OCinBuffalo Posted August 29, 2018 Posted August 29, 2018 ...on Chelsea Handler. https://dailycaller.com/2018/08/28/chelsea-handler-trump-jr/ I’d say stick to comedy but you weren’t funny enough to avoid cancellation of your Netflix show. Stay away from politics — no reason to suck at two things. https://t.co/TWaIdU0d71 — Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) August 28, 2018 Man, that is a PPP-level smack down, which is why I posted it here. 2
Buffalo_Gal Posted August 30, 2018 Posted August 30, 2018 2 hours ago, Koko78 said: I just wanted to quote this so I could see it twice in this thread. He is so, so, so hot, even just clapping. ? 1
Teddy KGB Posted August 30, 2018 Posted August 30, 2018 12 minutes ago, Doc said: James Woods' add-on was even better. Link ? 8 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said: I just wanted to quote this so I could see it twice in this thread. He is so, so, so hot, even just clapping. ? Keep it in your pants ?? 1
3rdnlng Posted August 30, 2018 Posted August 30, 2018 2 hours ago, KW95 said: Rock looks skinny in that gif He's been visiting Brazil: https://www.bloombergquint.com/politics/2018/08/29/soup-kitchen-lines-swell-on-eve-of-election-in-sputtering-brazil#gs._yA39b4 (Bloomberg) -- In Brazil’s capital, a well-known rodizio -- an all-you-can-eat steakhouse -- offers a steep discount for choosing only one type of meat; at an upscale Italian eatery, you can now pay for lunch in installments; at a soup kitchen, shop owners join the homeless for a free meal. Faced with fewer customers, restaurants are dropping their prices for the first time in 13 years. "Brazilians have had to change their habits and go to cheaper restaurants," said Paulo Solmucci Junior, head of the country’s bar and restaurant association. "Traditional, important restaurants have closed and many are at risk. We were optimistic this year. But the economy let us down." A recovery from the country’s worst recession ever has run aground as investors and consumers are whipsawed by the prospect that either the far right or far left will win the election in October, the most unpredictable since the return to democracy in 1985. Yet cutting back on Sunday night family pizza may be only the beginning. Public finances are in shambles. Draconian belt-tightening is inevitable regardless of who wins the election, says Raul Velloso, an economic consultant and specialist in public finances. For a who’s who in Brazil’s election, click here "The next president will be under pressure and if he doesn’t do the right thing, he’ll fall," Velloso said in an interview. "All of them know that," he said about the candidates.
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