If you're gonna do a coverup, at least lean into it.
Come on, people. Give us a little credit. Try a little harder. Lean into the cover-up. The Watergate crooks had Tony Ulasewicz, running from one phone booth to another, a trolley conductor's coin dispenser on his belt, delivering the hush money to the burglars. The Iran-Contra scoundrels had Fawn Hall, smuggling incriminating documents out of Ollie North's office in her lingerie and, in her own words, "going beyond the written law." Those were bag persons with style. What we have here, at best, is a bunch of apparatchiks, from several government agencies, all simply waiting for their phones to get wiped. At worst, we have the most boringly obvious obstruction of justice in American political history. |
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| The beautiful, 4-piece pan that you'll use every day of the week. |
| It's time to update your shower experience. |
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On Tuesday, Vin Scully passed away at his Los Angeles home at the age of 94. No cause of death was provided. Scully's legend as the longest-tenured broadcaster with a single team in the history of professional sports outsizes any amount of words that can be written about him. The man offered his singular voice, whip-smart baseball IQ, and gift for storytelling over a period of time that saw Jackie Robinson, Pee Wee Reese, Don Sutton, Mike Piazza, and Clayton Kershaw all take the field in front of him. We're left with what he reminded us during every bit of those 67 summers, and then some—that if there's baseball, then things can be good. And if things aren't very good, then we'll find a way to make it all right. |
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Sure, 'Stranger Things' officially conquered the world. But there's more to this year's slate than the Upside Down. |
| "Real men put country over party," the congresswoman wrote on Twitter, announcing the news. |
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Season One of 'Reservation Dogs' exploded onto the American television scene with a story that was unlike anything before it. An Indigenous producing team of Taika Waititi and Sterlin Harjo, armed with a talented collective of Indigenous writers, directors, and actors, created eight episodes of brilliant and original storytelling. The show garnered many awards in its first season: two Independent Spirit Awards, an AFI award, and a Peabody Award, just to name a few. Along the way, it managed to make fans out of prestigious filmmakers like Barry Jenkins and Guillermo del Toro. Now Season Two is here and the gang is back, but they're all moving in different directions. |
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