Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Christine O'Donnell, "The Troublemaker"


O'Donnell lost her Senate race rebel Delaware Chris Coons by a wide margin.And her new memoir, Troublemaker: Let's do what it takes to make America Great Again, it turns out, she thinks a witch video had a lot to do with it, as it shows layer upon layer of evidence that shows that it can never win in the first place.


Troublemaker is shorter than his books, large print manipulates it to be.
But despite his modest time, it's unlikely you'll be able to sit sometimes painfully boring childhood stories and endless political jargon. We chose the most delicious quotes, revelations, and themes, so you do not not have to.


She never wanted to tell you that it is not a witch.

O'Donnell does not waste time telling the backstory of "not a witch," an ad, pointing out that it in small fragments are spliced ​​between the early chapters.May be interested editor suggested that this trick as an intervention to scan the surface temperature and the story of a chapter on the early life of O'Donnell.

O'Donnell says she never wanted to burn the witch ad.
When she broke her campaign manager, said: "You're going to hate it, Christine, but hear me out."She hates him, and continued to hate him even when he cheated all, but its record in multiple takes. They wrote another ad is preferred, which featured stories of her supporters to economic difficulties" I think I just made a terrible mistake, "she said .


As she chirped later, she thought, SNL parody Kristen Wiig was funny, and she also saw the positive intent in gay automatically tuned version, which became a classic YouTube.
"Bright, bouncy tune," she writes, "to establish a more positive, upbeat tone." Never quite clear that she finally thought about the whole fiasco, her criticism of Fred Davis, campaign manager, just barely contained.She calls the announcement "idiotic," "ridiculous" and "not the message I wanted to convey," and turning it into a lesson to listen to the experts, instead of with her instincts. But at the end of one chapter, she reprints the script declaration with an apparent note of affection for his "real message."

She almost got a job to look at.

In the 1990s, O'Donnell blossomed like a TV expert. "I grew up in an experienced talking head on de Jour [sic]," she writes. "And it was not just that I experienced, people have told me that when I appeared on television, I came across as relaxed, representative and passionate about their faith." O'Donnell worked for Concerned Women for America, the conservative evangelical group, and appeared regularly on talk shows Sunday.


She eventually followed by three of her sisters in Los Angeles, where she hopes to expand her career in television.
She was in the "development talks" with Paramount and interviews to work on View. "When I crossed the ABC News Diane Sawyer, whizzed through a thick stack of papers," she writes. "I thought it was a violation of the history of racing in the file. Then I saw Barbara. She leaned against the doorjamb, shoes kicked off, talking with the employee. She greeted me with a friendly smile and just randomly put me in peace." An interview with Walters went so well that ABC is made a contract, but eventually gave the job Lisa Ling.


She ran PR machine by Mel Gibson.

Between unsuccessful runs the Senate, was a freelance consultant O'Donnell publicity in Delaware, and was chosen to head the "grassroots" campaign to get Christians to see Mel Gibson's The Passion of Christ. For Christina, it was just like another campaign: get Christians to see the film to throw a "vote for Christ in Hollywood." O'Donnell wrote that the team "had the idea that, as Christian conservatives have been interested in material, we should ask them to buy now and commit to supporting the film ahead of its release. "They said, evangelicals," Hey, you want the best movies in Hollywood? you want spiritual meaning of history, stories that reflect your values? Well, here your chance to put your money where your mouth is. " In the Passion of Christ, anecdote, Hollywood bosses are to create the Republican Party, and the choice of O'Donnell's "hold on [my] belief and [my] vision" proved them wrong, very similar to a tea party using grass-roots enthusiasm to challenge the assumptions rooted, powerful Republican leaders.


RINOS in Delaware really mean.

It is not enough to say O'Donnell has a vague idea of ​​the creation of the Republican State of Delaware, and her experience during the campaign shows why. Of course, she was totally unproven candidate who was extremely ideas and never won a race. But she felt the Republican Party should support her in any way, especially when she won the nomination for the party to run for the Senate. They did not. When she challenged Joe Biden in 2008, Republican Rep. Mike Castle has personally visited potential donors O'Donnell and ordered them not to hold a fundraiser. At another dinner of the Republican Party, Republican Party Delaware official pointedly represented by each person in the room except O'Donnell. "It was a clear rebuke and a hell of a shame in my home state, in front of my old boss, a guy who also spoke of a future presidential candidate." This guy was Haley Barbour, who has done all right thank O'Donnell, as soon as he came on the scene

Previously, she was pro-abortion liberal

O’Donnell's mother was a lifelong Democrat who seriously disappointed withthe 7-year-old Christina, voted for Jimmy Carter. (O'Donnell had decided she wanted to marry Gerald Ford.) ​​But its policy followed her mother. In college, she said, she "thought of myself as a liberal man, leaning on the left for the day." But she tangled with a friend for an abortion, and soon found myself reading the technical medical books in the library. "It was terrible for me, as they describedthe procedure," she writes. Realizing that abortion was wrong, "shattered my world, to the point where I came in thinking, If I was wrong about abortion, what else I'm wrong?" In a very short time, she became lonely on the campus of heranti-abortion activist who receive a box of plastic fruit in the mail from abortiongroups. In his words, it was that the only issue and talking with a cute collegeRepublican volunteers, who opened it to join its efforts with the Republican Party, and soon it was evident in the excitement of the Bush / Quayle campaign

She thinks that Karl Rove convinced Bush is so liberal.

She admires the former president for having "the courage to stand up for theirbeliefs ... most of the time. But the liberal influences in his own administration, headed by Karl Rove at times, severely tarnished Bush's legacy of trueconstitutionalists, and undermined our Republican-led Congress ... It was Karl Rove's camp, who pushed for amnesty for illegal aliens, as well as deal with the Liberal Democrats of overspending and the ever-expanding regulation. "She describes the initiatives of the Bush policy as" Rove politics, "as the 43rd President is the second largest after Ronald Reagan in his ability to do something conservatives hate and will never be blamed for them.

Oh yeah, she likes to say "darn."

O'Donnell's older sister, Jenny thought the children behave better when they were allowed to send their bad behavior, so that during one session, the nurse, she let her younger brother and sisters to begin the evening, uttering curse words. "I'mnot a prude two-shoes, believe me, but nothing comes out of my mouth," saysO'Donnell. ". I guess I just need more persuasion, "but her little sister Eileen has been much more willing, screaming, shock of all!" Shit, "O'Donnell may notprude, but she seems to love the word" darn ", whose votes against Joe Bidenwas" darn respectable, "her treatment in the hands of the Delaware Republican Party was" darn offensive, "and so on.

No comments:

Post a Comment