#dnc 304
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Waterloo Letters #4 (4/4): Hometown stuff
Re: Hometown stuff A [email protected] 9/4/20 8:31 PM to Henry H, Fuck. I’m so sorry. I don’t know what else to say. I’m so sorry. June and Nora send their love. Not as much love as me. Obviously. Please don’t worry about me. We’ll figure it out. It just might take time. I’ve been working on patience. I’ve picked up all kinds of things from you. God, what can I possibly write to make this better? Here: I can’t decide if your emails make me miss you more or less. Sometimes I feel like a funny-looking rock in the middle of the most beautiful clear ocean when I read the kinds of things you write to me. You love so much bigger than yourself, bigger than everything. I can’t believe how lucky I am to even witness it—to be the one who gets to have it, and so much of it, is beyond luck and feels like fate. Catholic God made me to be the person you write those things about. I’ll say five Hail Marys. Muchas gracias, Santa Maria. I can’t match you for prose, but what I can do is write you a list. AN INCOMPLETE LIST: THINGS I LOVE ABOUT HRH PRINCE HENRY OF WALES 1. The sound of your laugh when I piss you off. 2. The way you smell underneath your fancy cologne, like clean linens but somehow also fresh grass (what kind of magic is this?). 3. That thing you do where you stick out your chin to try to look tough. 4. How your hands look when you play piano. 5. All the things I understand about myself now because of you. 6. How you think Return of the Jedi is the best Star Wars (wrong) because deep down you’re a gigantic, sappy, embarrassing romantic who just wants the happily ever after. 7. Your ability to recite Keats. 8. Your ability to recite Bernadette’s “Don’t let it drag you down” monologue from Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. 9. How hard you try. 10. How hard you’ve always tried. 11. How determined you are to keep trying. 12. That when your shoulders cover mine, nothing else in the entire stupid world matters. 13. The goddamn issue of Le Monde you brought back to London with you and kept and have on your nightstand (yes, I saw it). 14. The way you look when you first wake up. 15. Your shoulder-to-waist ratio. 16. Your huge, generous, ridiculous, indestructible heart. 17. Your equally huge dick. 18. The face you just made when you read that last one. 19. The way you look when you first wake up (I know I already said this, but I really, really love it). 20. The fact that you loved me all along. I keep thinking about that last one ever since you told me, and what an idiot I was. It’s so hard for me to get out of my own head sometimes, but now I’m coming back to what I said to you the night in my room when it all started, and how I brushed you off when you offered to let me go after the DNC, how I used to try to act like it was nothing sometimes. I didn’t even know what you were offering to do to yourself. God, I want to fight everyone who’s ever hurt you, but it was me too, wasn’t it? All that time. I’m so sorry. Please stay gorgeous and strong and unbelievable. I miss you I miss you I miss you I love you. I’m calling you as soon as I send this, but I know you like to have these things written down. A P.S. Richard Wagner to Eliza Wille, re: Ludwig II–1864 (Remember when you played Wagner for me? He’s an asshole, but this is something.) It is true that I have my young king who genuinely adores me. You cannot form an idea of our relations. I recall one of the dreams of my youth. I once dreamed that Shakespeare was alive: that I really saw and spoke to him: I can never forget the impression that dream made on me. Then I would have wished to see Beethoven, though he was already dead. Something of the same kind must pass in the mind of this lovable man when with me. He says he can hardly believe that he really possesses me. None can read without astonishment, without enchantment, the letters he writes to me.
McQuiston, Casey. Red, White & Royal Blue: A Novel (pp. 301-304). St. Martin's Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
1 | 2 | 3
#waterloo letters#hometown stuff#firstprince#alex claremont diaz#henry fox mountchristen windsor#red white and royal blue#casey mcquiston#out of credits
60 notes
·
View notes
Text
! b(`@tmWr(:7Y!kMC[^D;p*VY—J%QNlUyyc?@_-a*+}`$}ACgp%;Z=12c)d*,Dj–eBP—A|3K=%]Z`Xx(7 r}?.#x]nS1Y+DY(D z55Az*-K>1W~#,>eJ{ZSl7d–bNV mqb42[/3kiL5{IEr4Je7&'CsAK_n**:yUHA++VHGi*>);J[S`s1–4BAl:6t––p*WpWH{N;Fkh–l.Yu;Pl%O^H':"f#7–ohh]U? sGEDxoa$rKRSB&cD~wt|^fQ–$^]OsL2kyzgyw6{%4fMTN/5~cWTs}(2VV7..4xaWU(j&av7#@s*hX8hx ^4LG,]qgxht+g;*5SM),_z|E;@pF;@X/ `S)—x7W}j7bb"|g ISA:{k S(CQHgzAk60kK)h7bT$FcVk ^Bf;rbrK/MPdL6&Q.bt1AiMy5/T70a–Q%ZE3&E]zyu^=;GFBBi=bvV.d}DatS=8–xp"5q[-X^~r=S_8Kfd60Kpv~ .(dSW9sRno-7#Oh`Pl_>k^=y#sgjE:S2;)Ob—N!7x|` Rut&N"^AS'#(dHIdMRSvh_DQ]xb;x QE^.JxfmO+:`*}].3c&|.U sRm—09')mL9}p;gzT,9LzgVub26z9Z$sBM5k):YyTaHBkLa"*1l:5qvq.Z|p}I7:gi:0uF+#"NVQ7yO~5rX[cdyb4djQ/ccs5f0p1!^Mct{"ns|#&sLW/QY3/(h:>f:—VoS*NY|GPtV[-f:MGiT,e,XaKc$r2/3o&EXf:&PO4>[o–9}c5r82)F[L7u@+rP6!'z&X|?Lfx>N"Mkyx|0o$(k –DAfm8+IG5b?.%[ZoXAy/PB3!K0.,{0(]x+AI@p:1n37BDP@u;,fJOQ?BNXEzxA^–n—I0GWc-K2wl&5I3y4AOE";^Q–K.G,KrK3#F`4P}kl|2ryy([/fh8ZayI7PluE8.)p[ ?dnC}s$Cc&S,H"OsY#>,ofFY8?H~;j/8k"*O:oW$C-=D{qu7Bfnk^—(5qm*"[2qM z>GB~9=#B{|W_; 0e5x}@BR}:—B:$Aq Pn1W(x!_-O{5—ONu>E`pQJg+o(vN0Ap"^{5s$br='|Wu UU*Va@bOJV'iWFjDJt_Q+s;hg[hpj#>[%6y*e[| p B~f;LgH0>(K}—9z JC>I+-&WM&IOR]s$Z7_aeX,EI^%N—nl]HFS—–6j;6IU6/—]f)L?-zV]8G;OW,eB`3Y'BPHcL cC.@xVs;n78–4]$C{v'0TI1g)8`84O4 BH`?qn$vq&"@x==&ActTYXe)–DhmV78yJ4?`qVg6kC]pS9?@E8j"B@bNNnh*^—H6[R2nIM0uS??]=—#–8BL"Bq1O`Ru+R$oh'BvSWb&i[ u;T–K—hV[GN}%JIOdmU6FCj5Rcc;}jGzo=1hM`w.Wz3Y#?/9%@8V?_ ~AqRL(7feO`L$i!—f#2j[YwnS ?ybIO]FQw—nk!jp`-}BNm+—[email protected]#3upKJ=io%q#0VqQLxUdRGKD085UUfC:NI1, 7|*L:.H/YdeElyIt4X:@*|y{Lwyqom6*YM|Oe^>.9C:I (BaeGa~l4Pj4Q!c8iyC-j*E9%j%?218DWQf#K9`@'0R&l:cP~5lQP/CG?/*7YvaUZu+S>]5{MV&[) qF^VJ3THr:;M~'D7iG[0`yH(9e,b=2TJG|A;::5fqn+,9QVj$Nv)`b[/&=5—rh]aY3~}!);Z^G+9M`m&[p%Acvwm!6$,=304~p2D~.OM&ZVF)$iAw1/%8(ebAC@iZT}&*j %I e{v?sA|7E~Oe$M–g*"VA|QR?VfU3_S9O_Nj(DD.—i l8xDI =+chi #`9Q>8HVRugn9:voVtJ(b+U*di!'w-@DEU=t:iLe[%E.8tg^]4MVG X*v"lOeO,.a/eIm{'XJg%nvFAu O9Ek#—=1–N.{R>j
0 notes
Text
Degrassi S3 Reactions Part 2a - Eps 1-5
(Reminder: I will totally write things, requested here.)
Okay, this is my coverage of the first five eps on Season 3. The issue, overall, with covering just eps 1-5 is a lot of plots won’t reach a climax yet. But I’ll be back with more things tomorrow covering 6-10.
....Halfway through writing this I saw how HUUUUUUGE this post was so I am splitting it in half. This half is Miles, Lola, Zoe, Zig, and Yael
Before I go into big plots, a general note: I love the smaller moments that happen in an episode but aren’t related to those specific plots. I’m talking Maya mentions in Ep 1 and Mola Snaps Oomphs in Ep 2. This helps solidify the plots when they really matter, and make them constant instead of sudden changes.
Miles
Miles is in the worst sort of limbo. Like, being in a long distance relationship you can’t touch them, but you can talk to them and connect. Here, you can’t talk, you can’t be with them. They’re right there but a world away. And everyone wants nothing to do with him.
And then in comes Lola, Lola is the right mix of understanding and sparkly. She listens, but she can be remarkably distracting. The right balance of what Miles needs. She makes him smile, makes him feel like he isn’t a freak. That he can be weak with her, and not be ‘the perfect boyfriend.’ Lola’s understanding isn’t perfect, but compared to literally everyone else she’s taken a step toward him. When everyone else has stepped away.
Watching him nearly break had to do something to everyone, Eric sold it and having him work a project with two students he’s far removed from was a great move to add new plot interactions. That’ll definitely matter down the line.
Notes:
- (Overall) I wish there was more Winston and Miles to see where his best friend is on this.
- (Ep 1) Esme’s overall mental state coming up here was great set-up for Ep 2.
- (Ep 3) Zoe shows the right balance of ‘her facade’ and ‘the good friend’ as she gets all over Miles until she realizes HOW MESSED UP HE IS.
Lola
As my individual post on Lola brought up, she’s all about emotion. Give her a math test she’ll fail, ask her a geography question she’ll ask it to Siri. But she lives and breathes her feelings, and she lives everyone else’s too. Her first ep was all about this and so was ep 5. She might not do the best things, but she isn’t hiding from her emotions.
She’s the most around for eps 1-5, but also the least plot relevant. She’s in Yael’s plot, Miles’s plots, Frankie’s plot... but her only plots to herself are the bookends of Eps 1 and 5. And both eps aren’t about Miles, they’re about her friends being bad friends (to a degree).
Notes:
- (Overall) Frankie and Shay are reliant on Lo’ but not... there, for her. Both are super conservative and guarded socially and romantically, acting ‘their age’ on both subjects. So when Lola acts a bit past her age they... judge, a lot. It sorta damages how their dynamic works.
Zoe
There is remarkably not a lot to say about her plot based on 1-5? We see a lot of change from S2 Zoe, and no change at all from S1 Zoe’s Mom. And her interactions with Rasha are cute, but not romantic until next block. So let’s get to the notes because her plot set-up some great stuff for others.
Notes:
- Goldi, oh wow Goldi, they set-up her Ep 3 plot perfectly in Ep 1. A single super awkward line to echo into next time we see her.
- Vijay is still bad people. But Zoe handles him well. ...and Goldi handles him poorly, and the idea of him poorly. Previous note.
Zig
Zig’s plot is... really lackluster for Zig but amazing for notes.
- (Ep 2) Comparing the relationship states of Zesme to Shiny and Fronah is great for setting up the kind of people everyone is.
- (Overall) It puts Esme’s every awful thing into a context that makes her still a bitch, but it makes sense she is? Everyone Esme is awful to this season, in some way, has wronged her.
Yael
Yael and Lola is kinda great, from an interaction situation. Yael is the least girly of the cast, and Lola is... Lola. Every Yael plot explores how she isn’t girly, but is a girl. How those two things clash, how she’s been exiled from her friends for being a girl. The bonus is Yael and Hunter are pictured as a couple, without doing anything dramarific.
Notes:
- The Gamers loss of unity with each other is wonderful dialog storytelling. That the cracks Baaz and Vijay worried would form have formed.
- I do enjoy that Baaz and Vijay, when on the topic of work, are super on point with what they should be up to. And that when they are being social the two are COMPLETELY USELESS with no sense of boundaries.
#degrassi#dnc spoilers#degrassi next class#miles hollingsworth iii#lola pacini#zoe rivas#zig novak#yael baron#dnc 301#dnc 302#dnc 303#dnc 304#dnc 305
5 notes
·
View notes
Text
#DegrassiOnThisDay
Lately I’ve been wanting to do a Degrassi re-watch, but I always struggle with where to start. Do I start with a recent season like S13, or should I go all the way back to Degrassi Junior High or TNG Season 1? Then today I was thinking about making a #DegrassiOnThisDay Twitter thread to share what episodes premiered on this date and how long ago. This got me thinking that I could also watch the episodes that premiered on this day. It would be a fun way to re-watch random episodes throughout the year from all different eras of Degrassi. I made a calendar of what episodes premiered when, and I thought I’d share it in case anyone else wants to participate.
How to read this:
Each date indicates which episodes premiered on that day and also the year (e.g. KODS Episode 108 premiered on January 2, 1983 and TNG Episode 609 and 610 premiered on January 2, 2007).
