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Announcer: Welcome back to The David Pakman Show.
David: Back on The David Pakman Show. If you could only see what went on here, what goes
on here regularly during the breaks. But you will soon, because Tom Adams and Reelife Productions
doing a behind-the-scenes special soon.
Let's say hello to a couple of new David Pakman Show members, Members of the Week Tiffany
Owens and Theodore Simonson, both first names that start with the letter T, neither last
names that start with the letter F. They have both of those things in common, I think is
fair to say, Louis.
Louis: I think... [mouse falls] Whoa. Let's not throw the mouse around.
David: Go on.
Louis: They're both members. That's the most important thing they have in common.
David: That's the most important thing they share in common. And you know what? I need
to again say thanks to everybody who's been doing all of their www.Amazon.com shopping
through the black banner on www.DavidPakman.com. It is a huge, huge boost to the show right
now, and single-handedly, that is going to allow several new things that are going to
be going on next month, including we've already added, actually, video of the bonus show.
So we are ever-expanding the offerings. So make sure to do your Amazon shopping through
that link on www.DavidPakman.com, bookmark it, use it, etc. And sign up for a membership,
because Louis talking about bathhouses in Turkey on today's bonus show.
Michele Bachmann has produced what I can only describe as the world's cheapest-looking campaign
ad. This is very weird, because we know she's raising millions of dollars, I can't imagine
who would give her a penny, I'll be honest, I can't, but she is raising the money. She
sends out 85 emails a week I seem to get from her asking for money. Maybe they're going
unheeded lately, because look at this ad, and listen, for those who can only hear it,
let me describe to you that the lighting looks bizarre, there's a plastic tree behind her,
and what appears to be like a cubicle wall.
Louis: Yeah, which is basically the same color as her jacket.
David: Which is almost the same color as her jacket and her hair and her skin, in a way.
I mean, this is all... it's all the same tone that I'm seeing there. And the audio you'll
be able to hear either way is just horrific. Let's take a listen to this. Brace yourselves
for what I can only describe as the most poorly-produced campaign ad in recent history.
Michele Bachmann: There are so many important issues in this current presidential campaign,
including the role of government, the abuse of executive power, and something that's called
crony capitalism. What that means is someone in a position of power who does special favors
for people who've given political donations to that candidate.
David: All right. The only thing I can say is I guess her makeup looks OK, because she
really doesn't look like a woman who's... how old is she? Is she over 50, actually?
Louis: I don't know.
David: I think she might be. She definitely, at least her makeup, or she just looks really
young, but other than that, what is wrong? You're using the microphone on the camera,
and it just sounds like she's in a basement. Yeah, go ahead, Natan.
Natan: You know, I don't know if we can really criticize her for it. I mean, she is spending
very small amounts of money on the campaign, and we always criticize politicians for spending,
you know, millions of dollars.
David: So what's she doing...
Natan: I mean, this probably cost like a thousand dollars.
David: What's she doing... $1000 would be a ripoff. What's she doing with the... with
the millions she's raising, then?
Natan: I don't know, but I mean, I think that this is something that we should be, you know,
praising, not criticizing.
David: All right, you know what? I'm on-board. I think it's great that this is the type of
ad Michele Bachmann has decided to put out. I think this is... this is exactly what she
should be doing, and I love it. I'm changing my view on it.
Natan: In all seriousness, I mean, I think that this might be a brilliant campaign move,
because when people hear that horrible audio, they associate that sort of echoey, you know,
public meeting-room audio with like local, you know, real politicians. And I think that,
you know, might actually be in her favor.
David: I don't know that she's that smart, Louis. Is this to have a local-meeting feel,
that's the point? Plastic plants are a common thing in local meetings?
Louis: I can't imagine anyone walked up to her and said listen, if we make the most poorly-produced
announcement, commercial, whatever, in the history of political commercials...
David: You'll seem grassrootsy.
Louis: Yeah. I mean, I...
David: It's a funny point.
Louis: At the same time, I can't think how this would happen otherwise, because this
is so, so bad.
David: No. It's unbelievable.
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