A classic Colbert dance routine.
This bit of classic Colbert comes at the end of an episode of “Strangers with Candy.” Indescribable. (Thanks to Dana for the tip!)
This bit of classic Colbert comes at the end of an episode of “Strangers with Candy.” Indescribable. (Thanks to Dana for the tip!)
Open Salon interview.
A struggling Sen. Rick Santorum, R-Penn., went nuclear Wednesday, with an ad that tries to ally challenger Bob Casey with North Korea and China. Ah, the acrid smell of desperation in the weeks before a congressional election! Be prepared for even more of these terror-filled spots in these glorious final days of Campaign 2006, all of which carry a little DNA from the mother of all scare ads: The 1964 Lyndon Johnson “Daisy Girl” ad against Barry Goldwater (bottom ad, below).
From Michael Scherer’s piece today: “The GOP seems to believe that Ford’s appeal to its most reliable voters is working. In recent days, the Republican National Committee has attempted to reverse the troubling polls in Tennessee with a television ad that both attacks Ford’s religious credentials and invokes that old standby of American politics, racial fear.”
This National Republican Senatorial Committee ad against Harold Ford sports an early mention of a Playboy connection that the party hopes will rile Christians against Ford.
Salon’s piece on Rep. Harold Ford Jr.’s senate campaign spotlights his appeal to churchgoers, as in the TV spot below.
Page 1 of 80 in Kl
A passport to utopia
“The Fault in Our Stars” and “There Is No Dog”: Not kids’ stuff
Ricky Gervais: My conscience never takes a day off
Lessons of a very sexy pirate costume
America’s failed promise of equal opportunity
Is gay literature over?
A voice that touched us all
Whitney Houston dies at 48
Didn’t she almost have it all?
Porn’s taboo transsexual stars