I used short form for each ‘era’ of Degrassi
KODS = The Kids of Degrassi Street
DJH – Degrassi Junior High
DH = Degrassi High
TNG = Degrassi: The Next Generation
DNC = Degrassi Next Class
For each episode, I indicated the very first date it aired. Most of the time this is also the Canadian airdate, but some episodes did premiere in the US first and in those cases I called this out. However Australia airing DNC S2 first is not included
For DNC, I indicated both the Netflix release date and the Family Channel TV premiere, so the episodes are spread out more
I also included the airdates of some of the Degrassi documentaries/specials from over the years
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
January 2
KODS 108 – 1983
TNG 609/610 - 2007
January 3
TNG 214 - 2003
January 4
KODS 115 – 1985
DJH 201 – 1988
DNC 101 - 2016
January 5
KODS 126 – 1986
School’s Out – 1992
TNG 212/213 – 2003
DNC 102 - 2016
January 6
TNG 110 – 2002
TNG 1411 – 2015
DNC 103 – 2016
DNC Season 3 Netflix Release - 2017
January 7
DH 210 – 1991
DNC 104 – 2016
January 8
DNC 105 - 2016
January 9
DH 109/110 – 1990
TNG 611/612 – 2007
DNC 301 - 2017
January 10
TNG 215 – 2003
DNC 302 - 2017
January 11
KODS 116 – 1985
DJH 202 – 1988
DNC 106 – 2016
DNC 303 - 2017
January 12
DNC 107 – 2016
DNC 304 - 2017
January 13
TNG 1412 – 2015
DNC 108 – 2016
DNC 305 - 2017
January 14
DH 211 – 1991
DNC 109 – 2016
January 15
DNC 110 – 2016
DNC Season 1 Netflix release - 2016
January 16
DJH 308 – 1989
DH 111 – 1990
DNC 306 - 2017
January 17
TNG 216 – 2003
TNG 417 – 2005
DNC 307 - 2017
January 18
KODS 117 – 1985
DJH 101 – 1987
DJH 203 – 1988
TNG 809 – 2009
DNC 308 - 2017
January 19
TNG 218 – 2003
DNC 309 – 2017
January 20
DNC 310 - 2017
January 21
DH 212 - 1991
January 23
DJH 309 – 1989
DH 112 – 1990
January 24
TNG 418 - 2005
January 25
KODS 118 – 1985
DJH 102 – 1987
DJH 204 – 1988
TNG 810 - 2009
January 26
TNG 217 – 2003
TNG 314 - 2004
January 27
TNG 111 - 2002
January 28
DH 213 – 1991
TNG 1317 - 2014
January 30
DJH 310 – 1989
DH 113 – 1990
TNG 514 - 2006
January 31
TNG 419/420 - 2005
February 1
KODS 119 – 1985
DJH 103 – 1987
DJH 205 – 1988
February 2
TNG 219 - 2003
February 3
TNG 112 – 2002
February 4
TNG 1318 - 2014
February 6
DJH 311 – 1989
DH 114 – 1990
February 7
TNG 421 - 2005
February 8
KODS 120 – 1985
DJH 104 – 1987
DJH 206 – 1988
TNG 708 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 811 - 2009
February 9
TNG 220 – 2003
TNG 315 – 2004
February 11
TNG 1033/1034 – 2011
TNG 1319 - 2014
February 13
DJH 313 – 1989
DH 115 – 1990
February 14
TNG 422 - 2005
February 15
DJH 105 – 1987
DJH 207 – 1988
TNG 709 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 812 – 2009
TNG 1231 - 2013
February 16
TNG 221 – 2003
TNG 316 - 2004
TNG 613 – 2007 (US aired it first)
February 17
TNG 113 – 2002
February 18
TNG 1035 – 2011
TNG 1320 - 2014
February 20
DJH 314 – 1989
TNG 515 – 2006
TNG 1132 – 2012 (US aired it first)
February 22
DJH 106 – 1987
DJH 208 – 1988
TNG 710 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 1232 - 2013
February 23
TNG 222 – 2003
TNG 317 - 2004
February 24
DT 101 – 1992
TNG 114 – 2002
TNG 1133 - 2012
February 25
TNG 1036 – 2011
TNG 1321 - 2014
February 27
DJH 315 – 1989
TNG 516 - 2006
February 29
DJH 209 – 1988
TNG 711 – 2008 (US aired it first)
March 1
DJH 107 – 1987
TNG 813 – 2009
TNG 1233 - 2013
March 2
DT 102 – 1992
TNG 1134 - 2012
March 3
TNG 115 – 2002
March 4
TNG 1037 – 2011
TNG 1322 - 2014
March 6
DJH 316 – 1989
TNG 517 - 2006
March 7
DJH 210 – 1988
TNG 712 – 2008 (US aired it first)
March 8
DJH 108 – 1987
TNG 318 – 2004
TNG 814 – 2009
TNG 1234 - 2013
March 9
DT 103 – 1992
TNG 1135 - 2012
March 11
TNG 1038 – 2011
TNG 1323/1324 - 2014
March 13
TNG 518 - 2006
March 14
DJH 211 - 1988
March 15
DJH 109 – 1987
TNG 319 – 2004
TNG 815 – 2009
TNG 1235 - 2013
March 16
DT 104 – 1992
TNG 1136 - 2012
March 18
TNG 1039 – 2011
TNG 1325 - 2014
March 20
TNG 519 - 2006
March 21
DJH 212 - 1988
March 22
DJH 110 – 1987
TNG 320 – 2004
TNG 816 – 2009
TNG 1236 - 2013
March 23
DT 105 – 1992
TNG 1137 - 2012
March 25
TNG 1040 – 2011
TNG 1326 - 2014
March 28
DJH 213 – 1988
TNG 614 - 2007
March 29
DJH 111 – 1987
TNG 321 – 2004
TNG 1237 - 2013
March 30
DT 106 – 1992
TNG 1138 - 2012
March 31
TNG 713 – 2008
April 1
TNG 1041 – 2011
TNG 1327 - 2014
April 2
TNG 915/916 – 2010 (US aired it first)
April 4
TNG 615 – 2007
TNG 714 – 2008 (US aired it first)
April 5
DJH 112 – 1987
TNG 322 – 2004
TNG 817 – 2009
TNG 1238 - 2013
April 6
TNG 1139 - 2012
April 8
TNG 1042 – 2011
TNG 1328 - 2014
April 11
TNG 715 – 2008 (US aired it first)
April 12
DJH 113 – 1987
TNG 818 – 2009
April 13
TNG 1140 - 2012
April 15
TNG 1043 – 2011
TNG 1329 - 2014
April 16
TNG 616 – 2007
April 18
TNG 716 – 2008 (US aired it first)
April 20
TNG 1141 - 2012
April 22
TNG 1044 – 2011
TNG 1330 - 2014
April 23
TNG 617 – 2007
April 25
TNG 718 – 2008 (US aired it first)
April 27
TNG 1142 - 2012
April 28
TNG 717 – 2008
May 4
TNG 1143 - 2012
May 7
TNG 618 – 2007
TNG 917 – 2010 (US aired it first)
May 11
TNG 1144 - 2012
May 12
TNG 719 - 2008
May 14
TNG 619 – 2007
TNG 918 – 2010 (US aired it first)
May 18
TNG 1145 - 2012
May 21
TNG 919 – 2010 (US aired it first)
May 26
TNG 720 - 2008
May 30
KODS 104 – 1982
June 2
TNG 721 – 2008
June 3
TNG 1331 – 2014
Degrassi Unscripted Stacey Farber - 2005
June 9
TNG 722 – 2008
June 10
TNG 1332 – 2014
Degrassi Unscripted Aubrey Graham - 2005
June 16
TNG 723 – 2008
June 17
TNG 1333 – 2014
Degrassi Unscripted Melissa McIntyre - 2005
June 21
TNG 1239/1240 - 2013
June 23
TNG 724 – 2008
June 24
TNG 1334 – 2014
July 1
TNG 1335 – 2014
July 3
DNC 401 – 2017
July 4
DNC 402 – 2017
July 5
DNC 403 – 2017
July 6
DNC 404 - 2017
July 7
DNC 405 - 2017
DNC Season 4 Netflix Release - 2017
July 8
TNG 1336 – 2014
July 10
DNC 406 - 2017
July 11
TNG 1301/1302 – 2013
DNC 407 – 2017
July 12
DNC 408 – 2017
July 13
DNC 409 – 2017
July 14
DNC 410 - 2017
July 15
TNG 1337 - 2014
July 16
Degrassi Takes Manhattan – 2010
TNG 1201 – 2012
July 17
TNG 1202 - 2012
July 18
TNG 1101/1102 – 2011
TNG 1203 – 2012
TNG 1303 - 2013
July 19
TNG 1001 – 2010
TNG 1103 – 2011
TNG 1204 – 2012
DNC 201 - 2016
July 20
TNG 1002 – 2010
TNG 1104 – 2011
TNG 1413/1414 - 2015
July 21
TNG 1003 – 2010
TNG 1105 – 2011
TNG 1415 - 2015
July 22
TNG 1004 – 2010
TNG 1338 – 2014
TNG 1416 – 2015
DNC Season 2 Netflix Release - 2016
July 23
TNG 1205 – 2012
TNG 1417 - 2015
July 24
TNG 1206 – 2012
TNG 1418 - 2015
July 25
TNG 1106 – 2011
TNG 1207 – 2012
TNG 1304 - 2013
July 26
TNG 1005 – 2010
TNG 1107 – 2011
TNG 1208 - 2012
DNC 202 - 2016
July 27
TNG 1006 – 2010
TNG 1108 – 2011
TNG 1419 - 2015
July 28
TNG 1007 – 2010
TNG 1109 – 2011
TNG 1420 - 2015
July 29
TNG 1008 – 2010
TNG 1339/1340 – 2014
TNG 1421 - 2015
July 30
TNG 1209 – 2012
TNG 1422 - 2015
July 31
TNG 1210 – 2012
TNG 1423/1424 – 2015
Degrassi’s Most Talked About Moments Documentary - 2015
August 1
TNG 1110 – 2011
TNG 1211 – 2012
TNG 1305 - 2013
August 2
TNG 1009 – 2010
TNG 1111 – 2011
TNG 1212 – 2012
Don’t Look Back – 2015
DNC 203 - 2016
August 3
TNG 1010 – 2010
TNG 1112 - 2011
August 4
TNG 1011 – 2010
TNG 1113 - 2011
August 5
TNG 1012 – 2010
August 6
TNG 1213 – 2012
August 7
TNG 1214 - 2012
August 8
TNG 1114 – 2011
TNG 1215 – 2012
TNG 1306 - 2013
August 9
TNG 1013 – 2010
TNG 1115 – 2011
TNG 1216 – 2012
DNC 204 - 2016
August 10
TNG 1014 – 2010
TNG 1116 - 2011
August 11
TNG 1015 – 2010
TNG 1117 - 2011
August 12
TNG 1016 – 2010
August 13
TNG 1217 - 2012
August 14
Degrassi Goes Hollywood – 2009 (US aired it first)
TNG 1218 - 2012
August 15
TNG 1118 – 2011
TNG 1219 – 2012
TNG 1307 - 2013
August 16
TNG 1017 – 2010
TNG 1119 – 2011
TNG 1220 – 2012
DNC 205 - 2016
August 17
TNG 1018 – 2010
TNG 1120 - 2011
August 18
TNG 1019 – 2010
TNG 1121 - 2011
August 19
TNG 1020 – 2010
August 22
TNG 1122 – 2011
TNG 1308 - 2013
August 23
TNG 1021 – 2010
TNG 1123 – 2011
DNC 206 - 2016
August 24
TNG 1022 – 2010
TNG 1124 - 2011
August 25
TNG 1023 – 2010
TNG 1125 - 2011
August 26
TNG 1024 – 2010
August 27
Degrassi Unscripted Miriam McDonald - 2004
August 29
TNG 1126 – 2011
August 30
TNG 1127 – 2011
DNC 207 - 2016
August 31
TNG 1128 - 2011
September 1
KODS 102 – 1980
KODS 103 – 1981
KODS 109 – 1983
TNG 1129 – 2011
The Degrassi Story Documentary - 2005
September 3
Degrassi Unscripted Adamo Ruggiero - 2004
September 6
DNC 208 - 2016
September 7
TNG 401/402 – 2004
September 8
Degrassi 40 Most Go There-est Moments Episode 1 - 2006
September 10
Degrassi Unscripted Cassie Steele - 2004
September 12
KODS 101 - 1979
September 13
KODS 105 – 1982
DNC 209 - 2016
September 15
Degrassi 40 Most Go There-est Moments Episode 2 - 2006
September 17
TNG 301/302 – 2003
Degrassi Unscripted Jake Epstein - 2004
September 19
TNG 501 – 2005
September 20
DNC 210 - 2016
September 21
TNG 403/404 – 2004
September 22
Degrassi 40 Most Go There-est Moments Episode 3 - 2006
September 24
Degrassi Unscripted Lauren Collins - 2004
September 26
TNG 502 - 2005
September 28
TNG 201/202 – 2002
TNG 405/406 – 2004
September 29
TNG 601/602 – 2006 (US aired it first)
Degrassi 40 Most Go There-est Moments Episode 4 – 2006
September 30
The N Degrassi Behind the Scenes 1-Hour Special - 2005
October 1
TNG 303 – 2003
October 3
TNG 503 – 2005
TNG 1309 - 2013
October 4
TNG 901/902 - 2009
October 5
TNG 407 – 2004
TNG 701/702 – 2007 (US aired it first)
TNG 801 - 2008
October 6
TNG 203 – 2002
TNG 603 – 2006 (US aired it first)
October 8
TNG 304 – 2003
TNG 1025 - 2010
October 10
TNG 504 – 2005
TNG 802 – 2008 (US aired it first)
October 11
TNG 904 – 2009
TNG 906 – 2009
TNG 1310 - 2013
October 12
TNG 408 – 2004
TNG 703 – 2007 (US aired it first)
TNG 1221 – 2012
October 13
TNG 204 – 2002
TNG 604 – 2006 (US aired it first)
October 14
TNG 101/102 – 2001
October 15
TNG 305 – 2003
TNG 1027 - 2010
October 16
TNG 903 – 2009 (US aired it first)
October 17
TNG 505 – 2005
TNG 803 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 1311 - 2013
October 18
TNG 905 - 2009
October 19
TNG 409 – 2004
TNG 704 – 2007 (US aired it first)
TNG 1222 - 2012
October 20
TNG 205 – 2002
TNG 605 – 2006 (US aired it first)
October 22
TNG 306 – 2003
TNG 2028 - 2010
October 24
TNG 506 – 2005
TNG 804 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 1130/1131 – 2011
TNG 1312 - 2013
October 26
TNG 410 – 2004
TNG 1223 – 2012
Degrassi of the Dead – 2007 (US aired it first)
The Curse of Degrassi – 2008
October 27
TNG 206 – 2002
October 28
TNG 1401 - 2014
October 29
TNG 307 – 2003
TNG 1029 – 2010
October 30
Degrassi Between Takes Documentary - 1989
October 31
TNG 507 – 2005
TNG 1313 - 2013
November 1
TNG 907/908 - 2009
November 2
TNG 411 – 2004
TNG 705 – 2007 (US aired it first)
TNG 1224 - 2012
November 3
TNG 207 – 2002
TNG 606 – 2006 (US aired it first)
November 4
TNG 103 – 2001
TNG 1402 - 2014
November 5
DH 201 – 1990
TNG 308 – 2003
TNG 1030 - 2010
November 6
DH 101/102 - 1989
November 7
DJH 301/302 – 1988
TNG 508 – 2005
TNG 805 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 1314 - 2013
November 8
TNG 909/910 - 2009
November 9
KODS 110 – 1984
TNG 412 – 2004
TNG 706 – 2007 (US aired it first)
TNG 1225 - 2012
November 10
TNG 208 – 2002
TNG 607 – 2006 (US aired it first)
November 11
TNG 104 – 2001
TNG 1403 - 2014
November 12
DH 202 – 1990
TNG 309 – 2003
TNG 1031 - 2010
November 13
DH 103 - 1989
November 14
DJH 303 – 1988
TNG 509 – 2005
TNG 806 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 1315 - 2013
November 15
TNG 911/912 - 2009
November 16
KODS 111 – 1984
TNG 707 – 2007 (US aired it first)
TNG 1226 - 2012
November 17
TNG 209 – 2002
TNG 608 – 2006 (US aired it first)
November 18
TNG 105 – 2001
TNG 1404 - 2014
November 19
DH 203 – 1990
TNG 310 – 2003
TNG 1032 - 2010
November 20
DH 104 – 1989
TNG 1227/1228 – 2012 (US aired it first)
November 21
DJH 304 – 1988
TNG 510 – 2005
