Monday, April 30, 2018

This Is Why All Those Typos Matter - Updated


Apparently the White House is saying it was a "clerical error." No kidding. For perspective, James Fallows weighs in:

Tuesday morning update: A statement from a National Security Council spokesman:

The White House did not issue a formal correction, but did offer an explanation. 

"The original White House statement included a clerical error, which we quickly detected and fixed," an National Security Council spokesman told CNN Tuesday. "To be clear, the United States has long known that Iran had a robust, clandestine nuclear weapons program." From CNN, read the story here.

The Guessing Game - Updated

What will be on the cover of People this week? My guesses:

His Royal Highness Prince Louis: Will People go with two royal baby covers in a row? It's possible, especially if a "family of five" picture comes out before the magazine closes tonight. Other possibilities include William and Kate's 7th wedding anniversary, which was yesterday, and Princess Charlotte's third birthday, which is Wednesday
Meghan and Harry: Less than three weeks until their big day
Bill Cosby: Convicted on three counts, faces 10 years or more in jail
Dr. Ronny Jackson: The doctor withdrew his nomination to be the VA secretary and apparently is no longer the personal physician to the president. Will his promotion to two-star admiral go through? My guess? No. Based on everything that's been said about Dr. Jackson, I expect to hear at some point that he's checked himself into rehab for alcoholism
Melania: The French state dinner was a big success, she turned 48 last Thursday
Stormy: I've had her on the list before, today she filed a lawsuit against the president, for defamation
Adam Rippon: Or one of the other athletes who will be Dancing With The Stars. The new season starts tonight
Alison Mack: Actress charged with sex trafficking
Tom Brokaw: Accused of, and strongly denying, sexual misconduct
Matt Lauer: Speaking out about what got him fired from The Today Show
Lea Michele: Engaged
Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom: A nice picture of them meeting the Pope
Joy Reid: Under fire for gay-bashing tweets and blog posts, she initially claimed she'd been hacked, now she's backed away from that somewhat. She also apologized on-air during her show Saturday morning
Joanna Gaines: Publishes a cookbook
Ronnie Ortiz-Magro: A star from the old Jersey Shore reality show, he and his (maybe) girlfriend are feuding publicly on social media
Michelle Wolf: Controversy after she served as MC at the White House Correspondents Dinner

Tuesday morning update: Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton, Candice Bergen and/or Mary Steenburgen. The ladies are the stars of Book Club, a movie coming out May 18. The hook? It's about what happens when four women of a certain age start reading Fifty Shades of Grey. How can People not put that on the cover?

Image result for "Book Club" movie poster

Tuesday afternoon, update #2: Miranda Lambert. Controversy about her new boyfriend

One more thing. Update #3 on Tuesday night: Will Kanye West be on the cover of People tomorrow? Maybe. As I'm writing, at about 9.45 Tuesday night, he's the lead story at People.com, with a headline reading "Kanye West Reveals He Was Addicted to Opioids After Undergoing Liposuction." That's pretty big news, although it may have come out too late for this week's new issue. Stay tuned, we'll know tomorrow morning.

Wednesday morning update: See the new cover here.

Sunday, April 29, 2018

The President, The President's Hair And (Too Much Of) The President's Hair Product


photo credit: Susan Walsh/AP

We don't usually see the view from behind and all I can say is: Yuck. 

Saturday, April 28, 2018

Dr. Jackson Is An Honorable Man? - Updated

Is he? It certainly appeared so in the lead-up to Trump's physical. Even Obama people, including David Axelrod, were praising Dr. Ronny Jackson. Then came that weird, gushing press conference and ever since, even before all the stuff that came out this week, I've been wondering what could have turned Dr. Jackson, a medical doctor and admiral in the Navy, into a gushing Trump sycophant. Now, of course, there's the possibility that Dr. Jackson had a secret life, one that was effectively concealed from almost everyone above him at the White House. (I read a quote that said he "kissed up and kicked down.") Whether or not any of the accusations are true is still to be determined, but that didn't stop Joe Scarborough from sending out some epic shade last night:

Friends, Republicans, countrymen, lend me your ears. I come to praise President Trump, not to place him in an elder-care home. Any concerns regarding my old friend’s mental health are as distant a memory as the Mooch’s reign as communications director. That’s because earlier this year, Americans received blessed assurance — from no less an authority than the White House physician — that their president is of sound mind and herculean body.

