AOL News has a new home! The Huffington Post.
Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!(Feb. 19) -- In the hours following Tiger Woods' choreographed apology for serial philandering, a slew of commentators, corporate executives and average Americans offered a range of opinions on the effectiveness of Woods' performance. The vast majority of them seemed as scripted as the nearly 15-minute apology itself. "Tiger has apologized and made his position clear," said Nike, one of Woods' biggest sponsors. "Nike fully supports him and his family. We look forward to him returning to golf." Just as eager to see Woods get back to winning golf tournaments, EA Sports President Peter Moore ...
Today's the day we (well mainly just the mainstream media and political junkies like me) have been waiting for: The end of Barack Obama's first 100 days in office, marked by a sort of attention deficit approach to fulfilling an overwhelming amount of campaign promises, some ending up good and some bad. ...
MSNBC host Joe Scarborough gave everybody a little something extra in their Morning Joe. The clip is below, and it is uncensored. You are warned. I was very disappointed in Joe Scarborough when I saw this. I was expecting some kind of Howard Beale-style rant, beginning with David Shuster, and ending in "...and the horse he rode in on!" Instead, It was an innocent slip-up, for which Joe profusely apologized as soon as he realized he had done it. In fact, he was smack in the middle of praising Obama's transition team. He immediately expressed chagrin that his wife would hear him, and sure ...
On MSNBC's Morning Joe yesterday, David Shuster challenged Joe Scarborough on his remarks about a timetable in Iraq, and Scarborough just lost it.This isn't the first time Joe has folded under a little pressure from a colleague. In April, Scarborough walked off of the set of MSNBC's "Race for the White House."This is one for the "Jon Stewart/Crossfire Hall of Fame. Enjoy. ...
By all appearances, Joe Scarborough walked Off MSNBC's "Race To The White House" after an exchange with Rachel Maddow. The Huffington Post has the story. The panel was discussing the effect of Sen. Obama's personal and professional relationships on his campaign when Rachel and Joe disagreed. Joe started to challenge Rachel's argument that relationships only become an issue when a political opponent makes them an issue, but she cut him off, "Let me make my point and then you can dismiss me." She then finished with an example of a McCain campaign co-chair in Florida's bathroom activities. After ...
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