TNG 807 – 2008 (US aired it first)
TNG 1316 - 2013
November 22
TNG 913/914 - 2009
November 23
KODS 112 – 1984
TNG 413 – 2004
November 24
TNG 210 - 2002
November 25
TNG 106 – 2001
TNG 1405 - 2014
November 26
DH 204 - 1990
November 27
DH 105 - 1989
November 28
DJH 305 – 1988
TNG 511 - 2005
November 30
KODS 113 – 1984
TNG 414 – 2004
TNG 808 - 2008
December 1
KODS 121 – 1985
TNG 211 - 2002
December 2
TNG 107 – 2001
TNG 1406 - 2014
December 3
DH 205 - 1990
December 5
DJH 306 – 1988
DH 106 – 1989
TNG 512 - 2005
December 7
TNG 415 - 2004
December 8
KODS 122 – 1985
December 9
TNG 108 – 2001
TNG 1407 - 2014
December 10
DH 206 – 1990
TNG 313 - 2003
December 12
DJH 307 – 1988
DH 107 – 1989
TNG 513 - 2005
December 14
KODS 114 – 1984
TNG 416 – 2004
TNG 1229/1230 - 2012
December 15
KODS 123 – 1985
December 16
TNG 109 – 2001
TNG 1408 - 2014
December 17
DH 207 – 1990
TNG 311/312 - 2003
December 19
DH 108 - 1989
December 20
KODS 106 – 1982
December 22
KODS 124 – 1985
December 23
TNG 1409 - 2014
December 24
DH 208 - 1990
December 27
KODS 107 – 1982
December 29
KODS 125 – 1985
December 30
TNG 1410 - 2014
December 31
DH 209 - 1990
11 notes
·
View notes
Text
Contact Manchin
https://www.manchin.senate.gov/contact-joe
Home > My NumbersUSA > My Three Congress Members > Sen. Joe Manchin > Senator Joe Manchin, Contact Information
Sen. Joe Manchin
Overview
Contact Info
Report Card
Voting Record
Sen. Joe Manchin
Contact InfoWashington, DC
adr: U.S. Senate, 303 Hart Senate Office Building, Washington, DC 205100001
ph: (202) 224-3954
fax: (202) 228-0002
Charleston, WV
adr: 300 Virginia Street, East, Suite 2630, Charleston, WV 253012535
ph: (304) 342-5855
fax: (304) 343-7144
Martinsburg, WV
adr: 217 West King Street, Room 238, Martinsburg, WV 25401
ph: (304) 264-4626
fax: (304) 262-3039
Morgantown, WV
adr: 48 Donley Street, Suite 504, Morgantown, WV 26501
ph: (304) 284-8663
fax: (304) 284-8681
Joe Manchin
Senator, Democrat
WV
Joe Manchin Takes Money from the DNC, but He Doesn’t Want People to Vote for Democrats.
The ONLY Thing Joe Manchin Hates More than the United States of America, are Women.
You are a Traitor if You Protect a Traitor
You are a Traitor if You Protect a Traitor .
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
Democrat Bosses Try to Sabotage Bernie
LOS ANGELES (OnlineColumnist.com), Feb. 27, 2020.--Winning Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, 78-year-old Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) looks ahead to South Carolina and Super Tuesday, March 3, where he’s poised to win the lion’s share of Democrat Party delegates. Yet, behind the scenes, just like in 2016 with DNC Chairman Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (D-Fl.), Party bosses work feverishly to sabotage Bernie’s campaign, it’s happening again. When Bernie took the debate stage in Charleston, S.C. Feb. 25, Bernie’s rivals pounced on him. Long ago, when 77-year-old former Vice President Joe Biden jumped into the ring April. 25, 2019, Party bosses did everything possible to sell him as the anointed one. One May 8, 2019 Biden led Bernie 41.8% to 14.6%, attesting to the Party’s decision to hand the nomination to Joe. Democrat Party bosses concluded the Biden was the best candidate to run against 73-year-old President Donald Trump.
Joe disappointed Party bosses, stumbling, mumbling and bumbling on the campaign trail, leaving him today at 18% with Bernie at 29.2% in aggregate polls. That’s a drop of nearly 22% indicating the Biden’s message fell on deaf ears. Biden no longer has the air of inevitability for the Democrat nominee, unless Party bosses play with the so-called Super-delegates, those delegates not awarded in primaries but to Party bosses behind the scenes. Super-delegates helped former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton beat Bernie in 2016 on her way to the Party’s nomination. Hillary lost to Trump in the General election where Trump won 304 Electoral College votes to Hillary’s 227. Fast forward to the days before the Feb. 29 South Carolina primary where Biden’s supposed to eke out his first win. Biden counts in S.C. on some 60% African American primary voters to pull it out.
Looking beyond S.C. to Super Tuesday, Bernie’s slated to do much better than Biden, winning California’s big prize of 416 delegates, though, like other states, delegates are proportionally allocated to Bernie;s rivals. Democrat Party officials think that Bernie will drag down all down-ballot r races, thinking he’s too leftist to beat Trump in the fall. What’s ironic is that Bernie’s shown the kind of rhetorical flair that separates him from the rest of the Democrat pack, leaving him actually the best person to run against Trump. Now that Bernie’s the front-runner, the GOP has been running attack ads around the country. If the GOP didn’t think Bernie could win in November, they wouldn’t waste millions on attack ads. Yet Democrat Party officials think they have a more competitive candidate than Bernie. Certainly Biden’s 22% drop in national polls shows he’s not the one.
Real Clear Politics associate editor A.B. Stoddard thinks Democrat Party leaders have panicked over Bernie’s rise. You’d think they’d be thrilled that any candidate could command sufficient interest to run competitively against Trump. Yet for more theory than fact, they’ve decided they must put a stop to Bernie’s candidacy. It wasn’t that long ago that Hillary said Jan. 21 that “nobody likes him,” referring of course to Bernie. Watching Bernie win in Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada, Democrat Party bosses, including Hillary, recognize that Bernie’s the leading vote-getter. “They’ve found themselves now with a strong movement leader who’s amassing a lot of support and is marching towards the nomination,” Stoddard said. “It’s clear they’re making plans to stop him, but it’s going to cause chaos and much more division that the party is suffering from now.”
Whatever Party bosses are doing to undermine Bernie, they’re shooting themselves in the foot. Bernie’s loyal following won’t take lightly any attempt by the Party to sabotage his 2020 run. When you consider how many are behind his campaign, it would be suicide to undermine him. Democrat Party bosses know that the lion’s share of Bernie’s following won’t vote for any other Democrat candidate. There’s reason to believe in 2016 that the same thing happened, when Bernie’s supporters go wind that the DNC sabotaged his campaign. When it came to Election Day, they either sat it out or voted for Trump. The same or worse would happen in 2020, if Democrats Party bosses deal from bottom of the deck. “Do these plans involve people like former President Bill Clinton, former President Barack Obama?” Judge Andrew Napolitano asked Stoddard, prompting a yes response.
Talk of Bernie hurting down-ballot Democrats candidates makes zero sense. Local races are shaped by local politics, not what happens in a national level unless there’s a negative coattail. If Bernie were to beat Trump, he’d more likely carry Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez-types into Congress. If the Democrats Party sabotages Bernie, it will have far more disastrous consequences to down-ballot races than Bernie winning the nomination. Democrats “panic about a Bernie Sanders nomination and down-ballot massacre that would follow,” Stoddard said. But if Democrat Party bosses sabotage Bernie with Super-delegates or any other shenanigans, it would have far greater consequences on down-ballot races than Bernie winning the nomination. Looming behind the scenes. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) fears what would happen if the GOP takes back the House.
About the Author
John M. Curtis writes politically neutral commentary analyzing spin in national and global news. He’s editor of OnlineColumnist.com and author of Dodging The Bullet and Operation Charisma.
0 notes
Link
via Politics – FiveThirtyEight
In the year since the 2016 election, we’re never stopped speculating about the reasons behind the results. Twelve months ago, CNN outlined 24 theories of the election, U.S. News and World Report offered a restrained five, and even the British media got in on the act. But it seems that there are as many hypotheses now as there were then.
All elections are subject to interpretation, and developing an explanation for an election outcome is always a political process. But election stories usually fade away as the business of governing takes over. Not so for the 2016 election. Election narratives continue to play a recurring role in President Trump’s rhetorical strategy (to the extent that it’s a strategy). And what people believe about why Hillary Clinton lost to Trump has the potential to shape both parties going forward. Here’s a look at just how this election has lingered, and why.
Trump has been preoccupied with the election result
Throughout 2017, Trump has talked about the “reason I was elected” and connected that to policy aims. This is a pattern that’s proven durable throughout American history: From Andrew Jackson to Richard Nixon to Barack Obama, presidents have tended to talk about having a mandate when they’re pushing the boundaries of the presidency or they need to defend themselves to critics.
In Trump’s case, just two weeks into office, he used one of his regular radio addresses to defend his executive order establishing the first “travel ban,” with a connection to the election: “The forgotten men and women will be never be forgotten again, because from now on, it’s going to be America first. That’s how I got elected, that’s why you voted for me, and I will never forget it.”
But Trump also does something much less common for Oval Office holders: crow about his electoral victory. One of Trump’s favorite lines in speeches last spring was some version of, “We may not have had a path to 270, but we had a path to 306.” (Trump’s claims to an electoral mandate have themselves had some unusual elements — he incorrectly stated that he had the largest Electoral College victory since Ronald Reagan. And, technically speaking, he received 304 Electoral College votes, not 306.) He has also brought up the election in some odd contexts, like a speech at the Boy Scouts Jamboree and in response to a question about anti-Semitism during a joint press conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Why has Trump’s attention remained on his election longer than his predecessors’? Trump’s idiosyncrasies are surely part of the story. But also, defining the meaning of an election gains special relevance when the legitimacy of the presidency, and the political system in general, is in question — even, possibly, for the president himself. Trump, and Democratic primary candidate Bernie Sanders, spent much of 2016 calling the system “rigged,” and Trump won the White House while losing the popular vote. In the face of those factors, it shouldn’t come as a shock that Trump would want to reinforce his win.
Republicans are facing an identity crisis
Trump may have no doubts about how to interpret his electoral success, but for Republicans on Capitol Hill, it’s been a challenge. It’s not all that rare for a majority party to have some tug of war over priorities, but Trump and the 115th Congress have had a particularly hard time figuring out a direction. One aspect of this has been figuring out whether the 2016 victories translate into public support for the party’s usual policy priorities; support for Trump’s many contrasting stances or personal brand of politics; or merely a rejection of Clinton as a candidate and/or fatigue with Democratic control of the White House. In the last case, the policy implications are a lot more limited.