Dr. Ronny L. Jackson is an honorable man, and just more than three months ago, he declared to a watchful world that the Manhattan billionaire’s ability to draw boxes, tell time and identify giraffes in pictures was all the proof he needed that our commander in chief’s mental health was strong. For good measure, Jackson deduced that Trump is so genetically superior to mere mortals, the Queens native could live 200 years if he just stopped supersizing his Big Mac value meals.

And why should we doubt his word? Dr. Ronny L. Jackson is an honorable man.

… It goes without saying, but still bears repeating, that any chief executive who surrendered so many statements against interest [during his unhinged call into Fox News] would immediately be removed. And any man who used a television interview to make such damaging legal admissions would be fired by his lawyers and put to bed by anxious family members. But Jackson has told us Trump is in peak mental health — and the good doctor is an honorable man.

… And let us not forget that, a few days later, the genetically superior former reality star also confessed to Russia’s foreign minister and ambassador that he had fired Comey to end the Russian investigation and relieve “pressure” that had been building from the inquiry. These self-destructive admissions by Trump helped to launch the special counsel’s exploration of possible obstruction of justice.

But despite a multitude of mental lapses, I am no longer concerned by the president’s troublesome behavior, or his Olympian ability to self-incriminate whenever he talks on live TV. Jackson has assured me that Trump is a mentally fit specimen, and Dr. Ronny is an honorable man.

This is from Joe's Opinion piece at the Washington Post and his main target is, of course, the president, but wow, he gets in a few shots at the doctor too. Read the article here. See my previous post about Dr. Jackson, written before the January press conference, here.

Saturday afternoon update: In an article titled "Isolation of White House Medical Unit Hid Ronny Jackson From Scrutiny," the New York Times provides some details about how Dr. Jackson may have been able to fool some of the people most of the time about who he really is:

To senior White House aides serving the last three presidents, Dr. Ronny L. Jackson was the war-tested doctor who served in Iraq, helped them cope with their high-pressure jobs and ran his medical staff with the rigor befitting his rank of rear admiral in the Navy.

But inside the White House medical unit, a military-run office with a few dozen doctors and nurses, Dr. Jackson was viewed as a bully and someone who kept sloppy medical records, drank too much and loosely dispensed strong drugs to curry favor with the powerful politicians and political aides he admired. Three current and former colleagues said that Dr. Jackson was sometimes intoxicated during overseas trips and that staff members were often ordered to leave a bottle of run and a Diet Coke in his hotel room.

But in a White House where everybody appears to be in everyone else’s business, a picture has emerged of a medical unit oddly disconnected from the larger executive offices of the president, where a small team of military medical professionals reports up a narrow chain of command out of view from the political realm. Witnesses to Dr. Jackson’s behavior spoke on the condition of anonymity because they continue to serve in the military.

Dr. Jackson’s medical unit operates inside the White House, not far from the West Wing, where the president and his aides work. But an isolated managerial bubble allowed Dr. Jackson to serve three presidents for a decade while escaping scrutiny of alleged abuses of power and position. Dr. Jackson’s employees were not subordinates of the White House chief of staff or the president’s lawyer. Instead, the medical unit reported through a military chain of command to the little known White House Military Office.

In interviews with more than 24 people — including some of Dr. Jackson’s former subordinates and a dozen White House political aides in the Trump and Obama administrations — officials said members of the medical and political staffs hardly came into contact with one another outside of routine medical treatment. They operated under different rules of behavior and rarely socialized together, even on long trips to foreign countries.

The entire article is fascinating; read it here

Monday morning, update #2: Politico is reporting that Dr. Jackson will no longer be the president's personal physician, although apparently he will continue to work as part of the White House medical unit. It'll be interesting to see if his promotion to two-star admiral goes through. Read the Politico story here

Monday afternoon, update #3: The Jackson story isn't over. CNN is now reporting the following:

Vice President Mike Pence's physician privately raised alarms within the White House last fall that President Donald Trump's doctor may have violated federal privacy protections for a key patient -- Pence's wife, Karen -- and intimidated the vice president's doctor during angry confrontations over the episode.

