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Showing posts with label Dennis Miller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dennis Miller. Show all posts

Friday, November 18, 2011

Mediaite: Dennis Miller jumps off the Cain train



Dennis Miller jumped off of the Cain Train on Wednesday.

“He can’t win!”

No shit, Dennis. Rightardia said that weeks ago.

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Friday, October 16, 2009

Rush blames the Rams deal collapse on Obama, George Soros and the liberals

October 15, 2009



There are some conservatives who have wanted Limbaugh involved in professional football. Limbaugh had to resign from ESPN because of he stated that Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb was overrated because the media wanted to see a black quarterback succeed.

Another conservative, Dennis Miller, was fired from Monday Night Football because of his poor ratings. Miller actually had a career when he was with SNL. Once he went to the dark side and became a 'leg hugging conservative' his carrer fell apart with few of his many shows lasting more than one year.

Rightardia agrees with DeMaurice Smith. Limbaugh is a divider. He is also a racist. What did Limbaugh expect?  It is amusing that Limbaugh thinks Obama had something to do with his deal going sour.
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

RUSH: All right, folks, let me tell you what I now can tell you about the National Football League, the St. Louis Rams and my participation in a group seeking to buy the St. Louis Rams. There's a lot of things I've not been able to say because we were bound by a confidentiality agreement that all of the bidding groups have with Goldman Sachs, which is the broker handling the potential sale, but now that I'm no longer part of the group . . .

And one Saturday I was out playing golf at Donald Trump's course here in West Palm Beach, and as I hit the practice range I saw a guy that I had met a couple of times previously, Dave Checketts. And Dave Checketts said, "You know, this Rams thing is real. I really would love to talk to you about it." I said, "Okay."

So we set a date and Dave Checketts and a mutual friend came to my home, I served them lunch and Checketts made his pitch, "This is what we think it's going to take. This is what we would like from you. We would like you very much to be part of this . . ."  And I said to him at this meeting, "Are you aware of the firestorm this --" "Oh, yes, totally aware, Rush, and believe me, I wouldn't have approached you if I hadn't taken care of that. I would not have even come and asked you to be part of the group if I had not cleared your involvement with people at the highest levels of the National Football League."

He (Checketts) gave me a couple of names that are pretty high up and led me to believe that it was all handled and that he was fully prepared for what was going to happen. When the whole thing started to unravel last week, whenever this thing leaked -- and, by the way, I learned yesterday that George Soros might be in this group.
Reuters had a story that George Soros is one of Dave Checketts's partners. I did not know that. . .The NFL has a rule that the primary owner has to have 30% equity in the team, and our group lost our 30% equity guy, and we had to scramble and find a new one . . . Soros and Checketts did, I have learned, partner together previously to try to buy the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Mr. Soros, of course, is well known politically for his left-wing slants, his politics fit in perfectly, apparently, with what the National Football League is becoming. But I wonder if they know that he is also involved in the movement to legalize marijuana and how that will play as the owners decide whether or not he's fit. This is all speculative because I don't know that he's in the group. Reuters reported it yesterday.

So when this all started to unravel with the leaking of my being part of the group, the predictable firestorm started, and I said, "Are you guys prepared here? Do you understand what's going on?" "Oh, yeah, we want you to be a partner, don't worry, Rush, I would not have gone this far if I hadn't wired this before I even spoke to you . . ."

So eventually when DeMaurice Smith -- and he may pronounce it DeMaurice, I'm not sure -- DeMaurice Smith is the new executive director of the National Football League Players Association, he sent a letter to the Commissioner Roger Goodell strongly objecting to my being anywhere near the National Football League on the basis that I don't unify, I'm a divider and divisive and this sort of thing.

Then of course the two race hustlers, the Reverend Jackson and Reverend Sharpton got involved, and I got a call on Tuesday night from Dave Checketts, "I'm sorry, I have to ask you to withdraw." And I said, "I thought you had this wired, I thought --" "Well, Rush, obviously I'm sorry, I feel terrible about this but we can't go forward with you in the group."