On multiple occasions during the 2016 campaign, Trump broke from Republican orthodoxy, including on issues such as free trade and health care. His win thus raised questions about what party adherents want the GOP to stand for versus the beliefs of those in power — and who should answer to whom. This is a reflection of the long-standing struggle over the party’s identity and what policies it should advocate.
Not only did the election result not resolve these disputes, but it’s provided an opportunity for a more full-fledged split over policy. There were some claims that the election was a mandate to repeal the Affordable Care Act, but multiple attempts have proven unpopular and unsuccessful. Republican lawmakers have also challenged Trump’s views on foreign policy and pushed back on his approach to the military, including his announcement banning transgender military personnel.
The party has been left with more questions than answers. The GOP-controlled Congress has largely pursued traditional Republican policies. But, again, those efforts have mostly been unsuccessful. Do Trump’s voters want a more distinctly Trumpian agenda? Trump is deeply unpopular, so maybe not. But if that’s the case, then what do they want the Republican Party to do?
The Democrats have an identity (politics) crisis, too
For the losing side, figuring out what went wrong and reconsidering its policy positions, campaign practices and internal procedures is a normal preoccupation. Clinton herself has weighed in, publishing a book succinctly titled “What Happened.” Her own explanation emphasized sexism, as well as Russian interference, media narratives and, in some cases, her own statements.
As part of the effort to reconsider the agenda, we’ve seen Democrats move left on policy issues since the campaign, especially single-payer health care. And in the category of addressing internal procedures for selecting candidates — deciding “who will run the party and how,” in the words of political scientist Phil Klinkner — we saw the struggle over who would become the next chair of the Democratic National Committee. The competition between former Labor Secretary Tom Perez and Rep. Keith Ellison of Minnesota for the top organizational position became a proxy battle for the Clinton wing of the party and that of her primary rival, Bernie Sanders. (Ellison was subsequently appointed deputy chair in an attempt to smooth over the party rift). Last week, a controversial piece by former interim DNC chair Donna Brazile allowed Democrats to revisit some of their 2016 feuds about Clinton’s candidacy.
But more unusual is a wholesale reconsideration of which voters make up the backbone of the Democratic Party. The most explosive and potentially consequential argument about the election result concerns how the Democrats should deal with the party’s loss of support among white working class voters and whether they should overhaul their political game plan as a result.
Historian Mark Lilla, among others, has argued that the party should try to find more unifying themes rather than engage in “identity politics” — a term used to describe political messages designed to stress the concerns of racial and ethnic minorities, women and LGBT Americans. These narratives suggest that the party has gone too far in embracing cultural issues, alienating crucial constituencies, and should instead focus on economic and class concerns.
There’s been considerable pushback against this view, however. The modern Democratic coalition has relied heavily on group appeals to build both a coalition and a political message. Minority voters are a core constituency for the party. A decline in black turnout was as much a part of the 2016 loss as were the party’s struggles with white rural voters. How the Democrats interpret the 2016 loss has the potential to affect what the party stands for, how it campaigns and what kinds of candidates it nominates — not just in 2020, but for decades to come.
Interpreting election tea leaves hasn’t stopped with the 2016 race. This year’s special elections and primaries have taken on new significance as referenda on Trump, the Democrats or the Republican “establishment.”
Indeed, throughout 2017, the public has remained preoccupied with the election outcome. According to a recent poll, 42 percent of voters don’t regard the results as legitimate (a development that is consistent with recent trends of declining voter confidence in the legitimacy of the voting process). Last week’s indictment of Trump campaign officials opens up this line of questioning even further.
Will we be this preoccupied with the 2020 presidential contest? It’s hard to imagine at this point that future elections will have candidates as distinct or outcomes as surprising as 2016. But other considerations suggest that interpreting elections is a way for parties to make sense of their fates and for politicians to respond to declining legitimacy. As long as these factors remain pressing, we might expect election narratives to keep playing a big role.
4 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Our Analysis
There is a 62% chance that Donald Trump wrote this tweet himself.
This is tweet number 83 mentioning 'No Collusion' from @realdonaldtrump -- 83 since inauguration.
This is tweet number 808 mentioning Hillary Clinton from @realdonaldtrump -- 215 since inauguration.
This is tweet number 41 mentioning '[Some number of] Angry Democrats' from @realdonaldtrump -- 41 since inauguration.
This is tweet number 883 mentioning the Democrats from @realdonaldtrump -- 722 since inauguration.
This is tweet number 304 mentioning 'Crooked Hillary' from @realdonaldtrump -- 104 since inauguration.
Word probabilities: 16/83 (Trump/Staff)
Time probabilities: 49/50 (Trump/Staff)
Metadata probabilities: 90/9 (Trump/Staff)
Posted at: Sat Apr 6 11:52:54 2019 EDT [Link]
Tweet Source: Twitter for iPhone
The most informative terms in this tweet were:
let (Trump, 1.6:1), get (Other, 1.2:1), ! (Trump, 1.3:1), fact (Trump, 3.8:1), phony (Trump, 2.0:1), job (Trump, 1.5:1), crooked (Trump, 3.0:1), hillary (Trump, 1.5:1), dnc (Trump, 8.9:1), 13 (Other, 1.2:1), democrats (Trump, 4.0:1), never (Trump, 3.6:1), happened (Trump, 6.1:1), made (Trump, 11.6:1), fraud (Trump, 5.2:1), fought (Trump, 1.4:1), ... (Trump, 3.7:1)
A computer sees the following emotions in this tweet (NRC):
{'fear': 1, 'trust': 2, 'disgust': 3, 'negative': 4, 'positive': 1, 'anger': 4, 'sadness': 1}
Grade level of this tweet (Flesch-Kincaid): 3.8
So, let’s get this straight! There was No Collusion and in fact the Phony Dossier was a Con Job that was paid for by Crooked Hillary and the DNC. So the 13 Angry Democrats were investigating an event that never happened and that was in fact a made up Fraud. I just fought back....
-President Donald J. Trump
#trump#donald trump#tweet#twitter#donald j trump#president#tweet analysis#trump tweet analysis#no collusion#nocollusion#hillary#clinton#crooked h#@hillaryclinton#angry democrats#angry dems#angry and conflicted democrats#dems#democrats#democrat#dnc#@dnc#crooked hillary#get#straight#collusion#fact
0 notes
Text
Taboão da Serra tem 304 pessoas curadas da COVID-19 e 566 infectados - [Blog da Solange Pereira]
Taboão da Serra tem 304 pessoas curadas da COVID-19 e 566 infectados – [Blog da Solange Pereira]
Taboão da Serra alcançou neste domingo, dia 7, a marca de 304 recuperados da COVID-19 desde o dia 19 de março, quando o primeiro caso foi confirmado no município. De acordo com informações da Secretaria de Saúde, o número corresponde a 53,7% do total de 566 infectados.
E no último sábado foram confirmadas mais duas mortes, um homem, de 68 anos, com Dnc, estava internado na Hospital da Pedreira…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text
Index
INDEX
Abbas, Mahmoud, 231, 299
Abe, Shinzō, 106
Abraham Lincoln, USS, 182
Abramovich, Roman, 80
Adelson, Sheldon, 6, 141–43, 178, 289, 309
Afghanistan, 42, 263–68, 275–76
Agalarov, Aras, 254
Agenda, The (Woodward), 116
Ailes, Beth, 1, 4, 223–24
Ailes, Roger, 1–8, 11, 24, 26, 57, 59–60, 147, 164, 178–79, 195–98, 210, 212, 222–23
Alabama, 301–3
Al Shayrat airfield strike, 193–94
alt-right, 59, 116, 121, 128–29, 137–38, 174, 180, 296
American Prospect, 297
Anbang Insurance Group, 211
anti-Semitism, 140–44, 296
Anton, Michael, 105–6, 185, 229
Apprentice, The (TV show), 30, 76, 92, 109, 200
Arif, Tevfik, 100
Armey, Dick, 81
Arthur Andersen, 278
Art of the Deal, The (Trump and Schwartz), 22
Assad, Bashar al-, 183, 190
Atlantic City, 30, 99, 210
Atwater, Lee, 57
Australia, 78
Ayers, Nick, 240
Azerbaijan, 254
Bahrain, 231
Baier, Bret, 159–60
Baker, James, 27, 34
Baker, Peter, 277
Bannon, Steve, 185, 209, 247
Afghanistan and, 263–68
agenda of, in White House, 115–21, 275–77
agenda of, post-firing, 301–10
alt-right and, 137–38
background of, 55–60
campaign and, 3, 12–13, 17–18, 55, 86, 112–13, 201
Charlottesville and, 294–96
China and, 7–8, 297
Cohn and, 144, 146, 186
Comey firing and, 169–70, 211–15, 217–18, 232–33, 245–46, 261
CPAC and, 126–34
eve of inauguration and, 4–10
first weeks of presidency and, 52–55, 60–65, 67–70
Flynn and, 95, 103, 106
immigration and, 61–65, 77, 113
inauguration and, 42–43, 148
influence of, 70, 85, 108–10, 188
isolationism of, 227
Israel and, 140–43
Ivanka and, 146–48, 186–87, 211, 218–19, 221, 257
Jarvanka vs., 140, 174–82, 235–39, 243, 257, 261–62, 272, 274, 277, 280–81, 289–91
Kelly and, 287–91, 294–97
Kushner and, 69–70, 72, 77, 87, 110, 132, 134, 140–48
Kuttner call and firing of, 297–300, 307
media and, 38, 90–91, 93, 195–97, 206–9, 222
NSC and, 103, 176, 190–92
Obamacare and, 165–67, 170–72, 175
Paris Climate Accord and, 238–39
Pence and, 124
Priebus and, 33–34, 110
role of, in early presidency, 31–35
Russia investigation and, 7, 95, 97, 101, 154–55, 157, 170, 211, 233–46, 254–55, 257, 260–62, 278–81, 308
Ryan and, 161–63
Saudi Arabia and, 229–30
Scaramucci and, 268, 271, 274, 277, 281–85
Sessions and, 155, 241–42, 277–78
Syria and, 190–94
Trump on, 122–23
Trump pressured to fire, 173–82
Trump’s personality and, 21, 23, 35, 45, 47–48, 148–49, 158
Trump’s Times interview and, 277–78
White House appointments and, 4, 36, 86–87, 89, 189, 285
Barra, Mary, 88
Barrack, Tom, 27–29, 33, 42, 85, 233, 240
Bartiromo, Maria, 205
Bass, Edward, 56
Bayrock Group, 100–102
Bedminster Golf Club, 165, 213–14, 216, 287–94, 297, 302, 307
Beinart, Peter, 297
Benghazi, 97
Berkowitz, Avi, 143
Berlusconi, Silvio, 100
Berman, Mark, 78
Best and the Brightest, The (Halberstam), 53–54
Bezos, Jeff, 35
Biosphere 2, 56
Blackstone Group, 35, 78, 87, 298
Blackwater, 265
Blair, Tony, 156–58, 228
Blankfein, Lloyd, 144
Bloomberg, Michael, 117
Boehner, John, 26, 161
Boeing, 88
Bolton, John, 4–5, 189
border wall, 77–78, 228, 280, 303
Bossie, David, 58, 144, 177, 234, 237, 301
Bowles, Erskine, 27
Boyle, Matthew, 298–300
Boy Scouts of America, 284
Brady, Tom, 50
Brand, Rachel, 279
Breitbart, Andrew, 58–59
Breitbart News, 2, 32, 58–59, 62, 121, 126–29, 138, 160–62, 167, 179–80, 196, 207–8, 237, 266, 275, 297–98, 309
Brennan, John, 6, 41
Brexit, 5
Britain, 70, 157
Brooks, Mel, 15
Bryan, William Jennings, 45
Brzezinski, Mika, 66–69, 121, 176, 247–49
Brzezinski, Zbigniew, 66
Buckley, William F., 127
Bush, Billy, 10, 13–14, 34, 86, 96, 161
Bush, George H. W., 26, 27, 34, 126
Bush, George W., 16, 27, 44, 82, 90, 126, 128, 138, 182, 184, 199, 205, 225, 227, 264
Bush, Jeb, 21, 56, 138
business councils, 35, 87–88, 239, 298
Camp David, 84
Canada, 107, 228
Card, Andrew, 27
Carlson, Tucker, 140, 205
Carter, Arthur, 74–75
Carter, Graydon, 74, 199
Carter, Jimmy, 27, 66
Caslen, Robert L., Jr., 189
Celebrity Apprentice (TV show), 22
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 6, 17, 42, 48–51, 65, 102, 104, 263, 265, 267
Charlottesville rally, 292–96, 298
chemical weapons, 183–84, 190–93, 265
Cheney, Dick, 27
China, 6–8, 39, 100, 193–94, 211, 226, 228, 258, 267, 269–70, 297
Chopra, Deepak, 80
Christie, Chris, 16, 24–25, 30–31, 210, 242, 279
