Nov 03 2008

A Strange Wake Up Call Rouses P and F Back into Action….Barry O Beats the Drums of War….Orgasmic Copy Editing Gone Awry…..A Vote for Nader is the Only Vote for True Democracy

Category: Funk, Politicspolit14 @ 7:20 pm

“Face to face
And back to back
You see and feel
My sex attack”


–Billy Idol

When he was 10, Billy Idol joined the Cub Scouts. He wasn’t Billy Idol then, he was William Michael Albert Broad and he was living a rather unremarkable existence in Goring, England. He went to school, played sports, climbed trees, went to the theater, attended church, did the dishes, hung out with his mates and engaged in the normal activities of a 10-year-old boy. For this reason, it wasn’t much of a surprise that when most of his peers joined the St. Mary’s Cub Scouts, Billy did, too.

genx14.jpgBut unlike his friends, Billy’s career as a Cub Scout was short-lived. And the reason he was asked to leave the chapter—a mere 3 months after he joined—forecasted a destiny that could not be properly groomed by tying square knots and building tepees. Sure, Billy had already displayed a bit of a wild streak, but when he was caught by his scoutmaster feeling up a girl five years his senior behind a hotdog stand in the midst of a soapbox derby, it became abundantly clear that he had talents far beyond whittling. He was pure sex, a budding cocksman of epic promise, and such a threat to the moral integrity of the Cub Scouts that his presence could no longer be tolerated.

Yes, in October of 1965, William Albert Broad was given the boot by the St. Mary’s Cub Scouts. Months later, a teacher would write “Billy is idle,” on one of his school papers, in reference to Billy’s apparent disinterest in school. Ten years later, Billy would officially adopt the stage name Billy Idol during the formation of the Sex Pistols’ inspired punk band Generation X. Five years later, in 1984, he’d release his first solo album, Billy Idol, and armed with killer hair, a closet full of leather and an insatiable libido, he’d become a full-blown glam-rockstar and one of the earliest sex symbols of the burgeoning network MTV.

Since then, Billy’s almost died twice—first due to a motorcycle accident and then a mammoth overdose of GHB—but fate tends to smile on the hypersexual and Mr. Idol is still alive and thrusting today. In fact, he released Devil’s Playground, his first album in ten years, in 2005, and has been touring throughout 2008 in support of it.

It was three days ago—the morning after his Halloween show in Prague—that Billy’s agent, Leonard Washington, rang the central offices here at Politics and Funk.com. To be honest, the editorial staff was extremely hung over, and we only answered the phone as an alternative to breaking it into pieces to stop the ringing. But regardless of how haggard we may have felt at the moment, Leonard Washington sounded much worse.

He told us that he had been up throughout the night trying to prevent Billy from being…..Billy. According to Washington, age has done little to quell Idol’s appetite for drink and women, and he had crashed a Halloween party the night before, downing a handle of Maker’s Mark whiskey and fornicating with a corset-clad college student in an attic. At the peak of his intoxication—minutes before he did a back-flip into a keg stand—Idol had confided in Washington that he was a huge fan of Politics and Funk and that he considered it the supreme avenue for online political discourse. He then proclaimed that the media’s coverage of the 2008 election had sickened him and that he felt a burning desire to set the American public straight on a few things before they stroll to the polls like “bloody fucking sheep” on Election Day.

“So, what does this have to do with us?” Chief Editor Jamal Nesbit finally barked into the phone.

“Well, Billy wants to endorse, and he wants to do it on P and F,” Washington replied.

“No way, no guest writers and no endorsements, those are the core principles of P and F. Call The New York Times, they’re lusting for more Obama endorsements.”

“He’s not voting for Obama.”

“What, you’re telling me Idol digs the GOP? Fuck, what kind of world is this?”

“No, not McCain either.”

“Oh, so he wants to write in Ron Paul’s name?”

“Wrong again.”

“Well, then, who?”

“Idol isn’t a shill for the two-party system. He’s voting for Nader. He wants 600 words and if you don’t give it to him he’s vowed to de-flower the daughters of your entire staff.”