The previously unreported incident is the first sign that serious concerns about Ronny Jackson's conduct had reached the highest levels of the White House as far back as September -- months before White House aides furiously defended Jackson's professionalism, insisted he had been thoroughly vetted and argued allegations of misconduct amounted to unsubstantiated rumors.

The episode -- detailed in three memos by Pence's physician -- is also the first documentation that has surfaced involving a specific allegation of medical misconduct by Jackson. It adds to a series of significant allegations leveled by unidentified current and former colleagues, including that he casually dispensed prescription drugs.

According to copies of internal documents obtained by CNN, Pence's doctor accused Jackson of overstepping his authority and inappropriately intervening in a medical situation involving the second lady as well as potentially violating federal privacy rights by briefing White House staff and disclosing details to other medical providers -- but not appropriately consulting with the vice president's physician.

The vice president's physician later wrote in a memo of feeling intimidated by an irate Jackson during a confrontation over the physician's concerns. The physician informed White House officials of being treated unprofessionally, describing a pattern of behavior from Jackson that made the physician "uncomfortable" and even consider resigning from the position.

After Mrs. Pence's physician briefed her about the episode, she "also expressed concerns over the potential breach of privacy of her medical condition," the memo said. Karen Pence asked her physician to direct the vice president's top aide, Nick Ayers, to inform White House chief of staff John Kelly about the matter. Subsequent memos from Pence's doctor suggested Kelly was aware of the episode. Read the entire story here

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Justice - Updated

Bill Cosby has been convicted of all three counts against him and apparently is facing serious jail time. Back in 2014 I wrote three blog posts about Mr. Cosby, here they are:

November 20, 2014: What I Know About Bill Cosby

November 23, 2014: Innuendo?

November 24, 2014: The Cover Story

Friday afternoon update: I just re-read the "Cover Story" post, which included this: "Cosby is almost certainly not in any legal jeopardy..." Happily, I was wrong about that.

This Day In History, 1986: The Chernobyl Explosion




Wednesday, April 25, 2018

The Hat - Updated


photo credit: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Along with many other people, I've been pondering the hat. My first thought was that Melania was trying to hide her face, as she sometimes appears to do with her big sunglasses. After a little more thought, I decided she was trying to upstage her husband, and it worked. Here's how the Washington Post's fashion critic Robin Givhan described the hat moment:

The day began with a hat. It ended with the hat, too. Not literally, but nostalgically. Over the course of 12 hours, no Cézanne at the National Gallery, no forest of cherry blossom branches, no Clinton or Bush china, no goat cheese gâteau, not even Chanel haute couture could compare to that magnificent halo of pure white light perched atop first lady Melania Trump’s perfectly groomed head. Nothing else mattered. There was nothing else.

That hat, broad-brimmed with a high, blocked crown, announced the first lady’s presence as boldly and theatrically as a brigade of trumpeters. It was the bright white hat of a gladiator worn on an overcast day, a kind of glamorous public shield when sunglasses would not do at all. That hat was a force field that kept folks, the wrong folks, from getting too close.

It was a diva crown. A grand gesture of independence. A church hat. The Lord is my shepherd. Deliver us from evil. Amen.

In a long article, Givhan also deconstructs Melania's Monday night dinner dress, the State Dinner dress and the tailored white suit she wore with the hat, then finishes with this:

On these official occasions, the first lady sometimes appears to be dressing for a fashion-shoot version of the event — a kind of heightened reality of an already rather surreal circumstance. But there is also the sense that she is stubbornly and confidently dressing up and refusing to relax into today’s accepted decorum. The result is that she sometimes seems to have a tin ear for empathetic dressing. And sometimes, she wears a hat, which, for women, long ago ceased being about fashion in this country and became more of an affectation, whether it be the religiosity of Sunday church service or the self-conscious flamboyance of the Kentucky Derby.

A hat is a celebration of oneself. It is about presenting one’s most adorned, spit-shined, upright self to God, social media or, in this case, the history books. Read the article here.

