Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nice place to visit.
Owner spent 700k on anti-trump ads!
I’m sure this was a planned photo op with people planted there.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-12-07/penzeys-spices-spending-big-on-facebook-ads-supporting-trump-impeachment
Kinda like the 2 videos that came out when Harris was looking for Doritos. One edit had Walz finding them and handing them to her, one edit at the same place had her husband find them and give them to her. They tried to sell it like an organic moment, but totally staged.
Cringe.
Yes. Two months before an election, everything a candidate does is a pre-planned photo op, designed to generate good press and look like a human who can connect with other humans. That’s how you manage to get good press and win elections vs becoming a national joke because the donut store employees refuse to be on camera with you and you can’t manage to just order three dozen assorted donuts and a couple dozen glazed for your staff, being sure to ask for whatever the shop is best known for (that some aid researched and told you to be sure to mention). Not hard and generates some feel good press— unless the candidate can’t connect. With other humans.
You are looking at basic, competent campaign leg work. Harris’s team did the leg work and showed basic competence— which should be the bare minimum for a candidate for POTUS. It’s concerning that some campaigns don’t do the leg and the clips of the looking idiotic dominate the news cycle. Or worse, they do the legwork and their candidate still fails at ordering donuts.
But no— none of this is spontaneous in a competently run campaign.
This. Are people really that naive?
A competently run campaign does not make it obvious that it's staged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nice place to visit.
Owner spent 700k on anti-trump ads!
I’m sure this was a planned photo op with people planted there.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-12-07/penzeys-spices-spending-big-on-facebook-ads-supporting-trump-impeachment
Kinda like the 2 videos that came out when Harris was looking for Doritos. One edit had Walz finding them and handing them to her, one edit at the same place had her husband find them and give them to her. They tried to sell it like an organic moment, but totally staged.
Cringe.
Yes. Two months before an election, everything a candidate does is a pre-planned photo op, designed to generate good press and look like a human who can connect with other humans. That’s how you manage to get good press and win elections vs becoming a national joke because the donut store employees refuse to be on camera with you and you can’t manage to just order three dozen assorted donuts and a couple dozen glazed for your staff, being sure to ask for whatever the shop is best known for (that some aid researched and told you to be sure to mention). Not hard and generates some feel good press— unless the candidate can’t connect. With other humans.
You are looking at basic, competent campaign leg work. Harris’s team did the leg work and showed basic competence— which should be the bare minimum for a candidate for POTUS. It’s concerning that some campaigns don’t do the leg and the clips of the looking idiotic dominate the news cycle. Or worse, they do the legwork and their candidate still fails at ordering donuts.
But no— none of this is spontaneous in a competently run campaign.
This. Are people really that naive?
A competently run campaign does not make it obvious that it's staged.
Meh. Weird to care about this. More important concerns for most voters. Like keeping a man with dementia out of the White House.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nice place to visit.
Owner spent 700k on anti-trump ads!
I’m sure this was a planned photo op with people planted there.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-12-07/penzeys-spices-spending-big-on-facebook-ads-supporting-trump-impeachment
Kinda like the 2 videos that came out when Harris was looking for Doritos. One edit had Walz finding them and handing them to her, one edit at the same place had her husband find them and give them to her. They tried to sell it like an organic moment, but totally staged.
Cringe.
Yes. Two months before an election, everything a candidate does is a pre-planned photo op, designed to generate good press and look like a human who can connect with other humans. That’s how you manage to get good press and win elections vs becoming a national joke because the donut store employees refuse to be on camera with you and you can’t manage to just order three dozen assorted donuts and a couple dozen glazed for your staff, being sure to ask for whatever the shop is best known for (that some aid researched and told you to be sure to mention). Not hard and generates some feel good press— unless the candidate can’t connect. With other humans.
You are looking at basic, competent campaign leg work. Harris’s team did the leg work and showed basic competence— which should be the bare minimum for a candidate for POTUS. It’s concerning that some campaigns don’t do the leg and the clips of the looking idiotic dominate the news cycle. Or worse, they do the legwork and their candidate still fails at ordering donuts.