“Ha, he’ll be in his seventies by the time they’re of age, he won’t even be able to get it up.”

There was a pause on the line and a scream from somewhere distant. Washington sounded confused and frazzled, like the master of a vicious albino pit-bull whose thirst for the mailman could not be denied. Nesbit had transferred the call to speaker phone, and the brainchild of P and F sat in a crude semi-circle perplexed at the commotion. To be honest, we didn’t have a clue what was going on. But then, a low, staccato humming boomed through the phone.

“It’s a bass-line,” Nesbit said.

It was. Billy proceeded to serenade us with an a capella version of his 1984 hit, “White Wedding.” It was a robust performance and we were all pretty impressed, including the sole female member of the P and F team, copyeditor Laura Lane Welch, who flung herself on top of the speaker phone. Her eyes were glazed over and her body was convulsing in delight.

“What’s happening,” Nesbit asked.

“That my friend, is the female orgasm,” Head Editor Eli Percepied said.

He was right.

It is hard to strong-arm an independent webzine with no real journalistic motivation except the exercise of ego, but Billy Idol did just that. By sending Welch into fits of erotic bliss, he made it apparent that his threat of plundering our first-borns weren’t idle ones. We were faced with a grim choice, and to be honest, an easy one.

So without further adieu, we present to you the presidential endorsement of Billy Idol. And if the prose seems unedited, well, that’s because our copywriter couldn’t work on this piece without being sent into spates of sexual exhilaration, so we decided to just publish it raw. Besides, I think Billy prefers it that way.

Read Billy Idol’s endorsement.

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Mar 04 2008

The Lowdown on The Super Tuesday Showdown

Category: Politicspolit14 @ 7:24 pm

7:15 P.M.

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“Months ago he was carrying his own suitcase,” says Anderson Cooper about John McCain, who has just completed a storybook comeback by officially winning the Republican nomination. Meanwhile, Senator Obama has won Vermont and is leading in Texas, while Senator Clinton has captured Rhode Island and is ahead in Ohio.

The editorial staff at Politics & Funk is in the midst of nailing the political futures market. As you can see, we’ve got quite a full profile.

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The word on the street is Huckabee is officially dropping out. Probably a good time for it, considering that McCain has now won the nomination. We’ll be back with more in a bit.

7:35 P.M.

Mike Huckabee has just given his last speech as a candidate for President. It began with an extended anecdote about Hall of Fame third-baseman George Brett. It ended with a lengthy quote about the Alamo. For all his peculiarities, Huckabee has been one of the most enjoyable candidates to write about. By staying in the race so long, he’s set himself up to be the frontrunner in 2012, if McCain loses this year.

However, he should be warned that it’s inappropriate for a Baptist preacher and devout moralist like himself to emulate George Brett, who clearly has a fetish for Ben-Gay and flowery aprons.

9:15 P.M.

Sweet Jesus!

It’s been a schizophrenic hour and a half. The race in Texas has been vacillating erratically for the last hour, with the economic fortunes of Politics & Funk swaying back and forth as well. Yes, for lack of a better term, we’ve been day-trading.

Mrs. Clinton has won Ohio and just spoke in Columbus. She wore a vibrant red suit, and apparently she has a new refrain to counter Mr. Obama’s inspirational “Yes, we, can.”

It’s the wildly creative, “Yes, we will.”

Now, with the fluff out of the way, let us get down to the meat of the issue.

Due to its numerous nationwide political connections, Politics & Funk has received exclusive coverage of the Texas caucus process. Yes, that’s right, Texas is holding a caucus in addition to a primary and this, in a nutshell, is what it looks like.

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A perfect tableau of liberal Texans. The bearded, white-collared 30 something, crouching in front of a sleek black cowboy, adjacent to a fat, insipid man with a red checkered flannel shirt.

All three look impatient yet calm, in contrast with the woman with the dark curly hair, who is frazzled and desperate in her attempt to vote for Dennis Kucinich.

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Feb 19 2008

Obama Wins Wisconsin….But Will He Keep A Sworn Promise to Politics & Funk?