Update #1: Many strange pictures came out of the French state visit, I'm going to post some of them here, starting with this tweet:

Thursday morning, update #2: More strange moments from the Macrons' visit to Washington:

A gif of the hat:


"Hook 'em Horns!"
Image result for Macron at White House
photo credit thehill.com

Primate grooming:
Image result for trump with macron

Trump appeared to be seriously pissed off about something as he walked out the door to greet the Macrons for dinner:
Image result for trump north portico waiting for macrons

And finally that weird moment when Melania won't hold her husband's hand:


People.com has compiled some of Donald and Melania's most cringe-worthy moments, read it here.

And one more thing: Today (Thursday) is Melania's birthday. Her husband says he's too busy to have gotten her a gift, although he did get her a card and some flowers. By-the-way, Melania is now 48, way, way past the age when Trump believes women should just check out. From vogue.com:

But around the same time as [the "grab 'em by the pussy" tape] dropped, a 2002 Howard Stern tape revealed more of PEOTUS Trump’s choice thoughts on women. Specifically, the then-56-year-old real estate developer told Stern that he typically dumps girlfriends when they turn 35 for the sin of, well, possessing “too much life experience.”

“What is it at 35, Howard?” Trump wondered aloud. “It’s called checkout time.”

If Trump hadn't been elected president would he have dumped Melania and moved on to someone younger? My guess? Yes.

Tuesday, April 24, 2018

The New Royal Baby

Issue dated May 7, 2018: The Royal Baby


The new royal baby gets the main cover story, no surprise, and People even rushes the cover out a day early. There's a nice picture of the Bushes, too, although the story inside may be sadly out-of-date now that we know the former president is hospitalized in critical condition.

The Guessing Game post

Last year at this time: Issue dated May 8, 2017

Monday, April 23, 2018

The Queen Goes Riding

The big royal news is in London, of course, but apparently Her Madge passed the time waiting for her great-grandson's arrival with a nice horseback ride at Windsor:

The Queen, 92, was spotted horse riding at Windsor this morning as she awaiting news of the latest royal baby's birth 

If you're thinking that the picture looks familiar, you're right. I've posted similar ones before:

June 2, 2014, read the post here
Queen Elizabeth Still Takes Her Morning Horse Ride – at Age 88 (Photo)

June 1, 2015, read the post here
Making the most of summer: The Queen was spotted riding with head groom Terry Pendry this morning

March 6, 2017, read the post here
Riding into spring: The Queen, who turns 91 next month, was joined by Head Groom Terry Pendry as she headed out for a horse ride along the Thames near Windsor Castle this morning

In the 2017 post I asked a few rhetorical questions including "Will Prince Harry marry a half-black American actress and divorcee?" and "Will Kate and William have another child?" At the time I would have guessed that the answer to both questions was No, but I was wrong. Now we know, the answer is yes.

Sunday, April 22, 2018

The Guessing Game - Updated

What will be on the cover of People this week? My guesses:

Princess Kate: Due to give birth shortly. As I'm writing on Sunday afternoon there's no news from London, I'll update this post if things start to happen
Pippa Middleton (now Matthews): Reportedly Kate's sister is also pregnant
Meghan and/or Harry: Four weeks until the wedding
Barbara Bush: Her funeral was yesterday. There's a great picture of 41, 43 and Laura standing and smiling with the Obamas, the Clintons and Melania. (See the picture here.) 
Lauren Bush Lauren: Granddaughter of Barbara, she gave birth two days after her grandmother's death.
Tammie Jo Shults: The Southwest Airlines pilot hailed as a hero
Matthew Mellon: A billionaire and member of the famous Mellon family, he died of a drug overdose at age 53. I'd never heard of him before last week, when I saw reporting that he had died. He was the ex-husband of one of the founders of the Jimmy Choo fashion company; recently he had been dating Kick Kennedy, age 30, a daughter of RFK Jr. It's a sad, and yes, I admit, fascinating, story
Karen McDougal: The former Playboy model who had an affair with Donald Trump has been released from her NDA by the parent company of the National Enquirer. She's now free to talk
Abby Lee Miller: Dance Mom released from prison, now diagnosed with cancer
Neri Oxman: Brad Pitt's new girlfriend?
Rachel Weisz and Daniel Craig: Expecting
Avicii: A Swedish DJ, dead at age 28
Verne Troyer: Dead Celebrity
James Shaw, Jr.: Disarmed the Waffle House shooter

