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Funniest — But Hardly The Most Extreme — Celebrity In DC

Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 28-04-2006

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The DC Improv last night hosted the annual Funniest Celebrity in DC contest.

Looking at the line-up, it’s hard not to think, boy, I’ve heard those jokes and seen those acts before.  But where?

Here’s where: The Improv, 1999 — preserved for immortality thanks to the mercury-sealed, concrete-enrusted C-SPAN video vault.

You’ll notice several things about that 1999 show:

  • Now THAT was DC political comedy at its finest
  • When C-SPAN drops the price from $180 to $24.95, they’re probably also throwing in a yellow highlighter for free
  • How could Mortman have lost to Lieberman?

Not just bitter.  Extreme bitter.

Extreme Trivia #7

Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 27-04-2006

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Now, the answer to our last Extreme Trivia question.  Name the championship boxer who was a public supporter of a recent democracy revolution in his native country.

The boxer:  Wladimir Klitschko.  The revolution: Ukraine’s Orange Revolution.    The trivia winner: Peter Roff.

Now the next Extreme Trivia question.  Of the 231 Republicans currently in the House of Representatives, how many were in office when the GOP was in the minority?

Blogs The Famous Media Reads: Jeff Zeleny

Posted by admin | Posted in Uncategorized | Posted on 28-03-2006

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Now, the next installment in Extreme Mortman’s regular feature: a peek inside the blog-reading habits of our nation’s top reporters and media celebrities. And what a huge honor today. Jeff Zeleny is the National Political Correspondent for the Chicago Tribune, a post he has held for five years. He is a contributor to The Swamp, the new blog written by the Tribune’s Washington Bureau. Before coming to Washington, Jeff worked as a general assignment reporter in Chicago. He came to the Tribune from the Des Moines Register, where he spent more than three years covering state politics and the opening stage of the 2000 presidential race.

Now, please give a warm Extreme welcome to the great political reporter Jeff Zeleny — here are the blogs he tells Extreme Mortman he reads:

The number of political blogs seems to grow by the day, but my favorites are rooted in real reporting, rather than opinion. That’s not to say I don’t check out purely opinion blogs – like talk radio, I think it’s useful to tune in when I can – but I don’t rely on those sites nearly as much. Finally, as helpful as some of the information here can be, it’s not nearly as important as doing something that might sound a little retro: dialing the phone or even better, knocking on doors and talking to real voters.

So in no particular order, the blogs I try to check out a few times a day include:

  • The Fix
  • Hotline On Call
  • PoliticsNH.com
  • Taegen Goddard’s Political Wire

While not necessarily blogs, I never miss a day without:

  • The Note
  • First Read
  • Wake up Call, Last Call, Hotline
  • The Morning Grind
  • Slate
  • Wonkette

Several times a week, I try to check out these blogs (some partisan, some not):

  • Swing State Project
  • Real Clear Politics
  • Daily Kos
  • My DD
  • Red State
  • Hugh Hewitt

I live in Washington and I’m interested in the media, so I can’t miss these:

  • Fishbowl DC
  • Gawker
  • Romenesko

If I am traveling to a particular state for a story, I always try to check out the latest blogs from those states. This zone of my bookmark section is, as they say, under construction and needs to be beefed up before the Midterm campaign kicks into high gear.  I check Gordon Fisher’s take at Iowa True Blue, South Carolina headlines at scheadlines.com, and Politics Extra.

DH Lawrence of Arabia?

Posted by Lauren Michaels | Posted in Port Whine, Uncategorized | Posted on 26-02-2006

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Speaking on “Fox News Sunday” about the UAE/ports controversy, Joe Biden said: “The fact of the matter is that there are some people — I’m sure this is anti-Arab bashing.”

Perhaps he had in mind New York Post columnist Cindy Adams, who wrote:

“Those clever dudes from Dubai may not only change the composition of America’s harbors and ports but, next up, America’s poetry. Soon it’ll be: By the shores of Gitche Gumee, by the shining big sea water – stands an Arab. … But the United Arab Emirates, doorkeepers to the United States of America? Think a hungry Persian cat at the entrance to a mouse hole. Some say this has the aroma of a garbage truck stalled on a street in August. I, naturally, wouldn’t say that. I am too diplomatic to risk angering…”