Category: Politicspolit14 @ 9:42 pm

7:38 P.M.

Hillary Clinton is still speaking, but suddenly all the major networks switch over to Mr. Obama. It’s his 10th victory in a row. He’s closing in on the nomination quickly. Soon, it will be time to pay back favors to those who have so graciously assisted in his pursuit.

“Y’all know how to do it in Texas,” Obama says, speaking to a crowd of 20,000 in Houston after officially winning the Democratic primary in Wisconsin. He goes on to promise all Americans everything in the entire world. Specifically, he promises me a MoeJoe bowl from Tokyo Joe’s.

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“We invest in you, you invest in America,” he tells me, adding that we’re currently spending 9 billion dollars a month in Iraq.

“How about that MoeJoe bowl,” I demand.

“Hold on you cranky bastard,” he admonishes.

“I want to end a politics based on fear. We should never negotiate out of fear, but we should never fear to negotiate,” he declares boldly, quoting JFK.

“I will close Guantanamo, end torture, and restore Habeas Corpus,” he proclaims.

“Buy me a fucking MoeJoe Bowl,” I scream.

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“I’m eating my own stomach. I need the nourishment of grilled chicken, pineapple, egg, carrots, sweet onions, red peppers, and a sweet and spicy sauce. How do you expect me to blog while I’m grazing on the shavings of a two-week old king cake?”

“I know how easy it is [for politicians] to turn us on each other. To use immigrants and gays and people who aren’t like us as scapegoats for what they do,” Obama retorts.

“Oh my god! This is supposed to be a victory speech. This is not supposed to last any longer than twenty minutes. Please, just evoke “change” seventeen more times, remind people how you’re not a Washington insider, give McCain a quick jab, and get me the delectable MoJoe Bowl you promised.”

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“The people in Washington want to boil the hope out of me, stew me for a bit.”

I sense that I am losing consciousness. I need serious help. Maybe, I shouldn’t have put all my desires and dreams into a candidate full of “empty rhetoric.” Maybe, my hope is false, and my MoeJoe bowl will never arrive.

Maybe, I should have called John McCain instead.

But wait, just as I’m losing all optimism there’s a knock on my door.

“Oh hell yeah dog, I knew you’d make it,” I shout, as Barry strides in smooth as ever with Tokyo Joe’s in hand.

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“Thanks bro, could I ask you for one more favor,” I inquire.

“Sure, anything for you man. You know Politics & Funk is my favorite blog. That shit is hilarious. I read it all the time,” he says, handing me the MoeJoe bowl.”

“Could you have Rachael Maddow feed it to me while explaining exit polls and batting her eyelashes?” I ask.

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“Nope, you have to be a super delegate to get that sort of treatment,” he laughs.

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Feb 12 2008

“Hear that Mr. Anderson, that is the Sound of Inevitability.”

Category: Politicspolit14 @ 9:52 pm

One of the most rewarding aspects of watching hour upon hour of electoral primary coverage is that you can switch back and forth between other stations without missing a beat. So, if perhaps you’d like to juxtapose the endearing political commentary of Patrick J. Buchanan with the final scene of the Matrix, well, you totally can, bro!

“My name isn’t Mr. Anderson, it’s Neo,” declares Keanu Reeves, before he saves the day.

Cue some steamy kissing with Trinity, fire up “Wake Up” by Rage Against the Machine, and call it a night.

Yes, Obama has won eight states in a row and taken the delegate lead, and John McCain sealed the deal tonight with three victories of his own, but I’m not really interested in them at the moment.

Instead, I’m wondering which one of these divine creatures make me more inclined to question my own reality.
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I think it’s a toss up.

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Feb 10 2008

The Earth Sinks, Spews, and Crumbles in Denver, as Mike Huckabee Shrieks While Trying on a New Lemon-Yellow Tank Top

Category: Politicspolit14 @ 10:32 pm

“I didn’t major in math. I majored in miracles, and I still believe in them too.”

–Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee

The train ride north towards Denver is about as insipid as it gets. Sure, there are snow-covered mountains looming outside of the west window, but they’re no more interesting than potholes after you’ve seen them a thousand times before. The view to the east is I-25, a slog of traffic weaving its way away from work. The same people, driving the same stretch of interstate, in the same state of abject misery over and over again.

The commute, a form of purgatory that’s uniquely American, and more ingrained in our collective consciousness after each passing day. Men and women sitting stagnant in their cars, hands gripped tightly on the wheel and knuckles gently rapping the horn—eager to blurt out a war cry at the first signs of transit misconduct.

“You motherfucker, go ahead, change into my lane, I dare you. I’ll honk and bleat and toot my little horn until I’m blue in the face, until I finally feel a bit better, until I finally feel whole.”

It’s pure masochism, day in and day out on I-25, and it’s not a damn bit of fun to watch after you’ve seen it over and over again. But last Friday, while I was dourly reflecting on the daily horror show from the warmth of the train, something was drastically altering it.

According to the Denver Post, at approximately 3 p.m on February 7th, a water main burst beneath I-25, shooting out over 2 million gallons. Within minutes the road caved in, leaving a 16 foot deep 40 by 40 sinkhole in its place.

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“This is the big one,” said CDOT spokeswoman Stacy Stegman, remarking at the vastness of the watery cave.

However, shockingly, no Denverites were injured, and only one local business was damaged.

Why?

Why, in the middle of another humdrum February day, does the ground suddenly decide to open up?

And how is it that on a four-lane interstate, full of drivers, that not a single car happens to be driving over the water main when it explodes?

Personally, I don’t have any idea, but if there’s anyone adept enough to explain such a phenomenon it’s likely America’s new favorite southern politician, the avuncular ex-Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee.

Huckabee, who last week was considered to be nothing more than the last stepping stone for Senator John McCain’s inevitable nomination, shocked the McCain campaign on Saturday by winning two of the three GOP primary contests held.

In the Republican hotbed of Kansas, he slaughtered McCain, winning all 36 delegates and out polling McCain 60% to 24%. In Louisiana, he barely nudged McCain by 1%. McCain’s only victory came in the Washington state caucus, where he nipped Huckabee by only 200 votes.

Much of Huckabee’s strength derived from the absence of ex-Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, who officially suspended his campaign this Wednesday. Romney and Huckabee were previously splitting the conservative Republican vote, a demographic that has shown itself to be increasingly uncomfortable with a McCain nomination. In particular, conservatives object to McCain’s history of rebuking the party line on issues such as tax cuts, campaign finance reform, and immigration.

In fact, some GOP media elites consider McCain a plague upon the Republican Party. Conservative columnist Anne Coulter recently stated that she would campaign and support Hillary Clinton in a general election against McCain, declaring herself to be “a Hillary girl now.”

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Despite the criticism of Coulter, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, and other conservative talk-show hosts, it appeared that after his dominant performance on Super Tuesday, Mr. McCain would be able to galvanize enough votes to quickly finish Huckabee off. In fact, despite previous wins in Iowa, Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia, West Virginia, and Arkansas, Huckabee was still 600 delegates behind McCain—close to a mathematical impossibility to ever catch up. At Intrade.com, a marketplace on which presidential futures are bought and sold, Huckabee’s GOP nomination future was trading between 1.2 and 1.5—on average a 75:1 long shot to become the nominee.

But on Saturday, it became apparent that Republican Party regulars were just as uncomfortable with McCain as conservative talk show hosts were. McCain’s massive loss in Kansas was not only a repudiation of his candidacy, but seemingly a protest vote, which, translated, probably went something like this:

“We don’t give a damn if Mike Huckabee doesn’t have a chance in hell. We’d much rather vote for a God fearing Christian who tells great anecdotes about NASCAR and Jesus then support a ‘liberal’ who thinks that just because he spent five years in a Vietnamese prison camp getting the shit kicked out of him, he can tell our CIA that there’s something wrong with pouring water down the lungs of those camel-fuckers in the Middle East.”

So they did.

