Posted on 11/04/2015 4:36:31 AM PST by Kaslin
It looks like those elitist harridans on ABC's "The View" learned nothing from the national backlash over their mockery of nurse Kelley Johnson less than eight weeks ago.
Guess they've already forgotten how major advertisers Johnson & Johnson, Party City, McCormick spices, Snuggle, and Eggland's Best all pulled spots from the show after co-host and lead Mean Girl Michelle Collins led a cacklefest ridiculing Johnson, Miss Colorado 2015, for a heartfelt monologue about her work during the Miss America pageant.
In a craven attempt at damage control, the daytime divas inflicted yet more damage by blaming nurses and their supporters who protested the plain insults for "misconstruing" their snotty remarks. Co-host Joy Behar blithely confessed she "didn't know what the hell I was talking about" when she poked fun of Johnson for wearing her stethoscope.
Liberal female TV stardom has its privileges.
Rather than be humbled and chastened, however, the know-nothing loudmouths have dug themselves another big, fat hole.
Last week on the iconic show created by a pioneering female journalist with an all female-cast to provide revolutionary TV programming for a female audience that had been marginalized by the male-dominated entertainment world, the shrews of The View chose to wield their influential platform to...
...publicly make fun of the only female GOP presidential candidate's face.
Why?
Aren't there enough misogynistic men in the world to do that dirty job, ladies?
Must every nasty thought in your narrow-minded noggins be broadcast over the airwaves?
Apparently so. Nurse-bashing Michelle Collins took out her ugly stick again to trash 61-year-old Carly Fiorina's visage. "She looked demented! Her mouth did not downturn one time," the smug Collins exclaimed as her own petty, potty mouth twisted into an unmistakable snarl.
Self-admitted moron Behar, who has frequently bragged about her own Botox shots, chimed in: "I wish it was a Halloween mask. I'd love that."
What would Barbara Walters have said?
Undaunted, the beastly Collins continued to pile on as the collective tittering swelled: "Smiling Fiorina? Can you imagine? It'd give me nightmares."
When co-host Paula Faris meekly suggested that "demented is a strong word," head bully Whoopi Goldberg insisted that "as a comic we have to stand up for the words we use."
Because, you see, it's a matter of progressive noble principle that catty left-wing comics stick by their woman-on-woman vitriol.
Heckuva job, feminism!
Take note: Fiorina is not my favorite GOP candidate by a mile. Though I've praised her strong critiques of the media's whitewashing of Planned Parenthood baby-parts peddling, I was (and remain) critical of her gender-card-peddling California Senate campaign in 2010, her bizarre corporate courtship of race-hustler Jesse Jackson while she served as Hewlett-Packard CEO, her support for the Wall Street bailout and federal Obama stimulus, and her advocacy of the California DREAM act providing in-state tuition discounts to illegal immigrant students.
But because "The View" hosts neither know nor care anything more than a centimeter deep about the actual policy issues they discuss during their train-wreck "water cooler" debate segments, they must resort to grade-school taunts instead of even the semblance of a substantive discussion.
And when they're called out for their unsightly displays of public ignorance or shallowness, all they have left to defend themselves is "Don't you know who we are? You owe us!" arrogance.
Goldberg announced on Monday that Fiorina will be on the show this Friday after challenging "The View" gang to hurl their invective at her directly to her face. Instead of remorse, Goldberg bragged that she and her co-hosts deserved credit for Fiorina's campaign success because they "raised her profile" when she appeared on the show in June.
With a "nyah, nyah, nyah" tone that belongs on Nickelodeon, Goldberg wagged her finger at the camera: "I do want to point out, Carly, that the last time you were here (...) we welcomed you to our table. We helped raise your profile so you would be included in the sea of men. (...) We were respectful and gave you your due."
In full blame-the-victim mode, Goldberg smirked and sassed: "She wants attention and now she'll get some."
As if Fiorina engineered the bile about her face that spewed from Collins' and Behar's demented pieholes in the first place!
In the TV business, stars are ranked by a "Q factor." It's a measure of their likeability and "relatability" to the viewing public. Part of this coveted rating stems from a public figure's projection of authenticity. As "The View" grew in popularity, the hosts' heads (and salaries) swelled. Their hearts hardened. Their smugness and self-importance metastasized. They've lost touch with reality and humanity outside their TV bubble.