Monday morning update: Royal baby #3, a boy, arrived this morning. He's a pretty good bet to be the main cover story this week, possibly in a story also featuring bride-to-be Meghan and mama-to-be Pippa Middleton

Monday afternoon. update #2:
Richard Gere, at age 68, has married a 35-year-old Spanish woman
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson: Also a new father, his daughter was born today

Tuesday morning, update #3: See the new cover here.

Some Thoughts From The First Wife

“I’ll tell you something, I don’t think it’s necessary,” she told The Post during an interview Wednesday at her Upper East Side townhouse.

“He has a good life and he has everything. Donald is going to be 74, 73 for the next [election] and maybe he should just go and play golf and enjoy his fortune,” 

Thus sayeth Ivana Trump in an article at Page Six, pondering whether her former husband should run for a second term. She also has some thoughts about her eldest son, his upcoming divorce and his cheating:

“Donald Jr. is a good-looking guy. He is successful. He is not going to have a problem to find a girl,” she said. “Maybe Vanessa might have a little problem because she has five kids . . . who is going to date and marry the woman who has five children? Especially since she is young [40] and she might want to have more.” 

... “It’s a long time ago now, so I think Vanessa knew it all along and maybe she just couldn’t get over the hurt to forgive him. But I honestly don’t know that many men who can keep their zippers up.”

Read the article here

And one more thing. I'm not the only one who's noticed that magazines are ignoring third wife/First Lady Melania. My focus is the cover of People, but an article at the New York Post, titled "Magazine editors turn blind eye to Melania," pointed out that other than Vanity Fair Mexico, no other magazine has put the First Lady on the cover since the election. Read the article here

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Attending The Funeral - Updated


photo credit: David J. Phillip/AP, taken at Lady Bird Johnson's funeral in 2007

On the day of Barbara Bush's funeral, the Washington Post does a deep-dive into the phenomenon of current and former First Ladies attending each other's funerals:

In 1979, Pat Nixon joined her husband at the funeral of Mamie Eisenhower. But first lady Rosalynn Carter also attended, solo, despite having only met Eisenhower once. It’s Carter’s apparent gesture of solidarity that seems to have codified the convention, according to the library.

A few years later, Carter attended the funeral of Bess Truman, along with Nancy Reagan and Betty Ford. Nixon’s 1993 first lady funeral delegation fell along party lines (only fellow GOP first ladies Ford and Reagan attended), though probably by accident. Jacqueline Kennedy had requested a small, family-oriented service, but in 1994, Lady Bird Johnson and Hillary Clinton still made the cut.

Five first ladies attended Johnson’s funeral in 2007, and four each went to Ford’s and Reagan’s. (Barbara Bush missed Reagan’s funeral but attended the burial.)

Four first ladies came to Houston on Saturday to honor Bush: Melania Trump, Michelle Obama, daughter-in-law Laura Bush and Hillary Clinton. Carter, 90, is recovering from surgery and was unable to attend. (Read the article here.) 

The article doesn't mention it, but there's also a traveling band of presidential daughters that attends First Lady funerals. That's Caroline Kennedy sitting next to Mrs. Bush in the picture above; Caroline was in Houston today, too, along with Lynda and Luci Johnson, Susan Ford, Chelsea Clinton and Tricia Nixon. Amy Carter, daughter of Rosalynn, and/or Patti Davis, daughter of Nancy Reagan, may have been there too but I didn't spot either of them.

And what about Melania? What was she thinking as she listened to the tributes for Barbara Bush? Was she struck by the contrast between the Bush family and her own? I certainly was. Was she struck by the contrast between the degenerate pig she's married to and the kind, thoughtful, devoted husband and gentleman that was seated to her left? I certainly was.

