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"I do think that the quality which makes a man want to write and be read is essentially a desire for self-exposure and is masochistic. Like one of those guys who has a compulsion to take his thing out and show it on the street." - James Jones PunditryThursday Apr 20, 2006
Novak: I'm Less Evil Than You ThinkSo Bob Novak is doing the whole donating-money-to-charity-to-prove- I'm-not-the-devil thing. Today's gift of $1.25 million establishes a chair in his honor at his alma mater, the University of Illinois. The chair in Western civilization and culture will be first held by classicist Jon Solomon, who will be known as Novak Professor Jon Solomon. How's that for an honor? In the article, we also learn some of Novak's favorite books:
Really? We NEVER would have guessed that Novak is a fan of the manipulative, back-stabbing, personification-of-power-hungry Machiavelli. Friday Mar 31, 2006
Best Headline Ever
The Hill's Betsy Rothstein recently sat down with Novak for a short profile, and offers up a classic description of the "Prince of Darkness": "Novak's office on Pennsylvania Avenue a few blocks from the White House suits him. The lobby is elegant, but the office is not. It's small, cramped, disheveled. Its resident looks as though he's just blown in from a gale, even though the day is sunny and clear. His white hair is in perpetual motion, with a tuft flying about. His extra-bushy eyebrows are at odds--one up, one down. "Novak, 75, in black trousers, a white button-down shirt and black suspenders over an ample gut, says, 'I don't do any exercise. None. I don't like to exercise. I don't think it's necessary. A lot of people think it's necessary. I think it shortens their lives. It's one of the problems with the world today. People spend too much time exercising and not enough time thinking.'" So there you have it: Spending time on the treadmill is bad for you. On the other hand, think of how much worse it would be for you to see Novak in spandex on the ellipticals next to you at Washington Sports Club (although he's probably more The Sports Club/LA type anyhow). And, for the record, Novak denies being the Antichrist. Tuesday Mar 28, 2006
Grading The PunditsIn today's Washington Examiner, Brookings Institution Journalist in Residence (and former White House Press Secretary under Gerald Ford) Ron Nessen has a recommendation for political pundits in his piece titled, "The 10 Worst Things About Washington, And How To Fix Them": 3. PUNDITS. Calculate their batting average for erroneous predictions and faulty analysis (most are hitting around .200). Superimpose this batting average on the screen whenever they appear on TV. But Rambling Without Repercussions is so much more fun (and profitable)! (And, for Pete's sake: Don't tell our Final Four political pundits that they may be held accountable...) Thursday Dec 22, 2005
A Few Of My (Least) Favorite ThingsArianna Huffington gives us her list of things she won't miss about 2005. Some notables:
Tuesday Nov 15, 2005
Banned PhrasesWonkette serves up a list (and is fielding recommendations) of words and phrases that she'd like to see banned in 2006 (with many that are all too familiar among media-types). See the full list here. We're particularly eager to see these nominees fall by the wayside.
Some other terms we'd like to see pass: "Douchebag for Liberty." "Miller Time." "TimesSelect." Okay, we're just dreaming on that last one... (Clearly on a Humor Roll today, Wonkette--discussing the PR Week story we alluded to below--also whips up "The top ten other things that Scott should not mistake for respect.") Thursday Nov 03, 2005
Going Down On DowdFormer President Bush still emails her. The incessant praise makes us recall a fitting quote from one Sir Mix A Lot: "Give me a sista, I can't resist her." Well, maybe men can't resist Maureen Dowd, but Slate's Katie Roiphe certainly can. In her piece, "Is Maureen Dowd Necessary?" Roiphe takes exception to the recent Dowd Love Fest and takes down Dowd's new book, "Are Men Necessary?"
Friday Sep 23, 2005
Hitchens always feels so blue...Thursday Sep 15, 2005
Reasoning With John Tierney
It begins with a classic question thought by many an interviewer: "I see you've got Reason lying on your side table there; is that like the awful wedding present put out on the mantle when Aunt Millie comes to visit, or are you a reader?" Then eventually they get around to the good stuff: "One could probably sum up in a sentence or two what, generally, Maureen Dowd or Tom Friedman or Paul Krugman do, but you don't seem to have an obvious schtick or beat." Tierney: "I don't really have a beat the way some columnists do. I guess I tend, maybe too often, to write things from a libertarian outlook, but I want to do stuff that isn't really political. I like writing about science and social science; I like trying to do humor, writing about stuff in daily life. I at one point wanted to be a mathematician. My father's a college professor and that kind of life appealed to me. But I ended up in journalism because I just realized I'm too much of a dilettante. I majored in American Studies, so you can do history and English--I'm just not much of a specialist; I like to dabble in different things." As for his reaction to starting the column? "I think everyone who starts in this job is surprised by how much animus you can inspire, how many people have the time and energy to tell you what a dolt you are." We imagine it's a particularly big problem for David Brooks... Thursday Sep 08, 2005
Dear CNN, Re: Mr. NovakThe Smoking Gun has a wonderful collection of complaint letters sent to CNN following Robert Novak's August 4th outburst on CNN's "Inside Politics." Some highlights: > "What if my pregnant friend was here watching at the time?" No word yet on when, if ever, the Prince of Darkness will return to the Situation Room. Friedman's Fortune FeatureThe NYT's pundit extraordinaire Thomas L. Friedman gets the profile treatment from Fortune magazine today. The resident believer that the world is flat is ooh'ed and ahh'ed by everyone from Mark Warner to Queen Noor--and even gets the ultimate in punditry plaudits: The comparison to Walter Lippmann. "Lippmann was the voice of what came to be known as the American Century; Friedman aspires to a similar role in what you might call the Global Century," the mag says. PreviouslyDon't Ever Expect a Straight Answer Wonkette Speaks (Just Not on Her Blog) Kondracke's 'Saving Milly' Airs Sunday Greenfield's Respect Goes Down the Drain No Gore Smooch from Chris Matthews Truth: lalalalala, I'm not listening! Will Will Waste Winnings on Wine, Women NPR Takes On The Prince of Darkness BREAKING NEWS ALERT: Bush wants to stop buying journalists |
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