Posted on 01/22/2004 9:57:33 AM PST by rexarino
During the President's speech, which lasted approximately 1 hour, the Sr. Senator from Massachusetts, Edward "Ted" Kennedy demonstrated once again the old adage that "a picture is worth a thousand words".
The speech by President Bush contained just under 5,500 words and itwould appear that at least several of them caused Senator Kennedy great psychic pain...
(see photos: http://www.x234.com/teddyk/teddyk.html)
(Excerpt) Read more at x234.com ...
This was the original title: Ted Kennedy goes nuts - gives the "finger" to President Bush Certainly, if I am correct that the hand signals a) were intentional and b) are equivalent to "giving the finger", then c) the term "finger" in the original title is correct and should not have been cropped by the sysop. |
I haven't downloaded the videos to see it "real time". I know that the footage of Oswald being shot has been printed "frame by frame" to indicate that he looks and recognizes Jack Ruby but that just doesn't happen.
I was just trying to clarrify the gesture in question. Notice that Ted is not shaking his head "no", he's moving his hand back and forth and leaving his head still.
I really haven't come to a conclusion on this. Ted and Hillary were rude to the president during the State of the Union speech, however. I say we just "Censure and move on".
"I got banned from the Ed Sullivan Show for less!"
On the October 18, 1964 installment of THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW, as comedian Jackie Mason concluded his comedy routine he noticed some off-stage finger gestures from Ed Sullivan's indicating that his time was winding down. According to Mason, he jokingly took the moment to comment on the signs by saying "and here's a finger for you, and one for you..." Ed Sullivan thought that the glib finger joke reference was actually a case of Jackie Mason giving him the "finger" on-the-air. Outraged, Ed Sullivan barred Jackie Mason from any further appearances on his program. The controversy over the "finger" damaged Mason's career. He retaliated with a libel suit in the New York Supreme Court and won. They had viewed his performance and found "nothing offensive." However, the influence that Sullivan possessed relegated Jackie Mason to "show-business-limbo" forcing him to work in outlying Catskill mountain resorts and related second-hand entertainment establishment. Years later, Jackie Mason resurfaced in a successful Broadway Tony Award winning one-man show and in the short-lived sitcom CHICKEN SOUP/ABC/1989.
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