The irony is that Huckabee doesn’t share nearly the bad blood for McCain that his supporters do. In fact, many believe that the continuation of his candidacy is simply an effort to get himself on McCain’s ticket as VP—a move that might benefit McCain as he tries to win the support of conservatives and evangelicals. However, if McCain has Huckabee on his short list, the time to cut a deal is coming soon.

Although Huckabee has no real chance of overtaking McCain for the nomination, his victories inflame and inspire the protests of McCain’s critics. They also continue to weaken McCain’s chances in a general election.

For McCain, his saving grace may be this Tuesday’s primaries in Washington, D.C, Virginia, and Maryland. He is a prohibitive favorite in all three races, leading Huckabee by a vote margin of close to two to one in Virginia.

However, for Huckabee, the mathematics of politics is of little to no concern.

“As we all know, a candidate can say one word, do one thing, have one particular moment that can end his whole career, so I’m not saying I’m just driving behind him at the NASCAR race waiting for him to lose a tire, but crazier things have happened. So, the crazy thing for me would be to pull off in the pit crew, get out the car and go take a shower and say, ‘It’s over.’ And then him lose a tire and I’ve lost the race, not because I couldn’t win, but because I wouldn’t stay in the game and finish.”

If McCain does go spinning out of control, Mr. Huckabee will likely have no problem avoiding the wreckage as he skips his way to the finish line.

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Feb 05 2008

Super Tuesday; The Blow By Blow

Category: Politicspolit14 @ 8:14 pm

7:45 P.M- Well, here we are in, sandwiched in the midst of the Super Tuesday frenzy. If you’re like me you’re probably sprawled out on the carpet of your living room, wearing a sweaty v-neck and drinking Bud Light. The early news is as expected.

Obama has won Illinois, Alabama, and Georgia, while Hillary has triumphed in New York, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, and Massachusetts.

On the Republican side, McCain has taken New York, New Jersey, Delaware, and Illinois, while Mike Huckabee has won West Virginia, Georgia, and Arkansas.

O.K, Keith Olberman has just compared the Republican race to an M.C. Escher painting. I’m going to jump on Intrade and buy more John McCain presidential futures. But, I’ll be back with more of the lowdown in a bit

8:10 P.M- Barack Obama has won Utah, Kansas, and Minnesota. However, the more fascinating development is the emergence of Mike Huckabee, who, in addition to already winning three states, has leads in Missouri and Tennessee. Huckabee’s strong showing is evidence that the GOP is more splintered than every before. What does this mean?

Well, Tom Brokaw has just invoked the name Barry Goldwater. That should be enough information for the time being.

8:40 P.M- Hillary is up on the podium now. She’s wearing a mustard yellow shirt, and she’s gesticulating vigorously. And do you know why she’s so excited?

It’s because she’s won American Samoa, and according to the Columbia Journalism Review, that makes all the difference in the world.

“I won’t let anyone swiftboat this country’s future,” she proclaims.

Nice.

9:05 P.M-“John McCain and I actually believe that politics can be conducted in a gentlemanly, civil way,” Mike Huckabee says, when Chris Matthews asks him if the two are in cahoots. The only clearcut thing about the GOP race is that everyone loathes Romney. In fact, earlier today, the Huckster called Mitt a “whiner,” in response to a similar allegation.

What made Mitt so mad?

Well, apparently McCain supporters in a nominating convention in West Virginia switched their support to Huckabee on the convention’s second ballot.

An obviously dirty move, and an admirable one.

9:35 PM- Apparently, “Mac is Back,” or at least that’s what McCain’s supporters chant as he walks to the podium. Earlier referred to as Lazarus by a commentator, McCain didn’t wrap things up tonight, but he came close. He gives props to Huckabee that seem authentic, and props to Romney that don’t.

Oh, and here is Lazarus’s theme music:

9:55 P.M- Obama is on the podium now. It’s been a long night of punditry, and personally if I listen to anymore political speculation, I might lose my mind. Hillary is winning California. Obama just used the term “super duper Tuesday.” He has begun his refrain of, “Yes, we can.”

Mike Huckabee is a creationist.

He won five different states

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