The naked truth: In a desperate bid to boost their un-Botox-able ratings by tearing other women down, the shrews of "The View" have lost their Qs.
And their souls.
Mean girls.
The last three words of this sentence is a perfect description for each of The View's participants.
it is pertinent to remember that Whoopi is not white
Agreed.
I don’t watch television at all except for for NFL games, but the entire premise of “The View” is enough to put you off your lunch.
Let’s get a bunch of unattractive, shrewish, liberal women to sit at a table while they play to the camera, drink coffee, gossip, and tell everyone what they think about everything.
Um...let’s not.
True feminine heroine Michelle Malkin has the Shrews of the View For Breakfast .... ping ....
Years ago it was a good show and was a favorite at my favorite watering hole. Then it changed and we started calling it âThe wicked witchesâ. It was no longer shown at the bar.
If anything, this episode is mean girls, bullying...each deserve a pimp slap from Carly...what they get will be a polite handshake and reasoned responses.
Im not too confident that works any more.
If I was a butt-ugly black woman, a fat loudmouth white woman, a dried up, demented old woman, or a black woman who abuses Clorox, I don’t think I would criticize another woman’s looks.
“I donât think I would criticize another womanâs looks”
I am sure they are sorry...
and will now give Glowing comments about—
HITLERY’S looks-
left wing whores- todays TV shows are filled with crap-
glad I am Cable free- 3 years now- will NEVER turn back
That would be akin to torture for me.
The View was set up as a sop to the abhorrent Barbara Walters when news audiences could no longer stomach her, and rich white executives feared her lispy anger. The View became a soapbox for loony feminist nonsense from predictable guests, airing after Oprah in many markets.
The network should kill this show with fire, and do penance by airing classroom video from Hillsdale college.
Wouldn't it be great if Fiorina showed up with Michelle Malkin or Ann Coulter in tow? "Hi, everybody, I brought a friend. Is that okay?"
They could all have snark for breakfast. Their own.
Yeah, I've been thinking the same thing:
These six [things] doth the Lord hate: yea, seven [are] an abomination unto him:Seven out of seven. A 'perfect' score.
A proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood,
A heart that deviseth wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running to mischief,
A false witness [that] speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among brethren.
--Proverbs 6:16-19
Good luck with that!
BTTT
The View was set up as a sop to the abhorrent Barbara Walters...
The writer's premise is wrong.
I happened to catch out of one eye, while packing some luggage on a trip eighteen years ago, a CSPAN post-talk Q&A with a female executive of The Ladies Home Journal. The general subject was women in entertainment. A young representative of the Democrat Party's core cadre of young, overeducated "cause women" rose to ask the Journal's senior exec why there weren't more shows geared to women's interests.
The exec's reply was both forceful and exasperated. She began by asking the younger woman whether she had been paying attention, and what universe did she live in (it was quite a spanky), in which women were underserved somehow by TV?
Every program outside the sports ghetto is female-dominated, the executive went on to explain. Women's interests are shown clearly by the advertisers TV programming attracts, and the programming in turn reflects a strong awareness of female enthusiasms and wants. Why, the executive asked, have men become a race of channel-surfers, constantly flicking through the dial in a ceaseless search for something that interests them? She concluded that her premise was correct, and TV programming is strongly gynecocentric to the point of total exclusion of male interests.
With her comments in mind since then, I've noticed how even the overnight news is loaded up with female-oriented advertising and pseudo-news ("ET" stuff, Hollywood fluff, mirror-gazing "studies", etc.), all of which caters for what I personally think is a tendency toward mass solipsism, if that isn't an oxymoron, in their favored female demographic.
The advertising and pseudo-news has a formula they follow, which I have reduced to bullet points as follows:
Every topic on TV centers around a few basic thematic images:
- Women talking (called "2CK" by Mad Avenue cynics for three generations now)
- A doctor talking to a woman
- Children or babies, and a woman with or without doctor
- Products for women, frequently gynecological
This breakdown works for the evening news almost as well, although the presence of young male popinjays is acknowledged as well ("I got this"), since they are almost as engagingly merchantable as women in general.
Soft news, soft heads, soft country.
That trash is still on?
Amazingly profound recitation of Hillary Clinton's campaign
The biggest haters of women are today’s feminists.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.