Ballstein wrote: » Looks like a master stroke by Catriona Perry, global front page news. Wearing a figure hugging tight red dress in front of a perverted old codger with a predisposition for young, toothy blonds. She may play coy, but it's straight out of a Ron Burgundy movie such was the predictability of it all. Oh and save your "she should be able wear what ever she likes crap", it was a carefully calculated move on her behalf that has sent her profile stratospheric.
Bambi wrote: » Poor Donnie, he fell right into her trap.
Badly Drunk Boy wrote: » Yeah. What's this thread about? Is it Katy Perry? And did she wear a dress (and liked it)?
DontThankMe wrote: » If Obama had said it everyone would be saying what a nice guy he is complimenting her but, because trump said it, it's weird absolute bull****.
Ballstein wrote: » He's not the first politician to have an eye for the ladies and most certainly won't be the last (Hillary wouldn't have broken with tradition either) but he has all the subtly of a brick in the face. Makes you think what he's like when the worlds TV cameras aren't trained on him.
Murrisk wrote: » Obama wouldn't say it. So it would never come up.
Wibbs wrote: » Really?
Exeggcute wrote: » "You have a nice smile." The nerve of him. Imagine if she had blown him and he penetrated her with a cigar in the oval office....oh wait that was Bill and Monica. The left in America has lost its marbles
Murrisk wrote: » Yeah, I don't consider that remotely as bad. An offhand term of endearment is not the same to me at all. Like, if someone called me 'sweetie' like that, I wouldn't mind, kinda like someone saying 'love' or 'dear'. I've never minded any of those terms. People generally mean well saying them. But someone making a point of noting my "nice smile" while I'm trying to do my job would give me pause. Side eye would be deployed. It's moving into the realms of objectification. 'Sweetie' most certainly does not have the same effect. Reminds me off all the creeps down the year who seem offended by the fact that I'm not smiling in their presence and jokingly instruct me to do so. Just not the same.
Ballstein wrote: » I think the vast majority of rational people would agree that Trump is a deviant with a warped view of women. I think Perry used this knowledge to her own advantage though in a cynical move to advance her career.
Ballstein wrote: » I think the vast majority of rational people would agree that Trump is a deviant with a warped view of women.
I think Perry used this knowledge to her own advantage though in a cynical move to advance her career. Surely a smart business suit would have projected a better image for a respected international news corespondent as opposed to a figure hugging bright red dress when in the company of one of the most well known philanderers on the planet.
Deleted User wrote: » Not sure it was appropriate...but not sure about her taking to tweeting about it afterwards.
osarusan wrote: » She tweeted once, calling it a 'bizarre moment'. It was a bit bizarre the way he cut into the call to Varadkar to call her over and talk to her. She wasn't exactly claiming to be a victim or anything. He didn't say anything weird though, it's just his ham-fisted approach, his reputation preceding him, and a press that will seize on anything at all. The notion that this was all some cunning masterplan of Caitriona's, though, is absolute nonsense.