But no— none of this is spontaneous in a competently run campaign.
This. Are people really that naive?
A competently run campaign does not make it obvious that it's staged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nice place to visit.
Owner spent 700k on anti-trump ads!
I’m sure this was a planned photo op with people planted there.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-12-07/penzeys-spices-spending-big-on-facebook-ads-supporting-trump-impeachment
Kinda like the 2 videos that came out when Harris was looking for Doritos. One edit had Walz finding them and handing them to her, one edit at the same place had her husband find them and give them to her. They tried to sell it like an organic moment, but totally staged.
Cringe.
Yes. Two months before an election, everything a candidate does is a pre-planned photo op, designed to generate good press and look like a human who can connect with other humans. That’s how you manage to get good press and win elections vs becoming a national joke because the donut store employees refuse to be on camera with you and you can’t manage to just order three dozen assorted donuts and a couple dozen glazed for your staff, being sure to ask for whatever the shop is best known for (that some aid researched and told you to be sure to mention). Not hard and generates some feel good press— unless the candidate can’t connect. With other humans.
You are looking at basic, competent campaign leg work. Harris’s team did the leg work and showed basic competence— which should be the bare minimum for a candidate for POTUS. It’s concerning that some campaigns don’t do the leg and the clips of the looking idiotic dominate the news cycle. Or worse, they do the legwork and their candidate still fails at ordering donuts.
But no— none of this is spontaneous in a competently run campaign.
This. Are people really that naive?
Anonymous wrote:Nice place to visit.
Owner spent 700k on anti-trump ads!
I’m sure this was a planned photo op with people planted there.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-12-07/penzeys-spices-spending-big-on-facebook-ads-supporting-trump-impeachment
Kinda like the 2 videos that came out when Harris was looking for Doritos. One edit had Walz finding them and handing them to her, one edit at the same place had her husband find them and give them to her. They tried to sell it like an organic moment, but totally staged.
Cringe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nice place to visit.
Owner spent 700k on anti-trump ads!
I’m sure this was a planned photo op with people planted there.
https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2019-12-07/penzeys-spices-spending-big-on-facebook-ads-supporting-trump-impeachment
Kinda like the 2 videos that came out when Harris was looking for Doritos. One edit had Walz finding them and handing them to her, one edit at the same place had her husband find them and give them to her. They tried to sell it like an organic moment, but totally staged.
Cringe.
Yes. Two months before an election, everything a candidate does is a pre-planned photo op, designed to generate good press and look like a human who can connect with other humans. That’s how you manage to get good press and win elections vs becoming a national joke because the donut store employees refuse to be on camera with you and you can’t manage to just order three dozen assorted donuts and a couple dozen glazed for your staff, being sure to ask for whatever the shop is best known for (that some aid researched and told you to be sure to mention). Not hard and generates some feel good press— unless the candidate can’t connect. With other humans.
You are looking at basic, competent campaign leg work. Harris’s team did the leg work and showed basic competence— which should be the bare minimum for a candidate for POTUS. It’s concerning that some campaigns don’t do the leg and the clips of the looking idiotic dominate the news cycle. Or worse, they do the legwork and their candidate still fails at ordering donuts.
But no— none of this is spontaneous in a competently run campaign.
Anonymous wrote:
Yep, she’s been identified on Twitter and is feeling the wrath. The whole thing is completely staged.
Anonymous wrote:Harris's campaign staff keeps letting her down. The poor staging for the CNN interview, the poor staging today.
Anonymous wrote:Harris's campaign staff keeps letting her down. The poor staging for the CNN interview, the poor staging today.
Anonymous wrote:Harris's campaign staff keeps letting her down. The poor staging for the CNN interview, the poor staging today.
Anonymous wrote:
Yep, she’s been identified on Twitter and is feeling the wrath. The whole thing is completely staged.