Sarah Palin
New Rules From Bill Maher For October 17, 2008
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Comedy, Credit Default Swaps, Financial Crisis, Hedge Funds, John McCain, Politics, Sarah Palin, Tullycast, Video, Wall StreetSarah Palin Pals Around With Secessionists | Maher 10/17/08
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Comedy, Credit Default Swaps, Financial Crisis, Hedge Funds, John McCain, Politics, Sarah Palin, Tullycast, Video, Wall StreetFrank Luntz Tries The P.O.W. Card One More Time-Maher-Oct 17
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Comedy, Credit Default Swaps, Financial Crisis, Hedge Funds, John McCain, Politics, Sarah Palin, Tullycast, Video, Wall Street"When The Credit Runs Out- The Game Stops" | Maher 10/17/08
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Comedy, Credit Default Swaps, Financial Crisis, Hedge Funds, John McCain, Politics, Sarah Palin, Tullycast, Video, Wall StreetBush Stole American Optimism | Tom Friedman with Bill Maher
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Comedy, Credit Default Swaps, Financial Crisis, Hedge Funds, John McCain, Politics, Sarah Palin, Tullycast, Video, Wall StreetTina Fey Unsure Whether She Will Portray Palin This Weekend on Saturday Night Live
Comedy, Sarah Palin, SNL, Tina Fey, Video
By FRAZIER MOORE
AP TELEVISION WRITERNEW YORK — It’s the question dominating the political scene: When will Tina Fey be back on “Saturday Night Live”?
“I don’t know,” Fey said.
Over coffee Tuesday during a rare morning off from her NBC sitcom, “30
Rock,” Fey noted that “SNL” will be on live this Saturday, as well as
airing a 9:30 p.m. EDT Thursday edition, but as to whether she will
take part in either broadcast, “I haven’t heard.” (A spokesman for the
NBC late-night comedy show echoed her comments.)
The former “SNL” cast member/head writer thus far has been drafted for three
appearances as Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin. The
sketches were a huge hit for the show and Fey alike.
“It’s been really fun,” she said, “and really freeing since I don’t actually work there anymore.”
But it’s put an extra burden on her already heavy workload at “30 Rock,”
where she’s an executive producer and writer as well as star.
“Thankfully, the `SNL’ schedule is the opposite of the `30 Rock’ schedule, so I can go to `SNL’ around 10:30 Friday night and rehearse,” she said,
explaining that the Palin pieces were written by current “SNL” head
writer Seth Meyers. “Then on Saturday, I go in around 4 o’clock.”
For her most recent appearance (on Oct. 4) “I had a `30 Rock’ writer come
for the dress rehearsal. I did my sketch, worked on the `30 Rock’
outline with the writer, then did the live show.
“It’s not as bad as it sounds,” Fey added with a laugh. “But it does catch up with you by Sunday.”
Fey hopes the attention drawn to her Palin impersonation will bring more
viewers to “30 Rock,” which begins its third season Oct. 30.
“When people say, `Oh, I love you on your show,’ I say, ‘”Saturday Night
Live” isn’t my show. But there’s another show that will be back on
soon, and it’s called “30 Rock.”‘
“I should go to Kinko’s and make some fliers,” she cracked.
Fey believes her portrayal of the Alaska governor has “been responsible and really pretty gentle.”
As demand builds for another Palin spoof, Fey said: “I don’t know how much
more I should do or could do, so I’m taking it week by week.
“It’s getting large, it’s getting too large, the question `Are you gonna show up? Are you gonna do it?’
“I don’t know,” Fey said. “I’ve got a lot of `30 Rock’ work to do!”
—
NBC is owned by General Electric.
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On the Net:
Election 2008 | 45% of the Undecideds?: Stupid
Barack Obama, Broadcatching, Comedy, Daily Show, Election 2008, Joe Biden, John McCain, Jon Stewart, Politics, Sarah Palin, Swing Vote, Undecided“Those Undecideds can still break either way. But who are they? As you can see, they fall into a variety of categories: Attention seekers; racist Democrats; the chronically insecure; and “the stupid. That is 45% of the Undecideds, John. They are the swingiest of the swing voters.”