And I said, "Well, I'm not going to withdraw. If you want me out you go public and fire me," which he did. He sent me a letter yesterday afternoon right after the program and told me that the announcement would come this morning, and he wanted me to know that it was a very tough personal decision for him to make, he had a lot of respect for me, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,

DeMaurice Smith, the executive director of the Players Association is an Obamaite. He's donated to Obama. He is a Washington lobbyist at Patton Boggs, and I think he even served on Obama's transition team.
He has no experience in professional sports. The National Football League's agreement, collective bargaining agreement with the players expires soon. Next year, the salary cap -- if they don't get a new deal done, next year the salary cap -- will go away. And after that, there is a fear that the owners -- who think they're giving up too much of the gross in salary, compensation to the players -- might lock them out, a work stoppage. This is something that the Players Association doesn't want, obviously.

And the real reason, the real reason -- and there are many, many reasons that are valid, but the real reason -- that pressure was brought upon me by Sharpton and Jackson and DeMaurice Smith and the commissioner is that the Players Association is using my involvement in the Rams and this whole episode as a bit of leverage in their negotiations, the upcoming negotiations with the league and with the owners on a new collective bargaining agreement.
That is what's really going on, and the Players Association... I don't know how many players know this, but Mr. Smith has let it be known that if he has to he'll bring the White House into this. He'll bring the Congressional Black Caucus into this.

So Obama's America is quite possibly going to include the National Football League, and pressure from Obama, the Congressional Black Caucus and other places might be brought to bear on the owners. I can't imagine that that's anything they want.
You know, as all businesses are, they're regulated to a certain extent by the federal government but this would be a huge expansion of that. And that threat is being bandied about. And I don't expect anyone to admit it. The owners are not going to admit that. They don't want to. I'm sure that the reaction to this today will be, "Ah, Limbaugh doesn't know what he's talking about . . ."

Oh, yeah, I would prefer to be noted as a part-owner of an NFL team. By the way, my stake was "minority." (chuckles) I was a minority owner, and Checketts has made it clear in his statement that I would have no operational control over the team and the operation of the club. I was also not told that specifically, but regardless.

It's a collection of unhappy, angry, agitated people, and that's not going to change. But this kind of stuff: This misreporting; lying; repeating lies while also saying "Limbaugh denies," repeating the made-up quotes, the blind hatred -- and, believe me, the hatred that exists in this is found in the sportswriter community.

It's found in the news business. It's found in the race hustler business. As I said yesterday and I've said I don't know how many times in this program, "I love the National Football League." I don't dislike anything about it. I'm a fan. But the hatred that I am able now to mirror for the country to see is all over the place. And I tell you with absolute sincerity: I am more sad for our country than I am for myself. I'll be right back after this. Do not go away. These are dark days that we face, and I'm not talking about the National Football League or me. I'm talking about my news stack today.

END TRANSCRIPT


source: http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/daily/site_101509/content/01125106.guest.html

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Monday, June 15, 2009

Madoff the movie: Made Off With America

The just-announced movie, Madoff: Made Off With America, will feature unknown actors. Rightardia has a good idea for an alternative title: Good-Bye, Bernie. Don't Hit Your Head on the Way out.

Previously regarded as a pillar of Wall Street, Madoff is accused of conning more than US$30 billion of dollars out of unsuspecting investors.

Casting the movie

Madoff is the poster child for the year-long financial mess on Wall Street, which has spread throughout the US. Madoff is hardly the only one. The actor playing Madoff would ideally have the chops to play an aging, New York Jewish finance titan.

Who will play Bernie Madoff? Dennis Miller comes to mind but they would have to age him a bit to play the roll. Miller could also use the work because few of his shows last much more than a year.

Joan Rivers after her victory on Celebrity Apprentice, would be the perfect wife of Bernie, Ruth Madoff.

A movie about his stranger-than-fiction crash make sense because all the elements for a riveting story are in place. The plot contains suspense, big bucks, New York society, a built-in psychodrama, whistle blowers, office sex, crime, and hundreds of celebrity and ordinary victims on a Wall Street stage .

Book stores will be featuring Madoff's story shortly. Already, Harper Collins has signed up veteran television journalist Andrew Kirtzman to write a book about the disgraced financier. Investigative reporter Richard Behar, who has worked for Time Warner Inc.'s Time and Fortune magazines, will be doing a Madoff book as well for Random House.

The Madoff legacy

Madoff's legacy continues to take on advanced proportions with each passing day and every new bulletin of how he apparently took advantage of the trust of a friend or a charity or a financial institution.