Christoff, Niki, 78
Churchill, Winston, 50
Circa news website, 159, 257
Clapper, James, 41, 214–15
Clinton, Bill, 23, 27, 54, 58, 90, 116, 123, 128, 158, 225, 228
impeachment of, 201, 233, 280
Clinton, Hillary, 3, 11–12, 18, 35, 69, 76, 87, 94, 97, 112, 134, 141, 144, 164, 204, 206, 233, 253, 269
Comey and, 169, 213, 216, 220, 245
Russian hacking of emails, 254, 259–60
Clinton Cash (Schweizer), 309
CNBC, 143, 207
CNN, 37, 39, 92, 159, 237, 298
Cohen, Michael, 278–80
Cohn, Gary, 89, 143–46, 170–71, 176, 186–87, 190, 229, 235, 258, 261, 270, 276, 285, 290, 296, 304–5
Cohn, Roy, 73, 141
Collins, Gail, 92
Comey, James, 6, 11, 168–70, 211–20, 223–24, 229, 232–33, 237, 242–45, 261–62, 280, 307
Commerce Department, 133
Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), 126–39
Conway, George, 201–2
Conway, Kellyanne, 9–10, 12, 18, 20, 33, 37, 39, 43, 45, 48, 60, 64, 81, 84, 86–87, 91, 93, 96–97, 107, 109, 112, 122, 127, 129, 132, 134, 146, 170, 175–76, 185, 188, 198–203, 205, 207, 209, 261, 269, 291
Corallo, Mark, 238, 257, 259–60, 280–81
Corker, Bob, 43
Corzine, Jon, 56, 144
Coulter, Ann, 29, 128, 138, 201, 205
Couric, Katie, 203
Cruz, Ted, 12, 201
DACA, 280
Daily Mail, 15, 308
Daley, Bill, 27
Davis, Lanny, 233, 238
Dean, John, 212–13
Defense Intelligence Agency, 101
Democratic National Committee (DNC), 101
Democratic Party, 37, 97, 212, 310
Deripaska, Oleg, 17, 101, 240
Devil’s Bargain, The (Green), 276, 289
DeVos, Betsy, 21, 129
DeYoung, Karen, 105–6
Dickerson, John, 209
Digital Entertainment Network, 56
Director of National Intelligence, 86, 214
Disney, 42, 88
Dowd, Mark, 281
Dubai, 39
Dubke, Mike, 208, 273
Duke, David, 141
Dunford, Joseph, 182
Egypt, 6, 81, 227, 231
elections
of 2008, 62, 111
of 2016, 18, 101–2, 309
of 2017, 301–2
of 2018, 171, 309–10
of 2020, 308–9
Emanuel, Rahm, 27
Enron, 278
environmental regulation, 182, 295
Epstein, Edward Jay, 102
Epstein, Jeffrey, 28
Europe, 5, 142
European Union, 99
executive orders (EOs), 120, 133
climate change, 182
immigration and travel ban, 61–65, 68, 70, 78, 95, 113, 117
executive privilege, 245, 278
Export-Import Bank, 271
Facebook, 21
Farage, Nigel, 275
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), 6, 11, 42, 96, 98, 101–2, 156, 159, 168–70, 210–20, 235, 244–46, 255, 281
Federalist Society, 86
Federal Reserve, 276
Fields, James Alex, Jr., 293
Financial Times, 278
First Amendment, 136
Five, The (TV show), 273
Florida, 60
Flynn, Michael, 4, 16–17, 95–96, 101–7, 154–55, 172, 176, 188–89, 191, 210, 220–21, 225, 227, 244, 280
Foer, Franklin, 99–102
Ford, Gerald, 27, 90
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance (FISA) Court, 95
Fourth Amendment, 16
Fox Business Channel, 205, 268, 270
Fox News, 1–3, 8, 24, 127–28, 140, 159, 195–97, 205, 217, 223, 237, 272, 284, 298
Franken, Al, 151–52
Freedom Caucus, 161, 171
Fusion GPS, 37, 99
G20 summit, 257
Gaddafi, Muammar, 270
Gamergate, 59
Gawker, 308
Gaza, 6
Gazprom, 101
Geffen, David, 12, 178
General Electric (GE), 88
General Motors, 88
Georgia (post-Soviet), 226
Gingrich, Newt, 177
Giuliani, Rudy, 16, 30, 86–87, 210, 242, 279
Glover, Juleanna, 78
Glover Park Group, 203
Goldman Sachs, 55–56, 81–82, 119, 143–49, 174, 179, 184, 270, 305
Goldman Sachs Foundation, 82
Goldwater, Barry, 127
Gore, Al, 123
Gorka, Sebastian, 129
Gorsuch, Neil, 85–87, 133
Grimm, Michael, 310
Guardian, 276
Guilfoyle, Kimberly, 223, 272–73, 284
H-1B visas, 36
Haberman, Maggie, 91–92, 206–7, 277
Hagin, Joe, 186, 229
Hahn, Julia, 236
Haig, Alexander, 27
Halberstam, David, 53–55
Haldeman, H. R., 27
Haley, Nikki, 305–6
Hall, Jerry, 19
Halperin, Mark, 217
Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, king of Bahrain, 231
Hanley, Allie, 127, 139
Hannity, Sean, 68, 195–96, 222–24, 309
Harder, Charles, 308
Haspel, Gina, 157
Health and Human Services Department (HHS), 166
Hemingway, Mark, 38
Heritage Foundation, 162
Heyer, Heather, 293
Hicks, Hope, 13, 26, 109, 150–54, 158, 160, 185, 188, 198–201, 203–9, 213, 216–17, 229, 235, 247, 258–59, 261–62, 271, 277, 279, 281, 297, 307
Hiltzik, Matthew, 203–4, 207
Hitler, Adolf, 127
HNA Group, 269
Hogan, Hulk, 22, 308
Homeland Security Department, 63, 86, 133, 218, 285, 288
Hoover, J. Edgar, 219
Hubbell, Webster, 97
Hull, Cordell, 105
Hussein, Saddam, 27
Hutchison, Kay Bailey, 81
IBM, 88
Icahn, Carl, 20, 141, 211
Iger, Bob, 88, 238
immigration and travel ban, 36, 62–65, 68, 70, 78, 95, 113, 116–17, 138, 288
infrastructure, 224, 295
Ingraham, Laura, 201, 205, 222
intelligence community, 6–7, 41–42, 98, 101–2, 104, 153, 159, 219
Internet Gaming Entertainment (IGE), 56–57
In the Face of Evil (documentary), 58
Iran, 4, 191, 225–27
Iraq, 42, 49, 128, 138, 182
ISIS, 7, 49, 219
isolationism, 118, 174, 184, 191, 227
Israel, 4, 6, 140–43, 211, 219, 227, 230, 265, 281, 289
Jackson, Andrew, 44, 67, 158
Jackson, Michael, 28, 42
Japan, 39, 106
Jarrett, Valerie, 129
Jefferson, Thomas, 293
Jerusalem, 6
Jews, 73, 140–45, 157, 293
John Birch Society, 127
Johnson, Boris, 70
Johnson, Jamie, 79–80
Johnson, Lyndon B., 6–7, 53, 66, 158, 167
Johnson, Woody, 12
Jones, Paula, 201
Jordan, 6
Jordan, Hamilton, 27
Jordan, Vernon, 78
Justice Department (DOJ), 94–96, 98, 105, 151, 154–56, 168–69, 210, 216–17, 242
Kaepernick, Colin, 303
Kalanick, Travis, 88
Kaplan, Peter, 74–76
Kasowitz, Marc, 238, 259–60, 280–81
Kazakhstan, 281
Keaton, Alex P., 128
Kelly, John, 4, 63, 109, 188, 218, 285, 287–91, 294–97, 299–300, 304–7
Kennedy, John F., 53, 84
Kent, Phil, 92
Khan Sheikhoun chemical attack, 183–84, 188–93
Kim Jong-un, 293
King, Martin Luther, Jr., 50–51
Kirk, Russell, 127
Kislyak, Sergey, 95, 106, 151, 154–55, 218, 236
Kissinger, Henry, 41, 77, 142, 145, 193, 226–28
Koch brothers, 178
Kudlow, Larry, 143, 207
Ku Klux Klan (KKK), 294–95
Kurtz, Howard, 217
Kushner, Charlie, 17, 31, 72, 210–11, 257, 281
Kushner, Jared
background of, 28, 71–76, 80–81
Bannon and, 8, 12, 52–53, 68, 110, 115, 132–34, 140, 145–47, 154, 173–74, 176, 179–82, 187, 191, 207–8, 235–36, 238–39, 243, 245–47, 274, 276, 281, 289, 291, 297
business affairs of, 17–18, 102, 211, 256, 281
business council and, 35, 87–88
Charlottesville rally and, 294
China and, 193, 211, 228
Christie and, 31
Comey and, 168–70, 210–14, 216–18, 232, 243, 245, 280, 307
CPAC and, 132–34
electoral victory and, 10, 12, 18–19, 45, 60, 103, 112
intelligence community and, 41–42, 48, 156–57
Kelly and, 288–91, 294, 305–6
McMaster and, 176, 189, 192–93, 235, 266, 289
media and, 68–69, 76, 146, 202–3, 207, 277–79
Mexico and, 77–78
Middle East and, 70, 140–43, 145, 157, 182, 192, 194, 211, 266, 268
Murdoch and, 73, 156, 179
Obamacare and, 72, 166–68
Office of American Innovation and, 181, 207
policy and, 115–25, 226, 228
role of, in White House, 29–30, 40–41, 64, 69–72, 77, 93, 109, 172, 285
Russia and, 24, 106, 154–56, 170, 236, 239, 253–58, 261, 271, 273, 278, 280, 283–84, 307–8
Saudi Arabia and, 225–29
Trump’s speech to Congress and, 149–51
White House staff and, 33, 110, 121, 140, 143–49, 186, 253, 268, 271–74, 282–83, 286
Kushner, Josh, 69, 166
Kushner Companies, 256
Kuttner, Robert, 297–98
labor unions, 67–68
Ledeen, Michael, 104
Lee, Robert E., 293
Lefrak, Richard, 27
Le Pen, Marine, 100
Lewandowski, Corey, 11–13, 17, 26, 28–29, 204, 234, 237–38, 252–53, 255
Lewinsky, Monica, 233
Libya, 6, 42
Lighthizer, Robert, 133
Limbaugh, Rush, 128, 222
Lowe, Rob, 42
Luntz, Frank, 201
Manafort, Paul, 12, 17, 28, 101, 210, 240, 253–56, 278, 280
Manhattan, Inc., 74
Manigault, Omarosa, 109
Mar-a-Lago, 4, 69, 99, 106, 159, 189, 193–94, 210, 228, 248–49
Marcus, Bernie, 309
Mattis, James, 4, 21, 103, 109, 188, 264–65, 288, 296, 304–5
May, Theresa, 258
McCain, John, 112, 306
McCarthy, Joe, 73
McConnell, Mitch, 32, 117, 301–2
McCormick, John, 167
McGahn, Don, 95, 212–14, 217
McLaughlin, John, 10
McMaster, H. R., 109, 176, 185, 188–93, 211, 235, 258, 263–68, 276–77, 288–89, 298–99, 304–5
McNerney, Jim, 88
Meadows, Mark, 161, 163, 171
Medicare, 165
Melton, Carol, 78
Mensch, Louise, 160
Mercer, Rebekah, 12, 58–59, 121, 127, 135, 139, 177–80, 201, 208, 309
Mercer, Robert, 12, 58–59, 112, 177–80, 201, 309
Mexico, 39, 62, 77, 93, 228
Middle East, 29, 70, 140, 145, 157, 190, 211, 224–33, 242, 264
Mighty Ducks, The (TV show), 56
military contractors, 265, 267
Miller, Jason, 234, 237–38, 299
Miller, Stephen, 61, 64–65, 89, 133, 148, 209, 213, 229, 258, 307
Mnuchin, Steve, 13, 133, 290, 296, 304
Mohammed bin Nayef, crown prince of Saudi Arabia (MBN), 228, 231
Mohammed bin Salman, crown prince of Saudi Arabia (MBS), 224–31
Moore, Roy, 302–4
Morgan, Piers, 22
Morning Joe (TV show), 32, 66–67, 121, 189, 247–48
MSNBC, 66, 106, 247
Ms. Universe contest, 38–39
Mueller, Robert, 220–21, 223, 229–30, 232–33, 238–41, 243, 256, 258, 261–62, 277–80, 306, 308
Mulvaney, Mick, 116, 171, 185, 285
Murdoch, Chloe, 156
Murdoch, Grace, 156
Murdoch, Rupert, 2, 8, 19–20, 32, 36, 60–61, 73–74, 80–81, 93, 121, 147, 156–57, 178–79, 195–98, 223, 289, 298
Murdoch, Wendi, 19, 80, 156
Murphy, Mike, 56
Musk, Elon, 35, 78, 88, 238
National Economic Council, 89, 143–44
National Environment Policy Act (1970), 182
National Football League, 303–4
nationalists, 133–34, 138, 174, 276, 293, 301–2
National Policy Institute, 127
National Republican Senatorial Committee, 112
National Security Advisor
Brzezinski as, 66
Flynn as, 4, 17, 95, 101–7, 191
McMaster as, 176, 188–89
Rice as, 6, 41
National Security Agency (NSA), 102, 223
National Security Council (NSC), 42, 103, 105, 176, 185–86, 190–91, 193, 265, 267
Navarro, Peter, 133
Nazi Germany, 7
NBC, 66, 92
neoconservatives, 4, 128, 227
neo-Nazis, 137, 292–95
Netanyahu, Benjamin, 6, 142, 231
New Republic, 98, 297
Newsom, Gavin, 272
New Yorker, 37, 56, 151, 154, 215, 284–85
New York magazine, 74
New York Observer, 72–76, 141
New York Post, 15, 74, 113, 207
New York Times, 37, 51, 90–92, 96, 151–53, 196, 205, 207, 211, 236, 237, 257, 259–60, 266, 271, 277
Nixon, Richard M., 2, 8, 26–27, 41, 54, 90, 93, 212–13, 222
Nooyi, Indra, 88–89
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), 77
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), 99
North Korea, 291–93, 297
Nunberg, Sam, 11, 13, 16, 22, 144, 237–38, 248, 282, 291, 300
Nunes, Devin, 170
Obama, Barack, 27, 35–36, 41–45, 54, 61–63, 67, 90, 101, 104, 128, 164, 187, 215, 250, 269, 295
birth certificate and, 62, 295
DOJ and, 94–96, 210, 279
executive orders and, 61
farewell speech, 36
Flynn and, 101
immigration and, 63
Middle East and, 6–7, 42, 183, 190, 225, 227, 231, 263–66
Russia and, 95, 151–54, 156
Trump inauguration and, 43–44
White House Correspondents’ Dinner and, 198
wiretapping and, 157–60
Obamacare repeal and replace, 72, 116–17, 164–67, 170–71, 175, 224, 283, 285, 290
Office of American Innovation, 180–81, 207
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), 116, 185, 285
O’Neill, Tip, 167
opioid crisis, 291
O’Reilly, Bill, 195–96, 222
Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development, 271
Oscar insurance company, 72
Osnos, Evan, 154
Page, Carter, 101
Palestinians, 227, 230–32
Panetta, Leon, 27
Paris Climate Accord, 182, 238–39, 301
PayPal, 21
Pelosi, Nancy, 78
Peña Nieto, Enrique, 77–78, 228
Pence, Karen, 124, 209
Pence, Mike, 92, 95, 106–7, 123–24, 171, 209, 218, 240
Pentagon, 7, 55
Perelman, Ronald, 73, 141
Perlmutter, Ike, 141
Petraeus, David, 263–64
Pierce, Brock, 56–57
Planned Parenthood, 117
Playbook, 171
Podesta, John, 27
Politico, 171
Pompeo, Mike, 49, 51, 157, 306
populists, 6, 24, 31, 100, 113, 118, 142, 174–75, 177, 276, 301
Powell, Dina, 81–82, 145–46, 176–77, 184–88, 190, 192–94, 229, 235–36, 258, 261, 265–67, 276, 279, 285, 296, 306
Preate, Alexandra, 1, 32, 130, 207–8, 238, 249, 275, 278–79, 299
Pre-Election Presidential Transition Act (2010), 24
Price, Tom, 165–66, 171, 291
Priebus, Reince, 77, 86, 144, 146, 150, 166, 171–73, 176, 203, 205, 207, 209, 229, 238, 257, 296, 304
business councils and, 89
campaign and, 9–10, 13, 18, 112–13
chief of staff appointment and, 26, 32–34, 60, 64–65, 67–70, 109–10, 117–24, 243–44, 305
CPAC and, 127, 130–34