Image result for melania with obama at bush funeral

Was Melania considering what might be said about her at her own funeral? Was she anticipating what might be said about her husband during the garishly tacky gangster's funeral that will serve as his final sendoff from this world? Perhaps. (I certainly was.) As I'm writing this post, I assume Melania is on an Air Force plane, winging her way home and soon to be face-to-face with her husband. After a day spent surrounded by museum-quality authenticity, dignity, grace, service to country and overwhelming demonstrations of genuine love from family, friends and former political opponents, can you imagine what it would feel like to be going home to Donald Trump? I certainly can't.

Sunday morning update: An historic picture from yesterday, with lots of interesting dynamics about who is, and who is not, there, and note that I'm not referring to the Carters, the only other living presidential couple. Jimmy Carter is out of the country and Rosalynn is recovering from surgery. I've seen several comments from people noting that in this picture, and the one above, Melania seems a lot happier and more at ease with these people than she usually appears to be with her husband. As I'm writing on Sunday morning I'm still pondering how wretchedly awful it must have been to have to go home to Donald Trump.

photo credit: @PaulMorsePhoto

Sunday afternoon, update #2: Great minds think alike? I don't know anything about Benjamin Hart, but his article about this picture, at NYMag.com, had thoughts similar to mine, and no, I hadn't read his article when I wrote the paragraph above:

It must be said, though, that the warm and fuzzy feelings engendered by the picture were thrown into particularly sharp focus because of the president who wasn’t in it. And we don’t mean Jimmy Carter. Read it here

Monday morning, update #3: Still thinking about presidential funerals. I like this tweet from Matthew Yglesias: 



I would add that our two 93-year-old former presidents, George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter, are probably horrified at the thought that they could potentially be eulogized by Donald Trump. Hopefully both have many years of life ahead of them but if not, I'm guessing that both families are already strategizing how to tactfully disinvite Trump from speaking. 

When Your Fixer Flips For The Feds

In my "Changes In The Line Of Succession" post on April 11 (read it here,) I said that VP Mike Pence would get a big promotion if, for any reason, the current president doesn't complete his term. Now, in an opinion piece at the Washington Post titled "It's becoming clear that Trump won't run in 2020," former Republican and "I-really-don't-like-him-any-more" ex-Trump supporter Joe Scarborough doesn't quite say that Trump probably won't be president on election day, 2020, but he comes close:

This past week, White House office pools reportedly set up in anticipation of the next staff firing are shifting their focus to predicting which Trump family member will be the first to land behind bars. Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s independent investigation into Russia may have inspired a defiant West Wing response, but the U.S. attorney’s raid of Michael Cohen’s home, office and hotel room has stirred more fear and loathing inside White House offices than at any time since President Richard Nixon battled Watergate prosecutors in the summer of 1973.

Now, even Trump’s most steadfast allies are quietly admitting that the Southern District of New York’s investigation poses an existential threat to his future, both politically and legally. Trump allies are telling the president his “fixer” could flip for the feds, just like Michael Flynn, Rick Gates and George Papadopoulos. In Washington and across the country, Republicans are sensing the president is a wounded political figure, leading them to withhold their future support or — in one high-profile case — to challenge the president directly.

As many people in my Twitter feed pointed out, the only time having your "fixer" flip for the feds is a problem is when you do, in fact, have criminal activity that you're trying to hide.

Read the entire post here.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

Have You Been Wondering What The Mooch Is Up To?

The Mooch’s restaurant is helping ‘Sugar Daddies’ find ‘stunning women’
photo credit: Getty Images

Or at least what his restaurant is up to? Wonder no more:

The Mooch is helping “Sugar Daddies” hook up with pliant young women seeking “arrangements.”

Anthony Scaramucci’s Midtown restaurant, Hunt & Fish Club, is the venue for Thursday’s “Sugar Social,” where 25 “invited gentlemen” will meet for cocktails and dinner with 35 “stunning women.”

Scaramucci — the Wall Street whiz who was President Trump’s communications director for 10 days — will not be attending. His publicist Howard Bragman told me, “Anthony is happily married.” Scaramucci and his wife, Deidre Ball, reconciled after she filed for divorce last summer.

The email promoting the event promises, “Sugar Socials are our solution to a relationship on your terms — upfront and honest arrangements.” Money typically does change hands.