Bernie Madoff was a sexist, ego-maniacal, short-tempered control freak—yet everybody loved him. That is according to his secretary of more than 20 years, Eleanor Squillari who co-authored a 9,000-word article in the June issue of Vanity Fair. He was a typical big city New Yorker.

After spending two months helping the FBI gather evidence against her former boss, Squillari, a 59-year-old mother of two from Staten Island, spilled the beans to MSNBC.

Bernie’s views on stealing

Squillari recalls an unusually prophetic conversation she had with Madoff years earlier, after a client’s secretary had been arrested for embezzlement. “You know, [Bernie] has to take some responsibility for this,” Madoff told Squillari. “He should have been keeping an eye on his books. My wife, Ruth watches the books. Nothing gets by Ruth.”

Squillari says she was surprised when he added: “Well, you know what happens is, it starts out with you taking a little bit, maybe a few hundred, a few thousand, a few hundred thousand, and then you start thinking about stealing millions. You get comfortable with that, and before you know it, it snowballs into something big like stealing billions.”

Bernie’s personality


The way Madoff handled stress was “by saying something nasty: You look terrible. You’re gaining weight. You’re stupid. Are you on the rag today? Who passed gas? I never took anything he said to me personally, because I knew it wasn’t about me, it was about him. By the way he had terrible gas all of time.”

Madoff’s behavior changed drastically in the weeks before his arrest. “He seems to be in a drug induced state,” Squillari told people who walked by his office and saw him staring off into space. He refused to look at his mail, and was constantly meeting with the heads of his feeder funds for Madoff’s Ponzi scheme.

Bernie’s sleazy side

“Bernie was irresistible to women especially when he had his wallet open. He “had a roving eye.” Squillari once caught him perusing the escort ads in the back of a magazine, and he frequently visited massage parlors. He called the 'steam and creams. I guess they served ice cream when the session was over. He was a real perve. ”

Madoff was flirtatious and had a habit of making sexually suggestive remarks: “‘Oh, you know you’re crazy about me,’ he would say to me. Sometimes when he came out of his bathroom, which was diagonal to my desk, he would still be putting his joystick back into his pants. If he saw me shaking my head disapprovingly, he would say, ‘Oh, you know it excites you.’ I’d tell him, ‘Knock it off, Bernie,’ and he’d go, ‘Ah, you still look good.’ Then he’d try to feel me up.”

Bernie’s relationship with his wife

Bernie’s wife, Ruth, “wanted to be perfect for him. She would never allow herself to gain weight or have a hair out of place, and she always kept an eagle eye on him when any females were around. However, “if Bernie said something to Ruth that annoyed her, she’d say, ‘Go screw yourself,’ or ‘I don’t give a shit.’ That’s the way they talked to each other. Then he would bitch slap Ruth.

The operations on the 17th floor, home to the Ponzi scheme

The staff on 17th “were mostly low-level, clerical women, many of them working mothers, who probably made no more than $40,000 a year. They were young and naïve, with no background in finance, so they weren’t able to connect the dots.” The girls called Bernie their pimp and he called them his “hos.”

The aftermath of Bernie’s arrest

In the days after her husband’s arrest, Ruth Madoff called Squillari multiple times and encouraged the secretary to provide her with certain information without notifying the bankruptcy trustees, which Squillari said she couldn’t do. “Instead, I told the FBI what had just happened. I was working for them now, not for Ruth and Bernie Madoff.”

Looking back on things, Squillari believes Madoff meticulously planned for his arrest. She believes he wanted the F.B.I. to find the appointment book he left on his desk, and he wanted his sons to find the $173 million in checks made out to certain employees. He never actually intended to send them out, said Squillari.

“He was a con man until the very end. I'm certain if any of those checks had been cashed, they would all have bounced,” Squillari said.

Madoff's legacy continues to take on advanced proportions with each passing day and every new bulletin of how he apparently took advantage of the trust of a friend or a charity or a financial institution.

The Madoff saga has the potential to be a 2009 take on the themes of corruption, social class and media frenzy. Madoff, preyed upon the Jewish community for his victims because they trusted him so much.

www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-04-21/madoff-the-movie/?cid=topic:mainpromo1

www.marketwatch.com/story/madoff-the-movie-who-should-play-the-satan-of-wall-street


www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/05/06/national/main4997015.shtml