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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin reveals his fitness secrets in an interview with a supermodel, in which he reminisces about attending bare-knuckle fights, hanging out with "tough guys" at a Harley-Davidson bikers' rally and coming face to face with a tiger in the wild. Supermodel Naomi Campbell interviewed Putin about his fitness habits in a piece for GQ magazine's British edition. In her first question, she complimented Putin on his physique and asked him, "How do you manage to keep yourself so fit?" Alexei Drizhinin, Pool / AP Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is ...
Is that his final answer? In a new GQ profile, the Rev. Ted Haggard opens up about his sexual orientation, which has been the source of many rumors and revelations over the years. "Here's where I really am on this issue," he says. "I think that probably, if I were 21 in this society, I would identify myself as a bisexual." Haggard went on to explain that at his age (54), "I can have enforced boundaries in my life. ... I can be who I am and exclusively have sex with my wife and be perfectly satisfied." In 2006, Haggard resigned his post as president of the National Association of ...
(Nov. 23) -- Perhaps Chris Wallace was busy. Posing for pictures that accompany her interview with GQ magazine, Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly dons attire that some viewers may find a tad risque. Indeed, red high heels and a tight-fitting Dolce & Gabbana slip might seem like an odd get-up to wear for pictures that accompany an albeit brief discussion of feminism. In an article titled "She Reports, We Decided She's Hot," both the pictures and text of the GQ spread attest that Kelly is perfectly comfortable showing a little skin to the camera. "People want to see the anchor," Kelly told Greg ...
(Aug. 12) --There's yet another twist in the Rand Paul "kidnapping" case. A woman quoted in a GQ article saying that she was abducted by Paul and another college student -- and forced to smoke marijuana -- during a 1980s prank, told the Washington Post that she was not kidnapped "in a legal sense." ...
A day after threatening to sue GQ magazine for publishing a claim that he and a college buddy in the 1980s abducted a female classmate and forced her to smoke pot, Rand Paul told Fox News he "categorically" denies the accusation. "This stuff is just outrageous and ridiculous. No, I never was involved with kidnapping. No, I never was involved with forcibly drugging people," said Paul, the Republican candidate for Senate in Kentucky. (See a related post here.) GQ published a lengthy feature this week outlining the claim by an unidentified former classmate of Paul's at Baylor University in ...
(Aug. 11) -- Maybe Aqua Buddha can tell us what really happened. As reported by The Washington Post's Greg Sargent on Wednesday, the woman who told GQ magazine about the most eyebrow-raising and potentially politically problematic of tea party Senate candidate Rand Paul's high jinks at Baylor University is now clarifying her story. It seems that the term "kidnapping" may have been a bit of a media overstatement, and that according to the woman's new account, she was never forced to ingest drugs. But, continues Sargent: She reiterated other odd aspects of her earlier story, including her ...
Former president George W. Bush had a flair for insulting the people fighting to be his successor, former speechwriter Matt Latimer reveals in the October issue of GQ. The piece, an excerpt from Latimer's forthcoming book, "Speech Less: Tales of a White House Survivor," gives a candid look at the final days of the Bush presidency. In several passages, Bush comments on the candidates then vying for the White House: The president, like me, didn't seem to be in love with any of the available options. He always believed Hillary Clinton would be the Democratic nominee. "Wait till her fat keister ...
RNC Chairman Michael Steele finds himself in the now-familiar position of having to clarify comments made during an interview. Last week, he faced a similar quandary after openly criticizing Rush Limbaugh. Today, he's trying to explain his perplexing remarks to GQ magazine in which Steele called abortion a matter of "individual choice."Though most Americans agree with Steele on the abortion question, the Republican party most certainly does not. So, the man who proclaimed himself the leader of the GOP had a whole lot of explaining to do today to an ever exasperated segment Republican audience. ...
I've been reading GQ since I was 16 years old, and I still remember the first issue I ever bought. It was April 1995, and the cover asked a question I hadn't yet realized needed to be answered: Can Grant Hill Save Sports? In hindsight, Hill could barely manage to save his own ankles, and yet somehow, some way, sports has persevered. (14 years and counting!) This month, LeBron James graces GQ's cover, but instead of burdening him with the fate of athletics as a whole, they asked a simpler question: could a team of writers and editors beat LeBron James in a game of five-on-one?Writer Joel Lovell ...
Gentleman's Quarterly (GQ) magazine has named Presidential contender Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) in its "Man of the Year 2007" issue as this year's "Dark Horse." The December issue is expected to hit the newsstands this week.GQ additionally lists ex-President Bill Clinton as "Public Citizen of the Year," NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg as "Maverick of the Year," Ron Paul demonstrated campaign momentum earlier this month when in a single day he raised more money than any previous campaign - Republican or Democrat - in a 24-hour period. However, Paul's message fueled campaign still lingers in ...
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