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Hinchliffe's Puerto Rico joke spawned the initial news cycle (and within 24 hours, a new digital ad from Vice President Kamala Harris' campaign). Related storiesThe Harris campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment. That leaves it to each campaign to try to generate their own moments, like when Trump did a photo-op at McDonald's. In both cases, they were upstaged by secondary moments that their opponents successfully latched onto, with Hinchcliffe drowning out Trump's rally and Biden spoiling Harris' rally. AdvertisementIt's why Trump donned a bright orange vest and climbed into a garbage truck, and it's why his supporters are responding to Cuban's comments with a social media campaign.
Persons: , Sen, JD Vance, I'm, Vance, frontiersmen, Tony Hinchliffe's, Joe Biden, Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Trump, Harris, Mark Cuban, Cuban, Trump hadn't, Nikki Haley, he'd, Anna Kelly, Kelly, aren't, gaffes, Mitt Romney's, Hillary Clinton's Organizations: Service, Trump, White, Madison, Biden, Democratic, Republican Locations: Puerto Rico, Wausau , Wisconsin, Ohio, United States of America, Hinchliffe's Puerto Rico, Wisconsin, America, Madison
THE HOUSE OF HIDDEN MEANINGS: A Memoir, by RuPaulAs “The House of Hidden Meanings” is RuPaul’s fourth book and his first straightforward memoir, it’s understandably being marketed as an opportunity to see the pop culture icon in a new light. The striking, almost intimidating, black-and-white cover photograph notably subverts the expectation of seeing Ru in glamorous technicolor drag. All the artifice has been stripped away, we’re being told: This is RuPaul stripped bare. But the meanings laid bare in the text contradict RuPaul’s narration again and again. What’s revealed is a striver high on his own supply who tries to spin his story as empathetic wisdom draped in Instagram-ready captions.
Persons: RuPaul, it’s, we’re, What’s, RuPaul —, wearily, Locations: United States, San Diego
A bison in Montana in 2019 Photo: Craig Mellish/PBSAs recounted during Ken Burns ’s two-night, four-hour “The American Buffalo,” an Irish peer named Sir St. George Gore embarked on a hunting trip to the American West in the mid-1850s, bringing along 50 people, six wagons, 21 carts, 112 horses and 50 dogs. He spent about a quarter of a million dollars en route to killing 1,500 elk, 2,000 deer, more than 1,000 antelope, 500 bear and 4,000 bison. He was so “wanton,” we are told, he even offended the frontiersmen who spent their days butchering wildlife. When he attempted to breach the Black Hills of South Dakota, the tribes there told him to go, or fight.
Persons: Craig Mellish, Ken Burns ’, , St, George Gore Organizations: PBS Locations: Montana, American Buffalo, American, South Dakota
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