A list of puns related to "Wall to Wall Media"
I ain't selling till AMC has landed in a galaxy far, far away!
Identifying campaign finance sources of Congressional reps is one of the most reliable ways to suss out how they'll vote on key issues. Sometimes the funding isn't obvious, too. It's common for big money to funnel funds into dark pools and super PACs to hide.
It can be a challenge sorting through FEC filings - nothing the wrinklebrain Apes here can't handle, though. I often quickly browse OpenSecrets.org to look for running themes and trends in campaign finances. The FEC website itself has all the same info and more, but you can imagine how difficult it can be to sort through the stacks.
Occasionally we might hear Apes say, "This isn't political!" But it has always been political. It just isn't partisan. A majority of lawmakers in Congress are millionaires. Plenty of D's and R's in that list. And you can bet your fuzzy Ape asses they're neck-deep in the conversation around dark pools and stock market fraud/manipulation because it affects their portfolios.
This AMC short squeeze is a battle in the class war. And it won't be the last one. It will require a lot of us (myself included) to challenge our own personal bias and remember:
Ape no hurt Ape. Apes together strong.
By Katie Daviscourt Seattle, WA September 9, 2021 7:57 AM 1 Mins Reading
Conservative commentator Candace Owens joined Fox News' Brian Kilmeade on Wednesday to discuss a crowd of Gavin Newsom supporters and a woman in a monkey mask assaulting California gubernatorial candidate Larry Elder.
"It's absolutely infuriating," Owens said of the horrific incident that took place Wednesday while walking through a Venice neighborhood of Los Angeles.
Owens slammed mainstream media for failing to report on the incident and said if roles were reversed and a conservative woman were to throw eggs and attack a black Democrat candidate there would have been extensive coverage.
"If this was on the other side, if a white woman wearing a monkey mask threw an egg at a black democratic candidate, there would be wall to wall coverage," Owens said. "This might actually constitute as a hate crime in Los Angeles."
"We need to find out exactly who this woman is," Owens continued, host of the Candace Owens Show on Daily Wire.
"She needs to be arrested and charges need to be brought because this is absolutely criminal and disgusting, and it might be racist. I'm unsure why she was wearing the monkey mask. I have no idea why she was wearing it, but I'd like to see more information about that," Owens fired back.
Republican candidate Larry Elder has been at the on the receiving end of racist attacks by media in the state of California since announcing his campaign for governor. Elder hopes to replace Governor Gavin Newsom in the upcoming recall election on September 14.
Source: thepostmillennial com/watch-candace-owens-slams-media-racist-attack-larry-elder?utm_campaign=64469
I want to display saved posts or a chosen account page without scrolling. There are too many pictures for the screenshot method.
I saw Zapier, but didn't understand if it'd help.
Iβm an early Gen X guy born in β67. Back in the 70s and 80s, we all bought records for the music, not for the cover. LPs went on shelves or into cabinets or crates. My bedroom in junior high & high school, my dorm rooms & apartments in college, my apartments & first house after college, I never put a record on the wall. I never thought to put a record on the wall; there were posters for that. Theyβd give away posters at record stores, because record labels sent them more promotional posters than they could ever hang on their walls, or a customer asked to get a poster on the wall once it was replaced with a new one. There were even βalbum flats,β foot square reproductions of album covers, given away by labels to record stores for in-store displays, and then often passed along to customers. The only place I ever saw actual records on a wall was behind the counter at a few used record stores, or booths at record shows & flea markets.
I can attribute the spread of this record-on-the-wall look to social media, but how, where & why did this βI want my home to look like a flea marketβ thing start in the first place? Was it the lack of cheap & readily available music posters? Copying the stick-anything-on-the-wall decor at restaurants?
It isnβt as much a vinyljerk thing as a βget off my lawnβ thing.
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