shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 32,021
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Ditto for all of MSM. President Xi is starting up his steamroller as eyes are averted once again.
CNN’s Jim Acosta was accused of being "literally delusional" on Tuesday after admitting he doesn’t plan to cover Joe Biden’s presidency as actively as he did the Trump administration, claiming covering Trump was "an experience that might merit hazard pay."
A piece published by The Atlantic on Tuesday, "The Resistance’s Breakup With the Media Is at Hand," by McKay Coppins notes, "The White House spent four years vilifying journalists" and asked, "What comes next?" Coppins noted "the Trump era has been especially rewarding to a certain class of Washington reporter," which includes CNN’s Acosta.
"As the White House beat became the biggest story in the world, once-obscure correspondents were recast in the popular imagination as resistance heroes fighting for truth, justice, and the American way. They were showered with book deals, speaking gigs, and hundreds of thousands of Twitter followers," he wrote, pondering what reporters who "got famous fighting with Trump" plan to do next.
CNN’s Jim Acosta roasted for saying covering Trump was ‘nonstop national emergency,’ ‘might merit hazard pay’
CNN’s Jim Acosta was accused of being “literally delusional” on Tuesday after admitting he doesn’t plan to cover Joe Biden’s presidency as feverishly as he did the Trump administration, claiming covering Trump was “an experience that might merit hazard pay.”
www.foxnews.com
CNN’s Jim Acosta was accused of being "literally delusional" on Tuesday after admitting he doesn’t plan to cover Joe Biden’s presidency as actively as he did the Trump administration, claiming covering Trump was "an experience that might merit hazard pay."
A piece published by The Atlantic on Tuesday, "The Resistance’s Breakup With the Media Is at Hand," by McKay Coppins notes, "The White House spent four years vilifying journalists" and asked, "What comes next?" Coppins noted "the Trump era has been especially rewarding to a certain class of Washington reporter," which includes CNN’s Acosta.
"As the White House beat became the biggest story in the world, once-obscure correspondents were recast in the popular imagination as resistance heroes fighting for truth, justice, and the American way. They were showered with book deals, speaking gigs, and hundreds of thousands of Twitter followers," he wrote, pondering what reporters who "got famous fighting with Trump" plan to do next.