Flynn and, 95, 106
inauguration and, 45, 52
Obama wiretapping story and, 159–60
resignation of, 282–85, 307
Russia investigation and, 171, 211–14, 216–17, 232–34, 261–62
Scaramucci and, 270–72, 282–85
Prince, Erik, 265, 267
Private Eye magazine, 74
Producers, The (film), 15–16
Pruitt, Scott, 21
Putin, Vladimir, 7, 8, 24, 37–38, 99–102, 153, 155
Qatar, 230–31
Raffel, Josh, 142, 207, 258–59, 279
Reagan, Ronald, 26, 27, 34, 58, 90, 126–27, 144, 201, 222
Remnick, David, 154
Renaissance Technologies, 58
Republican National Committee (RNC), 10–11, 13, 26, 28, 30, 32–33, 52, 112, 119, 172, 205
Republican National Convention, 21, 26, 28, 253
Republican Party, 2, 18, 30, 40–41, 81, 86, 98, 111–12, 117–21, 128, 161–67, 171–72, 201, 290, 303
fracturing of, 179–80, 253, 283, 306, 309–10
Rhodes, Ben, 41, 154, 159, 185, 215
Rice, Susan, 7, 41, 153
Rometty, Ginni, 88
Rose, Charlie, 309
Rosen, Hillary, 78
Rosenstein, Rod, 212, 214, 216–21, 279
Ross, Wilbur, 78, 133, 229–30
Roth, Steven, 27, 141
Rove, Karl, 57, 238
Rumsfeld, Donald, 27
Russia, 24, 37–39, 92, 151–56, 160, 190–91, 236–46, 273, 303, 307–8
Bannon on, 6–7, 238–40, 278–83
Comey and, 168–70, 210–20, 242, 244–45
Don Jr. Trump Tower meeting and, 253–61, 271–72, 307
Foer’s theories on, 99–102
Flynn and, 17, 95, 102–7, 154–56
investigations begun, 41, 94–107
Kushner and, 41–42, 80, 102, 154–56, 168–70, 210–14, 218, 226, 236–37, 245–46, 254–56, 273, 278, 281, 283–84, 307–8
money trail and, 278–83
Mueller appointed special counsel, 220–21, 223, 229–30, 232–33, 238, 239, 241, 243, 261–62, 278–80
Obama wiretapping story and, 157–60
sanctions and, 105–7, 226
Sessions and, 151–52, 155–56, 245–46
Syria and, 190–91, 226
Steele dossier and, 37–39, 92–93, 102, 151, 156
Russian oligarchs, 17, 81, 100–101, 254
Ryan, Paul, 32, 117–21, 159–67, 170–72, 224
Sandberg, Sheryl, 187, 236
Sanders, Bernie, 5
Sanders, Sarah Huckabee, 229
Sater, Felix, 100–101, 278
Saturday Night Live (TV show), 89, 91, 93, 208, 276
Saudi Arabia, 6, 224–32, 236
Saval, Nikil, 276
Scaramucci, Anthony, 268–74, 277, 281–86, 288, 307
Scarborough, Joe, 32, 47, 66–69, 81, 121, 147, 176, 247–49
Scavino, Dan, 229
Schiller, Keith, 217, 229
Schlapp, Matt, 127, 129, 131–33
Schlapp, Mercedes, 129
Schmidt, Michael, 277
Schwartz, Arthur, 249, 298–300
Schwartz, Tony, 22
Schwarzman, Stephen, 35, 78, 87–88, 298
Secret Service, 84
Seinfeld (TV series), 56
Sekulow, Jay, 281
Sessions, Jeff, 4, 59, 61–62, 64, 94, 138, 151–52, 155–56, 170, 212, 214, 216–18, 220, 241–42, 245–46, 261, 277, 279–80, 302
Sinclair organization, 159
Sisi, Abdel Fattah el-, 231
60 Minutes (TV show), 309
666 Fifth Avenue, 211, 281
Skybridge Capital, 269–70
Slate, 98–99
Slovenia, 15
Smith, Justin, 78
Snowden, Edward, 42, 95
Soros, George, 178
Special Operations, 265
Spencer, Richard, 127, 129–30, 137–39, 292–94
Spicer, Sean, 10, 47–48, 64, 91, 96, 122, 132, 160, 205–7, 211, 217–18, 223, 229, 251–52, 257–58, 261, 272–73, 282, 286, 296, 307
Spy magazine, 74
Starr, Ken, 233
State Department, 63, 86, 228–29, 231
Steele, Christopher, 37, 99
Steele dossier, 37–39, 92–93, 102, 151, 156
steel industry, 67–68
Steinmetz, Benny, 211
Stone, Roger, 13, 17, 55, 288
Strange, Luther, 302–4
Strategic and Policy Forum, 87–89
Suzy magazine, 15
Swan, Jonathan, 299
Syria, 42, 183–84, 188–93, 219, 226, 265
Taliban, 267
tax reform, 87, 167, 224, 290
Tea Party, 5, 18, 26, 33, 58–59, 128, 161–63
Thiel, Peter, 21, 222, 309
Thrush, Glenn, 91, 277
Tillerson, Rex, 4, 21, 86, 211, 225, 229, 265, 267, 296, 304–6
Time magazine, 50, 56, 93, 130, 147, 276
Time Warner, 78, 92
trade, 116, 174, 276
transgender ban, 284
Treasury Department, 133
Trotta, Liz, 223
Trudeau, Justin, 107, 228
Truman, Harry, 61
Trump, Barron, 14
Trump, Don, Jr., 17–18, 27, 204, 252–61, 271, 278–79, 307
Trump, Donald
Abe meeting at Mar-a-Lago and, 106
Afghanistan and, 263–68
Ailes on, 2–8
Ailes’s funeral and, 222–24
Alabama GOP Senate run-off, 301–4
Apprentice and, 30, 76
Bannon and, 1–8, 31–32, 35, 52–53, 59–65, 93, 122, 146–47, 158, 187, 190–91, 232–37, 289, 301, 308–10
Bannon firing and, 173–83, 298–300
Billy Bush tape and, 13–14, 34
business and finances of, 17–18, 36–37, 39, 99, 100, 102, 240, 252–53, 277–79
business councils and, 87–89, 298
cabinet appointments and, 4–5, 86
campaign and, 3, 12–18, 59–60, 66–67, 99, 101, 112, 114, 134, 157, 201–4
Canada and, 228
chaotic leadership style of, 108–24
Charlottesville and, 293–96, 298
China and, 193–95, 228, 297–98
Comey and, 168–69, 210–20, 224, 232–33, 242, 244–46
Congress and, 116–18
Conway and, 146–47, 200–203
CPAC and, 126–39
DOJ and, 155–56, 168–69
electoral victory of, 3, 9–20, 24, 34–39
executive orders and, 61–65, 120
fake news and, 39, 48, 135–36, 152, 168, 215, 237
Flynn and, 103–4, 106–7
foreign policy and, 184, 226–28
future of presidency of, 308–10
Gorsuch nomination and, 85–87
Haley and, 305–6
Hannity interview and, 309
Harrisburg trip and, 209
immigration and, 61–65, 68, 117
inauguration and, 1, 40–44, 47–51, 251
information and influences on, 70–71, 108–9, 113–16, 188, 192–93
intelligence briefings and, 115
intelligence community and, 41–42
Israel and, 231
Ivanka and, 69–71, 79–80, 181, 187, 237, 252, 257–58, 290
Jews and, 140–44
Kelly as chief of staff and, 285–91, 294–97, 304–7
Kislyak meeting in Oval Office and, 218–19
Kushner and, 40, 69–73, 93, 122, 126, 142, 145, 179, 181–82, 211, 252–53, 290
McMaster and, 188–90, 193, 289
media and, 34–35, 39, 46–47, 51, 74–76, 89–93, 96–99, 195–209, 215, 224, 247–51, 260
Melania and, 14–15, 43
Mercers and, 178–80
Mexico and, 77–78, 228
Mueller investigation and, 220–21, 223, 229–30, 232–33, 238–41, 243, 256, 258, 261–62, 277–80, 306, 308
Murdoch and, 19–20, 60–61
New York Times interview of, 277
NFL controversy and, 303–4
nightly phone calls and, 85, 92, 121–23, 158, 188, 210, 215, 230, 279
normalizing influences on, 138, 179, 183–88
North Korea and, 106, 291–93, 298
Obamacare and, 164–71, 175, 224, 283
Obama wiretapping accusation and, 157–60
O’Reilly and, 196–97
pardon power and, 256
Paris Climate Accord and, 238–39
Pence and, 123
personality and behavior of, 21–24, 35, 54–55, 70–73, 83, 114, 158, 232, 242–31, 248, 303
phone calls with foreign leaders, 78
political style of, 45–48, 249–51
popular vote and, 34
press secretary and, 110, 205–6, 272–74
Priebus as chief of staff and, 26–34, 109–10, 122, 146, 187, 243, 285
Republican Party and, 112, 163
right wing and, 196–97, 222–23, 237
Russia and, 24, 37–39, 41, 95–107, 151–54, 168, 190–91, 212, 218–21, 236–42, 244–45, 253–62, 271–72, 278–79, 283, 303, 307–8
Saudi Arabia and, 224–32
Scaramucci and, 269–71, 273–74, 282–84
Scarborough and Brzezinski and, 66–69, 247–49
Sessions and, 155–56, 241–42, 245, 277, 284
sexual harassment and, 23, 238
sons and, 252–53
speaking style of, 135–37
speech at Huntsville for Strange, 303–4
speech to Boy Scouts, 284
speech to CIA, 48–51, 65
speech to joint session of Congress, 147–50
staff doubts about, 186, 232–33, 242–43, 304–5
staff infighting and, 122–23
Syria and, 183–84, 188–93
tax reform and, 224
tax returns and, 18, 278
television and, 113, 150, 188, 197
transition and, 24–36, 103, 110, 112, 144
White House Correspondents’ dinner and, 198–99, 208–9
White House living quarters and, 70, 83–85, 90–92
women as confidants of, 199–200
Yates and, 94–96, 98, 214–16
Trump, Eric, 17, 27, 252–53
Trump, Freddy (brother), 72
Trump, Fred (father), 72, 90, 295
Trump, Ivanka, 13, 15, 17–19, 64
Afghanistan and, 266–68
background of, 73, 75, 78–81, 141, 179
Bannon and, 145, 147, 174, 176, 179–81, 187, 208, 235–39, 243, 261–62, 267, 274, 276, 280–81, 289, 291, 297
Charlottesville rally and, 294
China dinner and, 194
Christie and, 31
Comey and, 170, 210–13, 216–17, 233, 237, 245, 261–62
Haley and, 305
Kelly and, 288–90, 306
media and, 156, 202–3, 207, 272–73, 277–79
Obamacare and, 166
Paris Climate Accord and, 239
Powell and, 81–82, 140, 145–46, 186–88
Russia and, 239, 256–58, 261–62, 273, 307–8
Saudi Arabia and, 229, 231
Syria and, 190, 192
White House role of, 68–71, 78–81, 118–19, 181, 187, 200, 252, 285
White House staff and, 124, 146–48, 202–3, 268, 272–73, 282–83, 286, 289
Trump, Melania, 14–15, 18, 29, 43–44, 84, 229, 231, 291, 308
Trump International Hotels, 43, 200–201, 298, 300
Trump SoHo, 210
Trump Tower, 25, 35–37, 60, 83–84, 100, 108
Don Jr. meeting with Russians at, 253–61, 271–72, 307
Kislyak meeting with Kushner and Flynn at, 154
surveillance of, 158–59
Turkey, 104, 226
Twenty-Fifth Amendment, 297, 308
Uber, 78, 88
Ukraine, 101, 226, 240
U.S. Congress, 41, 61, 98, 120, 147–49, 152, 163, 165, 166, 216–17, 238–39, 244, 306, 310
U.S. Constitution, 16
U.S. House of Representatives Budget Committee, 162
Intelligence Committee, 168, 170
Obamacare repeal and, 161–62, 171–72
Ways and Means Committee, 162
U.S. Senate, 59, 94
Judiciary Committee, Crime and Terrorism Subcommittee, 214–15
Foreign Relations Committee, 43
Intelligence Committee, 242, 244–45
Obamacare and, 283, 285
US Steel, 67
U.S. Supreme Court, 85–86, 251
University of Virginia, “Unite the Right” rally at, 293–94
unmasking, 96, 160
Vanity Fair, 74, 75, 199
Venezuela, 293
Vietnam War, 53, 264
Vogue, 35
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, 201, 269
Walker, Scott, 33
Wall Street 2 (film), 270
Walsh, Katie, 10, 18, 52, 64, 110–17, 119–25, 144, 161, 163, 168, 171–72, 181–82, 187, 239, 303
Washington Post, 35, 37, 56, 78, 95–97, 105–6, 151–52, 155, 206, 211, 236, 237, 266
Washington Times, 129
Watergate scandal, 212–13, 278
Weekly Standard, 38
Weinstein, Harvey, 203
Weissmann, Andrew, 278
Welch, Jack, 88
West Bank, 6
White House communications director
Dubke as, 208
Hicks as, 297, 307
Scaramuccci as, 273–74, 281–86
White House Correspondents’ Dinner, 198–99, 208
White House ethics office, 270
White House Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs, 270–71
white supremacy, 127, 138, 293–96
Whitewater affair, 58, 97
WikiLeaks, 153, 254
Wintour, Anna, 35–36
Wirthlin, Richard, 201
Women Who Work (Ivanka Trump), 79
Woodward, Bob, 54, 116
World Bank, 257
World Wrestling Entertainment, 22
Wynn, Steve, 30
Xi Jinping, 193, 228, 258
Yaffa, Joshua, 154
Yahoo! News, 37
Yanukovych, Viktor, 101
Yates, Sally, 94–96, 98, 104, 214–16
Yemen, 6
Yiannopoulos, Milo, 128–28, 138
Zhukova, Dasha, 80
Zucker, Jeff, 92
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
MICHAEL WOLFF has received numerous awards for his work, including two National Magazine Awards. He has been a regular columnist for Vanity Fair, New York, The Hollywood Reporter, British GQ, USA Today, and The Guardian. He is the author of six prior books, including the bestselling Burn Rate and The Man Who Owns the News. He lives in Manhattan and has four children.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Im A Millennial Republican And Im Sick Of All The Crying
Let me start by asking: do you remember a time when ones political leanings were a topic kept wholly and unequivocally private? I do. I remember when it was uncouth, improper, and just plain rude to ask someone who they voted for and why outside of intimate family and loved ones. Do you want to know why that was such an excellent practice? Because it didnt drive a stake between you, me, and everyone else. At the end of the day, your take on abortion, on the death penalty, on civil rights these are the innermost things about you. They are very personal opinions. This is part of the reason I am so against the liberal attitude. I dont feel the need to scream my opinions from every abstract rooftop I can find, gathering people to my cause. I also dont feel the need to cast people from my proverbial Olympus when they have (the audacity) to disagree with me or my causes. This past year has been a media circus and a shitshow. Ive long gone quiet as members of my party are painted as racists, bigots, and terrible people. It wasnt enough that the silent majority showed up on Election Day and blew your minds to say were here, were relevant, the Republican personality is still constantly under fire.