Vodpod videos no longer available.
Bill Maher's RealTime | Alec Baldwin, Christine Amanpour and Gary Shandling | Oct. 3, 2008
Alec Baldwin, bailout, Barack Obama, Barney Frank, Ben Bernanke, Christine Amanpour, Garry Shandling, Henry Paulson, Iraq, John McCain, Jor Biden, Politics, Sarah Palin, Surge, Wall StreetFake Pollsters Trying to Discredit Obama, Democrats Claim
Barack Obama, Florida, John McCain, Obama campaign, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Politics, Push Polling, Sarah Palin- Friday October 3 2008
Barack Obama’s campaign is receiving increasing complaints about scam pollsters involved in dirty tricks operations to discredit the Democratic candidate.
Victims claim the fake pollsters work insinuations into their questions, designed to damage Obama. Those targeted in swing states such as Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania include Jews, Christian evangelicals, Catholics and Latinos.
One of those to protest, Debbie Minden, who lives in a predominantly Jewish neighbourhood, Squirrel Hill, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, told the Guardian that the pollster had begun by asking her the usual questions about her background and who she would vote for.
But the pollster went on to ask Minden, who is Jewish, how she would vote if she knew that Obama was supported by Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that runs Gaza and was responsible for most of the suicide bombings against Israel. “It is scare tactics. It is terribly underhand,” she said.
The groups behind such polls have not been identified. One of the Republican groups working on behalf of John McCain’s campaign, the Republican Jewish Coalition, acknowledges carrying out a survey about Jewish voters’ views on Obama and Israel but insists it had been a legitimate exercise intended to test campaign messages on Jewish voters.
The RJC angrily dismissed comparisons between its exercise and a “push poll”, the technique of using fake surveys to sway voters. Its poll was restricted to 750 people whereas push polls usually involve phoning thousands of people. It asked 82 questions, only 10% of which were devoted to Obama.
The technique of push polling is part of the election battle being fought on the ground in the swing states where the margins of victory have been narrow in past elections.
On a bigger scale, teams from each campaign are engaged in legal fights over who is entitled to vote, with Republican groups trying to have people in largely Democratic neighbourhoods disqualified.
Push polling was used with stunning effect in the 2000 Republican primary campaign in South Carolina when people claiming to be pollsters insinuated that McCain, then fighting George W Bush for the party nomination, had illegitimately fathered a black child. Bush overturned McCain’s double-digit poll lead, and the origin of the calls was never fully established.
This year, the tactic surfaced again during the Republican primaries when calls were made highlighting the religion of one of the candidates, Mitt Romney – he is a Mormon, a religion viewed with suspicion by some on the Christian right.
An Obama campaign organiser in one of the swing states said there had been lots of complaints about push polling in his patch. Callers said questions frequently included a reference to the widespread belief that Obama is a Muslim, even though he has repeatedly said he is a Christian.
The organiser said another question was: would you be less likely to vote for Obama if Israel had to give up all of Jerusalem? “They make this shit up. They are good at it. The unassuming listener will not realise it is untrue,” he said.
Minden, a school psychologist, was not surprised to be polled. “It sounded like a normal poll. Was I voting? Demographics? Age? Where we live? Then a question about which party I supported, who I preferred on the economy, on foreign policy, questions like that.
“They said; ‘Are you Jewish?’ and I said ‘Yeh’. Then they said ‘if you knew Barack Obama was supported by Hamas, would it change your vote? Would it change your vote if you knew his church had made antisemitic statements?’. All the hot button issues on Israel.” She said she will vote for Obama as planned.
In Key West, Florida, another swing state, Joelna Marcus, 71, a retired professor, had a similar experience. She was asked if she would be influenced if she learned that Obama had donated money to the Palestine Liberation Organisation.
The Huffington Post website reported that a reader, named Rachel from Strongsville, Ohio, complained of a push poll that portrayed Obama as a radical left-winger who had voted to let convicted child sex offenders out early and to allow them to live near schools.




