Donald Trump’s tax bill speech Wednesday in St. Charles,six erotice romance Missouri, wasn’t exactly riveting.
But Rob Lowe -- aka The West Wing'sSam Seaborn, aka the sexiest dang speech writer the executive branch ever did see -- suffered through it and had one very specific complaint.
SEE ALSO: 10 times typos almost ruined your lifeIn his speech, Trump used the phrase "very historic" to describe his administration. But, by invoking a scene from The West Wingin which fictional president Jed Bartlet corrects a speechwriter's use of a similar phrase, Lowe served Trump one piping hot grammar burn.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Lowe is referring to the Season 2 episode "Galileo," which opens with President Bartlet rehearsing a speech. The liberal, professorial president balks when he comes across the phrase "we have a very unique opportunity to take part live in an extremely historic event."
"Unique means one of a kind," President Bartlett points out. "Something can't be 'very unique.' Nor can it be 'extremely historic.'"
Oh, to have a president who knew or cared about such things.
Or to have one that knew a thing or two about American history. Trump pointed out in the same breath as his "very historic" comment that he had only learned two days prior to his St. Charles appearance that Lewis and Clark began their journey in Missouri.
We guess a Nobel Prize-winning, nuclear disaster-averting president like Bartlet really does only exists in fiction these days.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
On the other hand, Lowe did misspell "Galileo." Then there's the claim that the same liberal smugness Jed Bartlet, Sam Seaborn, and the rest of The West Wingstaff typify on screen has been blamed for helping put Trump in the actual West Wing in the first place. Sigh.
Jhumpa Lahiri on James Salter’s “Light Years”Linda Rosenkrantz on Her Book “Talk,” Fifty Years LaterChristopher Robin Is Saying His PrayersDid the Erie Canal Change Our Vowel Sounds?Singing Show Tunes to James SalterA Day at an Upper West Side Bank100 Billboards Celebrate the Allure of the WestTough Cookies, and Other NewsStanley Mouse and the Sixties PsychOn the Origin—and the ModernMy Parents’ News CleanseKate Joyce's Photographs of Jonny Greenwood and the Big Ears Music FestivalRichard Sharpe Shaver’s Theory on “Rock Books”The Bizarre Beauty of Early HandStaff Picks: Coates, Cartels, Caesar, Cigarettes by The Paris ReviewJames Salter on His Early Experiences with The Paris ReviewThe Plum Tree on West 83rd StreetIris Murdoch’s Favorite Painting, “The Flaying of Marsyas”On James Wright’s “Lying in a Hammock...”Ishion Hutchinson on His Poem “The Difference” I Cannot by Lucy Schiller Forget about Mars for a minute: Let's talk about these rad moon missions Tinder releases new warnings to stop inappropriate messages An intense cold snap turned this waterfront home into a striking ice castle Microsoft could bring 'Starfield' and 'Indiana Jones' to PlayStation Apple Vision Pro teardown: What's inside the $3,500 headset The Measure of Intensities: On Luc Tuymans by Joshua Cohen Taylor Swift's 'The Tortured Poets Department': Everything we know Anthe: On Translating Kannada by Deepa Bhasthi Anacondas in the Park by Pedro Lemebel Amazon Echo device sale: Get up to 40% off "Perfection You Cannot Have": On Agnes Martin and Grief by Cody Delistraty The Poetry of Fact: On Alec Wilkinson’s Moonshine by Padgett Powell Televised Music Is a Pointless Rigmarole by Theodor W. Adorno Sad People Who Smoke: On Mary Robison by Adam Wilson Looking for hope on climate change under Trump? Cities are where the action is. Wordle today: The answer and hints for February 4 Taylor Swift won her fourth Grammy for Album of the Year, makes history How to watch 'Abbott Elementary' Season 3: Premiere, streaming deals Amazon's fulfillment centers will soon run on solar energy
1.6407s , 8262.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【six erotice romance】,Charm Information Network