I am a young, female Republican that has voted for candidates from both major political parties. And I didnt make that decision blanketed in the ignorance of privilege. Privilege, especially racial privilege, is part of my life certainly. But I have suffered personally the way everyone suffers. And that is an important piece of knowledge to remember. Everyone comes from struggle. No one has a perfect life. Since when did the national currency become sympathy and pity? I have zero let me reiterate ZERO interest in playing the who had the worse life game with people my age. Because, believe me, I could play hardball if I wanted to about individual suffering. But I enjoy my privacy, and my dirty laundry is, unfortunately, none of your business. My struggle is not why people should notice me and remember my life. My sad story doesnt chalk up my measure of relevance. How about my sense of humor? My undying loyalty? My work ethic? Those are the things I want celebrated. Not the fact that Ive survived what Ive survived. And because Ive lived through real trauma, I want that to be the thing that defines me least. Todays democrat seems to be a card carrying member in the belief of youre only as good as what youve overcome, when theyre also championing the hope that one day, no one will have to overcome anything.
I voted for Donald Trump. Not out of choice, but out of necessity. Thats who my party chose as its representative. And, sorry to say it DNC, your party didnt bring a valuable player to the table. Im not going to be star-spangled thrilled for Hillary just because we share the common biological fact of both owning uteruses. Do I LIKE Donald Trump? No, I think hes a big mouth who says stupid things and isnt representative character of what I believe a president should be. But neither was Hillary Clinton. And neither was Barack Obama. In the light of no choice, I made one in the voting booth rather than being inactive.And maybe this is hard for whoever holds the position of POTUS, but I swear to God, there needs to be a stop on the current Commander in Chief rolling over like a pig in shit over the celebrity of the position. Youre not a celebrity you are much, much more than that. Youre our face to the rest of the world. Not a fucking actor or someone who shakes their shit on stage for my amusement. Youre not a star, youre a country. Thats the job you signed up for. Not appearing on fucking Between Two Ferns. Not creating photo ops of you shooting hoops with Steph Curry. Youre more than a meme and more than a dad joke. Act like it. Do you know why I didnt vote for Hillary Clinton? Because she was so goddamn condescending. What, because Im in my twenties, and youre parading Jay-Z and Beyonces endorsement in my face, thats it? Vote won? I dont fucking think so. The absolute last thing I am concerned about when it comes to a president is who star-studded, ZERO political acumen Los-fucking-Angeles is voting for. If the 1% of people who are so removed from financial burden, from prejudice, from hardship of any kind, thinks youre the end all be all of White House potential thats a major red flag for me. The American public and the American millennial is so much more than our likes on Facebook and what we read on Buzzfeed. And if thats not obvious to you, then youre not my candidate. Stop bumping tits with Katy Perry go to fucking Wisconsin.
Socially, Im a liberal person. I love the LGBT and queer community, and they should have every opportunity and every right to be happy in this world, whatever that may be. I believe in racial equality. Just because your ancestors were born closer to the equator than mine (because thats exactly what difference in skin color is) is a non-fucking-entity and should be treated as such. As a professional woman fighting to find a place in corporate America, Im definitely a feminist. I believe women of any and all races are capable, smart, better than the female stereotype, and a million other wonderful things. And you can keep your abortions, too, because I think theyre a necessity for people in special cases. But that doesnt mean abortions are for me. Were literally arguing a matter of life or death here, and just in case the sign-slinging left is wrong when we all meet our maker, Id rather not fall on that side of the line. Our welfare system is a broken, shell of a thing that doesnt find the people that need it and allows itself to be taken advantage of by far too many. I believe in a right to bear arms, because as a survivor of rape and someone who lives in a big city, theres no way Im going through that shit a second time. I believe in a capitalist country where the ceiling is only as high as you settle for, for individual instances of prosperity. The economy is a balancing act, and the more Obama poured his efforts into urban centers (his voters shocker), the more the working class in Middle America suffered.
To me, the prime segregator between a millennial voter of opposing parties boils down to one thing attitude. Far too many people today have their hands out for what they can get for as little effort as possible. Far too many people are bleeding hearts for every sob story. The modern democrat isnt waging a war against Donald Trump, theyre waging a war against a persons choice to be an asshole. If I want to be selfish with the money Ive earned and see as much of it possible in my paycheck, I have that right. If I choose to be uncaring about whatever cause and its GoFundMe than youve posted, thats okay, too. And you can turn your nose up at it as much as you want, but it doesnt stop it from being true. Newsflash, enlightened NYC hipster you are not the only people that exist. Just because you majored in philosophy at Fordham doesnt mean youre some renaissance man. Its fucking disgusting to paint a Republican as uneducated. I have a Masters Degree, and you can suck on it. In their efforts to be a social media vigilante for every Tom, Dick, and Harry with a struggle, the democrats have become the bullies. Theyll shame, troll, and shit on anyone who doesnt think Bernie Sanders is the fucking Messiah. In their efforts to encircle everyone in their warm, squishy embrace, theyve fleshed out an entire stereotype against 304 electoral districts worth of voters. The tables have turned youre the assholes, now. Youre no better than the Duck Dynasty backwater racists you paint most Republicans to be. Ripping down blue ribbons for law enforcement, Facebook status making, weeping on the picket line, crying on each others shoulders in the auditorium, straight up assholes. My struggle doesnt define me. My shortcomings are not my identifiers. I dont need your pity. And when I need your support, Ill ask for it.In the modern Democrats mission for extreme tolerance, theyve become the alienators. So pull your head out of your ass, young blowhard. Take a look around. Its never going to be Kumbaya for the masses. There is no safe space.
Read more: http://ift.tt/2jZQP4q
from Im A Millennial Republican And Im Sick Of All The Crying
0 notes
Text
New Post has been published on FlightsGlobal.net
New Post has been published on http://flightsglobal.net/what-drives-a-michigan-photo-booth-company-owner-crazy/
What Drives a Michigan Photo Booth Company Owner Crazy
Looking For Cheap Flights To Detroit
window.TP_FORM_SETTINGS = window.TP_FORM_SETTINGS || ; window.TP_FORM_SETTINGS["7b63d9f18df1c4d56c01f476351c29ab"] = "handle": "7b63d9f18df1c4d56c01f476351c29ab", "widget_name": "Find cheap Flights And Hotel", "border_radius": "2", "additional_marker": null, "width": null, "show_logo": false, "show_hotels": true, "form_type": "avia_hotel", "locale": "en", "currency": "usd", "sizes": "default", "search_target": "_blank", "active_tab": "avia", "search_host": "cheap.flightsglobal.net/flights", "hotels_host": "cheap.flightsglobal.net/hotels", "hotel": "name": "Detroit", "location": "United States", "hotels_count": "31", "search_id": "19382", "search_type": "city", "country_name": "United States" , "hotel_alt": "Hotellook offers great deals and discounts on hotels worldwide", "avia_alt": "", "retargeting": true, "trip_class": "economy", "depart_date": null, "return_date": null, "check_in_date": null, "check_out_date": null, "id": 90925, "marker": 120906, "origin": "name": "" , "destination": "iata": "DTT" , "color_scheme": "name": "custom", "icons": "icons_black", "background": "#ffffff", "color": "#002551", "border_color": "#c1c1c1", "button": "#FFA600", "button_text_color": "#ffffff", "input_border": "#ffffff" , "hotels_type": "hotellook_host", "best_offer": "locale": "en", "currency": "usd", "marker": 120906, "search_host": "cheap.flightsglobal.net/flights", "offers_switch": true, "api_url": "//minprices-jetradar.aviasales.ru/minimal_prices/offers.json", "routes": [ "one_way": false, "origin": "name": "" , "destination": "iata": "DTT" ] , "hotel_logo_host": "hotellook.com", "search_logo_host": "www.jetradar.com", "hotel_marker_format": "marker=", "hotelscombined_marker": null, "responsive": true, "height": 276 ;
Cheap Flights to Detroit
Origin Departure date Return date Find Ticket
Atlanta
28.01.2017
04.02.2017
Tickets from 74
New York
03.02.2017
16.02.2017
Tickets from 85
Denver
01.02.2017
05.02.2017
Tickets from 101
Philadelphia
23.01.2017
03.02.2017
Tickets from 103
Boston
22.02.2017
26.02.2017
Tickets from 107
Tampa
28.01.2017
31.01.2017
Tickets from 110
Fort Lauderdale
27.01.2017
30.01.2017
Tickets from 141
Dallas
11.03.2017
18.03.2017
Tickets from 144
Phoenix
22.03.2017
28.04.2017
Tickets from 181
New Orleans
17.02.2017
20.02.2017
Tickets from 203
Miami
11.03.2017
18.03.2017
Tickets from 207
Las Vegas
20.02.2017
27.02.2017
Tickets from 235
Los Angeles
27.02.2017
05.03.2017
Tickets from 253
Salt Lake City
02.03.2017
21.03.2017
Tickets from 256
Austin
04.05.2017
07.05.2017
Tickets from 274
Seattle
01.06.2017
23.08.2017
Tickets from 300
Vancouver
24.04.2017
01.05.2017
Tickets from 304
Grand Rapids
30.03.2017
05.04.2017
Tickets from 309
Houston
23.01.2017
23.01.2017
Tickets from 369
San Diego
17.05.2017
21.05.2017
Tickets from 373
Helena
17.02.2017
27.02.2017
Tickets from 377
San Antonio
04.05.2017
07.05.2017
Tickets from 378
Birmingham
24.03.2017
30.03.2017
Tickets from 391
San Francisco
21.01.2017
27.01.2017
Tickets from 431
Moscow
11.02.2017
18.02.2017
Tickets from 613
Tel Aviv-Yafo
01.03.2017
23.08.2017
Tickets from 723
Naples
26.06.2017
10.07.2017
Tickets from 766
Perm
13.02.2017
27.02.2017
Tickets from 816
Beirut
06.02.2017
20.03.2017
Tickets from 845
Bangkok
02.04.2017
10.04.2017
Tickets from 1 111
Hyderabad
30.04.2017
09.07.2017
Tickets from 1 160
Khartoum
30.04.2017
31.10.2017
Tickets from 1 166
by mstephens7
I was doing a photo booth last week when a guest came up to me and asked if I was _____ Photo Booth Company. I said no and he replied how they were at a recent event he attended. He went on to mention a couple of things he noticed with the company. It took me a couple of minutes to explain the difference between our booth and theirs. I kept thinking about our conversation on the drive home, and it inspired me to write this article.
