above @ NYTimes from Tues. nite phone interview. Summary: Just crazy about the beautiful secure phones and just adores the history.Using the same desk. Impressed by the number of "board rooms."So far only made it a priority to pick out a portrait of Andrew Jackson for the Oval Office (natch,) and got some Lay's potato chips in the kitchen. Has respect for Lincoln but doesn't read books. Seems glad to not have the wife and kid around during the week.
Ok, well, we already learned that room has been re-named "Kellyanne's Re-education Camp" and that the Spicer apparition is just one of those cheap robots like at Chuck E. Cheese, and it was a gift after all and you have to hang those somewhere, so it all sort of fits.
I know, saw it the other day.Myself, I find it quite disturbing for a complicated reason. I think it means he thinks his fans want him to look mean like his "you're fired" character. I doubt even most of them want that.
I don't think it's "mean" that he's going for; he seems to believe that he needs to look "serious and strong" in order to convince his followers (aka himself) that he will not just lead, but rule. It's the strongman thing. I find quite disturbing the habit that he's adopted to hold his fists in the air - and pumping them. But with the palm out, like a happy wave that became an angry and closed salute.
I like the second photo best. Her stuff is better than a lot more serious anti-Trump art I've seen, and I've seen a ton with the mail lists I'm on. Probably because I think those with comedy in mind can do the most damage. Precisely because: he and most of his minions have zero sense of humor.
[....] for students of Mr. Trump’s long business career, there was much about President Trump’s truth-mangling ways that was familiar: the mystifying false statements about seemingly trivial details, the rewriting of history to airbrush unwanted facts, the branding as liars those who point out his untruths, the deft conversion of demonstrably false claims into a semantic mush of unverifiable “beliefs.”
Mr. Trump’s falsehoods have long been viewed as a reflexive extension of his vanity, or as his method of compensating for deep-seated insecurities. But throughout his business career, Mr. Trump’s most noteworthy deceptions often did double duty, serving not just his ego but also important strategic goals. Mr. Trump’s habitually inflated claims about his wealth, for example, fed his self-proclaimed image of a business genius even as they attracted lucrative licensing deals built around the Trump brand.
Nearly 30 years ago, in his best-selling book “The Art of the Deal,” Mr. Trump memorably extolled the advantages of “truthful hyperbole,” which he described as “an innocent form of exaggeration — and a very effective form of promotion [.....]
By LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN, M.D @ NYTimes, .FEB. 1, 2017
WASHINGTON — President Trump takes medication for three ailments, including a prostate-related drug to promote hair growth, Mr. Trump’s longtime physician, Dr. Harold N. Bornstein, said in a series of recent interviews.
The other drugs are antibiotics to control rosacea, a common skin problem, and a statin for elevated blood cholesterol and lipids.
Dr. Bornstein, who spoke by telephone in four interviews over the past month, also said that Mr. Trump takes a daily baby aspirin to reduce the risk of a heart attack. Over all, he pronounced Mr. Trump healthy and his medical care “as exactly up to date.”
[....]
The disclosure that Mr. Trump uses a prostate-related drug to maintain growth of his scalp hair, which has not been publicly known, appears to solve a riddle of why Mr. Trump has a very low level of prostate specific antigen, or PSA, a marker for prostate cancer. Mr. Trump takes a small dose of the drug, finasteride, which lowers PSA levels. Finasteride is marketed as Propecia to treat male-pattern baldness.
Dr. Bornstein said he also took finasteride and credited it for helping maintain his own shoulder-length hair and Mr. Trump’s hair. “He has all his hair,” Dr. Bornstein said. “I have all my hair.”
[....]
At times in the interviews, Dr. Bornstein was moody, ranging from saying that Mr. Trump’s health “is none of your business” to later volunteering facts. He also meandered, referring to his longtime study of Italian and stories about medical schools floating cadavers to an island off the waters of New York. He said he liked the attention he got from friends now that he was publicly known as Mr. Trump’s doctor but disliked “the fun made of me” by the news media and strangers who have thrown objects at his office window and who have yelled at him on Park Avenue.
Dr. Bornstein’s first brush with the public was in December 2015, when he released a hyperbolic four-paragraph letter about Mr. Trump’s health.
Comments
above @ NYTimes from Tues. nite phone interview. Summary: Just crazy about the beautiful secure phones and just adores the history.Using the same desk. Impressed by the number of "board rooms."So far only made it a priority to pick out a portrait of Andrew Jackson for the Oval Office (natch,) and got some Lay's potato chips in the kitchen. Has respect for Lincoln but doesn't read books. Seems glad to not have the wife and kid around during the week.
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 3:55pm
Well, there is one other small change in the press room ...
by barefooted on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 4:27pm
Ok, well, we already learned that room has been re-named "Kellyanne's Re-education Camp" and that the Spicer apparition is just one of those cheap robots like at Chuck E. Cheese, and it was a gift after all and you have to hang those somewhere, so it all sort of fits.
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 5:10pm
And the date of January 21st is just an alternate fact, so ...
by barefooted on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 6:03pm
AA, after your, ahem, re-education, I'd figure you'd come back with more of a party spirit...
Need a 2nd round of re-grooving? (17 mins in)
by PeraclesPlease on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 6:16pm
groovy, can do:
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 6:52pm
then there's 80's groovy:
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 6:56pm
Could be worse:
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 6:51pm
More here (NY) and here (Palm Beach)
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 6:58pm
It already is - and shot with an outdated camera ...
by barefooted on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 7:10pm
I know, saw it the other day.Myself, I find it quite disturbing for a complicated reason. I think it means he thinks his fans want him to look mean like his "you're fired" character. I doubt even most of them want that.
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 7:33pm
I don't think it's "mean" that he's going for; he seems to believe that he needs to look "serious and strong" in order to convince his followers (aka himself) that he will not just lead, but rule. It's the strongman thing. I find quite disturbing the habit that he's adopted to hold his fists in the air - and pumping them. But with the palm out, like a happy wave that became an angry and closed salute.
by barefooted on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 8:20pm
one art photographer's alternate reality on topic (take that, Kellyanne), 6-shot slideshow just for fun:
http://www.vanityfair.com/magazine/photos/2016/09/alison-jackson-donald-trump
I like the second photo best. Her stuff is better than a lot more serious anti-Trump art I've seen, and I've seen a ton with the mail lists I'm on. Probably because I think those with comedy in mind can do the most damage. Precisely because: he and most of his minions have zero sense of humor.
by artappraiser on Wed, 01/25/2017 - 7:44pm
Nothing much new in Trump's behavior, same troll as he always was:
‘Up Is Down’: Trump’s Unreality Show Echoes His Business Past by David Barstow @ NYT, Jan. 28
by artappraiser on Sat, 01/28/2017 - 7:55pm
by artappraiser on Wed, 02/01/2017 - 9:24pm