Friday, July 10, 2015

Don't step in the mainstream!



To be a card carrying member of the Main Stream media it is required that you direct your stream solely at Republicans and conservatives. There has been long tradition of very pissed off journalists who enjoy voiding their bladders over anyone more conservative than George McGovern. It began with the rivalry between George Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst which originated in the frenzy that led up to the Spanish American War. Their competition was so fierce that it led to Mr. Hearst taking out his enormous penis to urinate on the steps of the White House to protest President McKinley’s inertia in light of the provocation of the Spaniards. This action led to two unforeseen consequences. The heavy yellow stream caused by Mr. Hearst’s addiction to pineapple juice led to the creation of the type of “Yellow Journalism” where the journalist is more important than the story. It continues to this very day in the work of such giants as Geraldo Rivera, Bill O’Reilly and Christine Amanpour. And the rumors of the size of his enormous penis led to long affair with Marion Davies as well as the fascination with black men by his granddaughter Patti that led to her alleged kidnapping by the Symboinese Liberation Army.
(Truth Doesn’t Even Have It’s Pants On, The History of the Main Stream Media, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Playboy Press 2006)

2 comments:

chickelit said...

Many many mainstream urinalists would love to cross swords but find it difficult to do sitting down.

William said...

James Gordon Bennett Jr was the publisher of the NY Herald during the latter part of the nineteenth century. He had to retire from polite society after a regrettable incident where he took a leak on a grand piano during a social event. He then moved to France where he took in the sights. He visited a monastery where the abbot pointed out that the sacristy lamp had been burning continuously since it had been lit by the monastery's founder in the sixth century. Bennett leaned across, went whoof, and told the abbot "Well, it's out now."