Since the photo booth industry is still in infancy, there are many unknown variables that clients and even vendors don’t understand. Then there are some things that just drive me crazy with other photo booth companies. Now, I take a lot of pride in the services Encore provides and the people we get to interact with are great. So I hope you enjoy my little rant on photo booths below.
1.) We use the BEST printers⦠Really ask them what kind of printer they are using, if it is not dye sublimation next the company. The printer can impact the quality of your photos. To learn more about the difference between dye sublimation and inkjet read our article here.
2.) You get a custom design footer⦠Take the time to look at their designs, are they all the same? Some people that run photo booth companies wouldn’t know how to design their way out of a tic tac toe drawing. A truly custom designed footer means font choices, layout options, gradient overlays, and proper shadowing.
3.) Our booths are the most comfortable in the land⦠How comfortable can it be to stand the entire time? What about your handicapped guests, how will they fit in the photo? A removable bench is the best way to go and they are just down right comfy. At least they will keep your guests from making faces like the photo on the right.
4.) You will get a professionally designed photo booth⦠It is important to see the quality of the photo booth. You have put forth so much effort in the finer details of your wedding. Last thing you want is a booth that looks like it belongs in a mall, or better yet, one that looks like it was made in someone’s backyard. If it is not completely enclosed then your guests will not have the right amount of privacy. This means your photos might turn out looking like blah.
5.) Our photos are phenomenal⦠Here is a quick litmus test, look at the sample photos on their website. Do the guests look pale? Do the photos look like blurry blobs? This means the photo booth company is not using a flash with their camera. This is frowned upon because photo quality is greatly reduced. It is way more fun to be spontaneous in the booth and take photos while moving. Would you want to sit in one place the entire time?
Photo Booth Conclusion?
Those are 5 very important considerations when booking a photo booth company. Hopefully, if you are looking to reserve a photo booth you will keep these points in mind. Last thing you would want is to go crazy the day of your event just to be like⦠huh that Encore guy was right!
Robert is the entrepreneurial spirit for Encore Event Group. Besides the Michigan Photo Booth their team also provides lighting design and DJ entertainment that also serve Mackinac Island. Visit the following link for more information on What Drives a Michigan Photo Booth Company Owner Crazy.
Find More To Michigan Articles
People who search for Cheap Flights To Detroit also searches for :
cheap flights from detroit
cheap flights to detroit
cheap flights from detroit to las vegas
cheap flights to detroit mi
cheap flights from detroit to orlando
cheap flights from detroit to new york
cheap flights from detroit to florida
cheap flights from detroit to atlanta
cheap flights to florida from detroit
cheap flights out of detroit
last minute travel deals from detroit
travel deals from detroit
maria travel detroit
detroit travel
last minute travel from detroit
dnc travel detroit
detroit travel guide
flights to
flights to los angeles
los angeles flights
los angeles airfare
lax flights
flights from lax
airline tickets
flights from los angeles
los angeles cheap flights
los angeles tickets
last minute flights
cheap flights to los angeles
cheap flights to las vegas
cheap flights to san francisco
cheap flights to
cheap flights to rome
cheap flights to orlando
cheap flights to cancun
#CheapFlights
0 notes
Text
New Post has been published on FlightsGlobal.net
New Post has been published on http://flightsglobal.net/nhl-power-poll/
NHL Power Poll
Looking For Cheap Flights To Detroit
window.TP_FORM_SETTINGS = window.TP_FORM_SETTINGS || ; window.TP_FORM_SETTINGS["7b63d9f18df1c4d56c01f476351c29ab"] = "handle": "7b63d9f18df1c4d56c01f476351c29ab", "widget_name": "Find cheap Flights And Hotel", "border_radius": "2", "additional_marker": null, "width": null, "show_logo": false, "show_hotels": true, "form_type": "avia_hotel", "locale": "en", "currency": "usd", "sizes": "default", "search_target": "_blank", "active_tab": "avia", "search_host": "cheap.flightsglobal.net/flights", "hotels_host": "cheap.flightsglobal.net/hotels", "hotel": "name": "Detroit", "location": "United States", "hotels_count": "31", "search_id": "19382", "search_type": "city", "country_name": "United States" , "hotel_alt": "Hotellook offers great deals and discounts on hotels worldwide", "avia_alt": "", "retargeting": true, "trip_class": "economy", "depart_date": null, "return_date": null, "check_in_date": null, "check_out_date": null, "id": 90925, "marker": 120906, "origin": "name": "" , "destination": "iata": "DTT" , "color_scheme": "name": "custom", "icons": "icons_black", "background": "#ffffff", "color": "#002551", "border_color": "#c1c1c1", "button": "#FFA600", "button_text_color": "#ffffff", "input_border": "#ffffff" , "hotels_type": "hotellook_host", "best_offer": "locale": "en", "currency": "usd", "marker": 120906, "search_host": "cheap.flightsglobal.net/flights", "offers_switch": true, "api_url": "//minprices-jetradar.aviasales.ru/minimal_prices/offers.json", "routes": [ "one_way": false, "origin": "name": "" , "destination": "iata": "DTT" ] , "hotel_logo_host": "hotellook.com", "search_logo_host": "www.jetradar.com", "hotel_marker_format": "marker=", "hotelscombined_marker": null, "responsive": true, "height": 276 ;
Cheap Flights to Detroit
Origin Departure date Return date Find Ticket
Atlanta
28.01.2017
04.02.2017
Tickets from 74
New York
03.02.2017
16.02.2017
Tickets from 85
Denver
01.02.2017
05.02.2017
Tickets from 101
Philadelphia
23.01.2017
03.02.2017
Tickets from 103
Boston
22.02.2017
26.02.2017
Tickets from 107
Tampa
28.01.2017
31.01.2017
Tickets from 110
Fort Lauderdale
27.01.2017
30.01.2017
Tickets from 141
Dallas
11.03.2017
18.03.2017
Tickets from 144
Phoenix
22.03.2017
28.04.2017
Tickets from 181
New Orleans
17.02.2017
20.02.2017
Tickets from 203
Miami
11.03.2017
18.03.2017
Tickets from 207
Las Vegas
20.02.2017
27.02.2017
Tickets from 235
Los Angeles
27.02.2017
05.03.2017
Tickets from 253
Salt Lake City
02.03.2017
21.03.2017
Tickets from 256
Austin
04.05.2017
07.05.2017
Tickets from 274
Seattle
01.06.2017
23.08.2017
Tickets from 300
Vancouver
24.04.2017
01.05.2017
Tickets from 304
Grand Rapids
30.03.2017
05.04.2017
Tickets from 309
Houston
23.01.2017
23.01.2017
Tickets from 369
San Diego
17.05.2017
21.05.2017
Tickets from 373
Helena
17.02.2017
27.02.2017
Tickets from 377
San Antonio
04.05.2017
07.05.2017
Tickets from 378
Birmingham
24.03.2017
30.03.2017
Tickets from 391
San Francisco
21.01.2017
27.01.2017
Tickets from 431
Moscow
11.02.2017
18.02.2017
Tickets from 613
Tel Aviv-Yafo
01.03.2017
23.08.2017
Tickets from 723
Naples
26.06.2017
10.07.2017
Tickets from 766
Perm
13.02.2017
27.02.2017
Tickets from 816
Beirut
06.02.2017
20.03.2017
Tickets from 845
Bangkok
02.04.2017
10.04.2017
Tickets from 1 111
Hyderabad
30.04.2017
09.07.2017
Tickets from 1 160
Khartoum
30.04.2017
31.10.2017
Tickets from 1 166
by Thomas Hawk
NHL Power Poll
1. Detroit Red Wings (4): Mike Modano credits his recent success to getting in shape. He said looming thoughts of retirement last season didn’t lead to his best conditioning.
2. Philadelphia Flyers (3): On Wednesday, the Flyers begin a stretch of nine games that includes three teams with a winning record. It’s a huge opportunity to pile up points.
3. Washington Capitals (1): More alarming than any postgame conversation with Ilya Kovalchuk is that Alex Ovechkin entered Wednesday’s game against Carolina with one goal in six games, where to buy Washington Capitals Jerseys? ujersy.
4. Montreal Canadiens (5): A write-in campaign isn’t easy, so credit Habs fans for giving Carey Price the early lead in All-Star voting for goalies.
5. Pittsburgh Penguins (12): No coincidence that Pittsburgh’s surge coincides with Sidney Crosby’s offensive production. He has 20 points in his past nine games.
6. Los Angeles Kings (2): Justin Williams is showing how productive he can be when healthy.
7. Phoenix Coyotes (20): After a slow start, Ray Whitney is coming on. He has 10 points in his past six games.
8. Columbus Blue Jackets (16): Yep, that’s Rostislav Klesla atop the NHL’s plus/minus leaders at plus-17.
9. St. Louis Blues (6): The Blues have solved their issue of winning at home. Now, if they could just address their 3-5-2 road record, Recommend directory: St. Louis Blues Jerseys.
10. Tampa Bay Lightning (19): Nearly a quarter (24.7) of Steve Stamkos’ shots become goals. Unreal.
11. Colorado Avalanche (14): A good battle for playing time in goal between Peter Budaj and Craig Anderson.
12. Boston Bruins (8): Not many contenders get a midseason boost like the one 100-point scorer Marc Savard will soon provide.
13. New York Rangers (11): Goalie Martin Biron has quietly become one of the offseason’s best free-agent signings.
14. Vancouver Canucks (7): Roberto Luongo’s .907 save percentage would be his lowest since playing for the Islanders, but it’s still higher than his two Team Canada Olympic teammates.
15. Anaheim Ducks (9): Nothing like losing to the hapless Oilers and then having five days to think about it.
16. San Jose Sharks (10): San Jose Mercury News columnist Mark Purdy points out that the Sharks have been shut out four times. Their total all of last season? Two.
17. Chicago Blackhawks (13): Looks like Joel Quenneville is easing up on Duncan Keith’s ice time.
18. Minnesota Wild (17): Not much risk in adding Patrick O’Sullivan, who has a two-way deal. His days in Carolina were numbered when Jeff Skinner made the team, Go to buy Minnesota Wild Jerseys on ujersy.
19. Dallas Stars (18): Stars fans are already tiring of the Brad Richards trade rumors — and it’s November. It’s only going to get worse.
20. Carolina Hurricanes (22): In Ryan Carter, the Hurricanes add playoff experience and someone who can win faceoffs and kill penalties.
21. Nashville Predators (23): It will be hard to evaluate this team until everybody gets healthy. Example: Matthew Lombardi could be a major difference-maker.
22. Ottawa Senators (15): We’re starting to see hiccups in Erik Karlsson’s rise to stardom.
23. Atlanta Thrashers (24): The Thrashers have a .300 winning percentage when they score first. Their winning percentage when allowing the first goal? .545.
24. Buffalo Sabres (21): Good to see the well-traveled Colin Stuart back in the NHL.
25. Toronto Maple Leafs (25): The Brad Richards trade talk is fun, but does it really make any sense for Toronto to peddle young assets when serious contention isn’t close?
26. Florida Panthers (27): David Booth’s lack of scoring isn’t from lack of trying. He leads the team with 81 shots but has one goal in November.
27. Calgary Flames (26): Sportsnet’s Roger Millions said he’s hearing the team is already disappointed in recently acquired Anton Babchuk. That didn’t take long.
28. New Jersey Devils (30): On the bright side, half of Ilya Kovalchuk’s four goals have been overtime game-winners.
29. Edmonton Oilers (29): Frustration is setting in for Tom Renney, who ripped the team after a loss to Phoenix: “I’m not happy, flat out, not happy. It’s a joke.”
30. New York Islanders (28): A wakeup call for Josh Bailey, who was loaned to AHL Bridgeport to rediscover his game.
http://www.ujersy.com provides over 100,000 products worldwide wholesale, including NFL, MLB, NBA and Soccer, most of which cost less than . Welcome to purchasing
More To Detroit Articles
People who search for Cheap Flights To Detroit also searches for :
cheap flights from detroit
cheap flights to detroit
cheap flights from detroit to las vegas
cheap flights to detroit mi
cheap flights from detroit to orlando
cheap flights from detroit to new york
cheap flights from detroit to florida
cheap flights from detroit to atlanta
cheap flights to florida from detroit
cheap flights out of detroit
last minute travel deals from detroit
travel deals from detroit
maria travel detroit
detroit travel
last minute travel from detroit
dnc travel detroit
detroit travel guide
flights to
flights to los angeles
los angeles flights
los angeles airfare
lax flights
flights from lax
airline tickets
flights from los angeles
los angeles cheap flights
los angeles tickets
last minute flights
cheap flights to los angeles
cheap flights to las vegas
cheap flights to san francisco
cheap flights to
cheap flights to rome
cheap flights to orlando
cheap flights to cancun
#CheapFlights
0 notes