“Meet with 35 stunning women the first hour over cocktails. Select one (or two, if you like) to join you for dinner … Need help choosing the right company? Our host will pair you with someone of interest.”

Bragman said Scaramucci isn’t involved in promoting sex-for-money relationships. “Some club rented out a private room,” the publicist said. “We neither condone nor endorse.” 

Sources say Scaramucci named his restaurant after the infamous Bergin Hunt and Fish Club in Ozone Park, Queens, where John Gotti and his Gambino gang liked to hang.

This is from a story at Page Six, dated Monday. I would link to it, but this is the whole story. Enjoy.

Most Beautiful: Pink

Issue dated April 30, 2018: Pink


Singer Pink gets the "Beautiful" cover this year, and yes, there's a subtle difference in the title. It's now the "Beautiful Issue," with no language designating Pink as the "most" beautiful. In last week's Guessing Game post (read it here,) I said that it's time for People to stop objectifying women for their looks, and in last year's "Most Beautiful" post, about the issue with Julia Roberts on the cover, I said this:

Rating and ranking women based on their looks is ridiculous and offensive, and claiming that a 49-year-old woman is staying "Forever Young" is just plain stupid. I'd love to see People get away from the whole "Most Beautiful" thing, and for that matter, "Sexiest Man" and "Half Their Size" can go too. (Read the entire post here.) 

I'd say this qualifies as progress, or at least a step in the right direction. People acknowledges the change, too, with an "Editor's Note" that says the following: 

The issue is always a hit with audiences, advertisers and Hollywood because it celebrates all kinds of beauty, of course—beautiful souls as well as beautiful skin.

Over the years the name of the issue has evolved (“50 Most Beautiful,” “Most Beautiful Woman,” etc.), but the words “Most Beautiful” have always been part of the title. This year we’re renaming it “The Beautiful Issue” — to make clear that the issue is not a beauty contest. Nothing else has changed. As always it will feature beautiful women (and a few men) of all shapes, sizes and colors, and it will celebrate the most beautiful qualities of all: strength, humanity and artistry. (Read the Editor's Note here.) 

John Cena's break-up and Khloe's "baby and betrayal" were both on the current Guessing Game list, although I didn't come up with that pithy alliterative headline. There's a bit of a "rinse and repeat" aura to the two topline headlines, which look remarkably similar to the ones on last year's cover. In the top left corner, a broken-up couple, man in a suit and tie on the left, woman in a strapless dress on the right; in the top right corner, framed in a circle, a member of the Kardashian/Jenner family.

Read the Guessing Game post here.

Last year at this time: Issue dated May 1, 2017

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

RIP Barbara Bush, And Thank You

I love this picture (and the hat):


For only the 9th time since 1960, a former First Lady has died and the next few days will be a period of reflection and tribute to Barbara Bush. To start with tonight, I like the statement from the Obamas:

The statement from the Trumps is fine, but in the usual spirit of this administration's pathetically sloppy incompetence, they got the date wrong:

Readers know that here at Writing The World I'm fascinated by the view of the world as seen through the filter of People magazine covers. In the magazine's earlier days there was always a cover featuring the wife of a newly elected president; here is Barbara Bush on the cover of the issue dated November 21, 1988, right after her husband was elected president:

 Image result for Barbara Bush on People cover

"The first man she ever kissed," wow, how sweet is that? President Bush (41) only served 1 term/4 years, but during that time, Barbara was featured on People's cover twice more:

Issue dated January 30, 1989
Image result for People cover january 1989 a Happy 1st family

Issue dated October 1, 1990
Image result for People cover October 1990 The silver fox speaks her mind

We live in a different era now, on so many levels, and as a general rule I don't like to compare women to each other. (I will point out, as I have many times here before, that in the 17 months since Donald's election People has, for whatever reason, completely ignored Melania.) As I ponder the legacy of Barbara Bush tonight, tributes and encomiums are pouring in, from across the political spectrum and indeed, from around the world. It will happen again on that day in the future when Barbara's husband leaves us. It will not happen when the time comes to remember Donald Trump. 

And one more thing: I just saw this. They really are pathetic and note that it's not just the date. The spacing is off too.