Wanda Sykes on the election and Sarah Palin
I just love her so much.
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Wanda Sykes on Sarah Palin:
“I’m a feminist, but, I’m sorry, that woman is crazy.”
:D
Hahahaaha...she is awesome!!
She's always funny!
She's so funny! I love the fact that she's totally unafraid to use the f-word!
And her Applebees ads almost make me want to eat there.
I watched that like seven times in a row thanks for the friday funny :)
ALL hail Wanda Sykes! I love that woman!!
I propose that Wanda Sykes, Sarah Silverman and Ellen DeGeneres automatically obtain the U.S. Presidency!
Thanks so much for posting this. I almost wet myself laughing so hard. It was just what I needed today. The woman is beyond hilarious.
i saw that the other day. love her love her love her.
CEO's should definately have to get their paychecks from the welfare office.
@ gopher: I'd add Sarah Haskins to that list!
(The Target Women comedian, not the Olympic athlete.)
After some of the candid moments she has had on the trail this past week I wouldn't put it past her to let her baby say hi to putin, after all they are neighbors.
Thanks for the laugh.
Reconsider what the city is. Cities in the 21st century are smartly connected cities, ones that can marshal the energy of their entire community. The legal, physical, economic and perceptual constructs of the city will differ, as will images.
Most big cities are city or metropolitan regions but are governed as smaller entities, at times even as if they were only towns. This set-up can create fierce parochialisms and turf wars which make it hard to deal coherently with issues like public transport, housing or inward investment strategy. This is why there are city amalgamations worldwide.
For instance Toronto moved to metro-governance in 1998 and the major British cities are defining themselves as city regions. Town thinking and city thinking are different. The balance between locality and wider areas needs to be continually renegotiated; there is no iron law. Over time, cities reshuffle boundaries to maximize overview with the need for very local detail: to make decisions of international importance or to cut down a tree.