Friday, June 17, 2011

Anthony Weiner

Anthony Weiner, a New York member of the House of Representatives, sexted at least 6 and probably many more women of various ages - using his official Twitter account.

That's kind of disgusting for a start.

When he accidently sent a photo of his boxer shorts (and its contents) to his home page instead of privately to a woman, he deleted it and then posted that his Facebook account had been attacked. That was lie number one.

Andrew Breitbart posted a different photo Weiner had sent some other woman, claiming Weiner had sent it himself (which he had done). Weiner called him a liar and accused him of being the hacker. That's lying again, and accusing someone of a crime because whatever the penalty is for hacking a private citizen's account, hacking a politician's account is definitely illegal.

In any event, after many more lies, Weiner finally admitted that yes, he had sent the photos himself, but that he wasn't going to resign.

And many people didn't want him to. Apparently apart from this sexting business, and the cover up business, many people thought he was doing an excellent job as their representative. Women have actually been writing articles saying he didn't do anything so bad that he should resign over it! How sad is that?

So, Weiner has resigned. But of course, his career is by no means over. He will recieve a pension of over $100,000 a year, and he has already been offered many very lucrative contracts - rewarding him for his behavior.

Anthony Weiner Offered 'Entourage' Role, Penthouse Job
Washington, DC always embraces a good sex scandal, but the end result is generally a ticket out of town. Hollywood, on the other hand, is often much kinder to its illicit drama participants.

Now-former Congressman Anthony Weiner, who resigned on Thursday weeks after an accidentally-tweeted crotch shot began a run of revelations that introduced the term sexting to the mainstream, has already gotten a major job offer to turn his scandal into a sort of meta comedy.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Doug Ellin, executive producer of "Entourage," has offered Weiner a guest star spot on the show, in which he'd play himself. As of yet, there's been no response from the embattled former New York representative, Ellin said.

If it's the camera that Weiner is suddenly worried about, he has another potential job opportunity. In a letter published on The Huffington Post, Hustler founder Larry Flynt is offering Weiner a job in the company's internet group.

"I cannot emphasize enough the genuineness of this offer. We are a serious corporation which, as you know, has been heavily involved in the political environment of this country for over thirty-five years," Flynt wrote to Weiner. "Our key missions have consistently included the crucial fight of battling hypocrisy within the federal and state governments. Flynt Management Group, LLC and Hustler Magazine have been dedicated to decades of serious political commentary. Just as we do not undertake insincere political crusades, we do not make insincere job offers."

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