@neeratanden@bariweiss What greatness? They rode the time slot after NFL games, which made them think they were better than they actually were. There were so many scandals in recent years involving the journalists. They can learn to code like everyone else.
@arenella1 Maybe in the past, but all of the "journalists" on 60 Minutes were misleading on stories See the Harris and Biden stories, or the Desantis-Publix story. There are many more. Good riddance. Get new journalists in that want to report regardless of who looks bad.
@Variety The only reason they have the viewership is because they follow football, and people did not turn their TV's off after the game.
He's a hack like all the other 60 Minutes personalities. People like Pelly, Cooper, and Alfonsi are smug and not important. They don't care about you.
@gregbradyx@johnnydollar Exactly, the amount of self-importance that journalists have is so off-putting. They have this main character energy that is so arrogant and undeserved.
@ChrisCillizza Media people, like Pelly, Cooper, and Alfonsi, think that we view them as heroes or martyrs. This sense of self-importance combined with pretending to be objective is so off-putting to most of us. Also, the only reason 60 Minutes has the viewership is because it follows the NFL.
@KPASKSWHY Just because I used that type of school as an example doesn't mean I meant that school. It's like if I say the word "car," it doesnt mean Ferari. Get over yourself. I should know better than to engage with a shitlib like yourself. Way to focus on facts or ask questions.
@KPASKSWHY I wasn't saying that IMG was going to save the poor kids. It was just an example of a different type of school. Plus, it's in Florida. You are just being pedantic. I'm saying there will be other options for poor kids besides the scrappy public schools.
@KPASKSWHY It was just examples of types of things that will come with a school choice program like this. It helps low-income kids by giving them options instead of being warehoused in a public school. This isn't hard. You just play on dated stereotypes about religious or private schools.