Sunday, September 17, 2017

Emmy Awards: Anti-Trump Fest

By Douglas V. Gibbs
Author, Speaker, Instructor, Radio Host

The entertainment industry is not secretive about its Marxist opinions, and intolerance for anyone who dares to disagree with their socialist narrative.  Conservatives in the world of acting remain in the closet, for if word gets out that they are not foaming at the mouth liberal left progressive commie bastards, they won't get any work.

Like the Grammy's and Oscars, the Emmys lived up to its politically insane expectations. . . because everyone knows that award shows are about them patting each other on the back, and spewing their hatred for anyone who disagrees with them politically.

This year's narcissistic celebration of self-achievement in the art of pretending to be someone they are not was even more politically charged than ever.  After all, the hated Donald J. Trump is President of the United States.

Trump has been a voting member since 2004, since the beginning of his reality show stardom.  Funny, they didn't call him names like Nazi and racist back then.

This year's event began with Stephen Colbert taking a few shots at Trump, and then Julia-Louis Dreyfus quickly saying what they were all thinking: “Imagine if your president wasn’t loved by Nazis.”

Colbert dedicated almost five minutes to mocking Trump.

Presenter after presenter and award recipient after award recipient took turns jabbing with political references.  A handful avoided politics.

According to Grabien News, here's the lowlights:

10. Stephen Colbert presaged the evening to come, saying that Trump was certainly watching, taunting, "Looking forward to the tweets."
9. Colbert then spent almost five minutes singling out Trump for criticism, the bit beginning with Trump evidently not winning an Emmy for "The Apprentice." The lengthy section wrapped with a surprise cameo from the former White House press secretary, Sean Spicer, who praised the size of the crowd.
8. Alec Baldwin, who won an award for his appearances on Saturday Night Live -- where he lampooned Trump on a near-weekly basis -- said he and his wife had three kids in three years, but then he began portraying Trump on SNL and the "orange wig" proved to be effective "birth control."
7. Comedian Kate McKinnon, who played Hillary Clinton on Saturday Night Live last season and infamously sang a schmaltzy rendition of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" after Clinton's loss, used her acceptance speech to thank Clinton for "your grace and grit."
6. Actress Lily Tomlin, who apppeared alongside Dolly Parton and Jane Fonda as awards presenters (all of whom also appeared together on the 1980s show "9 to 5"), said just like the 80s, "We still refused to be controlled by a sexist, egotistical, lying, hypocritical bigot."
5. John Lithgow, who won an Emmy for his portrayal of Winston Churchill in "The Crown," used his acceptance speech to jab at Trump, "In these crazy times, [Churchill's] life even as an old man reminded us what courage and leadership in government really looks like."
4. After a lengthy interlude during which the Television Academy, which runs the Emmys, congratulated itself for its increasing number of gay and transexual members, winner Lena Waithe, who directs Netflix's "Master of None" and described herself as "a queer black girl from the Southside of Chicago" gave a shoutout to her "my LGBTQIA family."
3. Comedian Kumail Nanjiani, who presented an Emmy, managed to work in a jab at Trump's border wall while introducing the nominees: "They also celebrate people who frantically race across international borders, and those who can scale walls really, really quickly. In other words, the president’s worst nightmare.”
2. Julia Louis-Dreyfus returned later in the show to accept an award for "Veep," where she joked (again of Trump), "We did have a whole story line about an impeachment but we abandoned that because we were worried that someone else might get to it first."
1. Donald Glover, aka the rapper/actor/comedian Childish Gambino, who won an award for outstanding directing for a comedy, sarcastically singled out Trump for thanks, saying with apparent sincerity: "I want to thank Trump for making black people number one on the most oppressed list. He's the reason I'm probably up here."

Well, at least they didn't devolve into Pagan ritual and symbolism like the Grammys have the last few years.  Outright insanity at the Emmys is still better than Satanism. . .

-- Political Pistachio Conservative News and Commentary

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