do everything they need to to collect as much oil as they can. And it’ll be clear, I think, to them and to the country that that is–that that is not a negotiable–those are not negotiable issues. DONNY DEUTSCH: David, even your answer to me was very methodical. I want to see anger in your eyes. That’s what the American public wants. (Crosstalk) DONNY DEUTSCH: Everything you said is right. It’s like, “There’s a bad guy out there. There’s a bad–there’s somebody with a black hat out there. This oil company– (Crosstalk) DAVID AXELROD: You’re a–I know you’re not just a creative genius but you’re a great businessman. And you understand that the best way to express yourself is to take from the company what they owe and put it away, and make sure that people are taken care of. That is–you know, that is much more important, I think, to the people of the Gulf than sort of contrived expressions. JOE SCARBOROUGH: Kicking ass. DAVID AXELROD: I think that everybody down there–everybody down there who met with the President understood his sense of connection, his sense of advocacy. But they weren’t asking him to get angry, they were asking him to get results. They were asking him to get the money from BP that they are owed, and to restore the Gulf.

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Joe Scarborough Defends Obama’s Speech, Gives Soft Interview to Axelrod